BBC Interview with Cerebal Palsy Sufferer Jody Mcintryre - Dragged From His Wheelchair by Police Anti-Tuition Fees Protest in London

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Jody McIntyre who has cerebral palsy was dragged out of his wheel chair and across the street in the recent student protests , here he gives a BBC interview.



BBC interview wheelchair user and cerebal palsy sufferer Jody McIntryre after he was dragged from his wheelchair by police on two seperate occasions at the anti-tuition fees protest on the 9th December 2010 in London. The presenter is Ben Brown. I apologise for some glitches in the video, this is because of a bad signal and dodgy aerial cable.

If you wish to complain about the conduct of the presenter the BBC complaints form is here http://www.bbc.co.uk/complaints/ This was shown on the 8 o'clock news on BBC News channel on the 13th December. BBC response: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors...

You can also complain to Ofcom at https://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/tel...

This is the 2nd incident. (No video of the 1st available.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUHzSQ...

Also read Jody's own account on his blog at http://jodymcintyre.wordpress.com/201...

Interview on Sky news is here: http://is.gd/iI2rY (2nd video on the page.)

Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid...
And another Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Menacin...
Jody McIntyre fan page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Jody-Mc...
Petition asking the BBC for an apology: http://www.gopetition.com/petition/41...
 

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Mark Steel: A Clear Case of Attack by Wheelchair

12-17-2010 05:18 AM

The police like to set their public relations department a special Christmas challenge, don't they? Because that's the only explanation for them being filmed on the anti-fees demonstration, chucking a disabled man out of his wheelchair and shoving him along the road, unless it was to enjoy telling their PR team, "Stick a positive spin on that for us, could you?"

Ben Brown of the BBC tried his best, when he interviewed Jody McIntyre, the man who was dislodged, and said aggressively: "There's a suggestion that you were rolling in the direction of the police." Now, let's suppose this was the case (which I can't help but doubt), how much force is needed, I wonder, to stop a man with cerebral palsy who keeps rolling, even when asked to stop?

Presumably the police turned to each other in shock, spluttering: "Oh my God, he's rolling straight for us. These riot shields and helmets with visors offer woefully inadequate protection against such a persistent rolling machine. If we're lucky our batons can buy us some time, but his momentum is terrifying, it's like a cerebral palsy tsunami." Maybe this is how to win in Afghanistan. We recruit a multiple sclerosis battalion to roll mercilessly through Helmand province and the Taliban will run away shrieking in fear.'

 
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