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Thu

11

Feb

2010

Rights Group Launch Olympic Observor Program
written by Press Release
Launch of the First Legal Observers Program in Olympic History
by British Columbia Civil Liberties Association
Hundreds of citizen Legal Observers trained by the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association will take to the streets to observe and record the security and policing of the opening ceremonies and major demonstrations planned throughout the Games.  Breaking news and video footage from the Observers will be the subject of daily media briefings.

What: Press Conference on the Launch of the Legal Observers Program -- An Innovative Model of Citizen Participation to Protect the Democratic Right to Demonstrate During the Olympics

Who:  David Eby, BCCLA Executive Director; Stefanie Ratjen, Legal Observer Program Director and volunteer Legal Observers

When:  8:00 a.m. Friday, February 12   

Where:  1188 West Georgia Street (Media personnel will be met in the lobby and escorted to the third floor board room)

 
British Columbia  Civil Liberties Association
Media Advisory

February 11, 2010
 
MEDIA CONTACTS:
Micheal Vonn, BCCLA Policy Director: 604-630-9753

FOR MORE DETAILS:  media@bccla.org or 604-630-9755   
 
 
 British Columbia Civil Liberties Association
  February 9, 2010
  For immediate release


  "Free speech zone" crowded with pro-Olympic displays


  Vancouver, B.C. - The BCCLA is disappointed that the organizers of the 2010 Olympics have crowded an area designated for free speech with pro-Olympic displays, making large demonstrations practically impossible in the Olympic city.

  "Beijing created protest zones where people who wanted to protest could peacefully assemble," said Robert Holmes, President of the BCCLA. "But the Vancouver Olympics organizers seem to think that even the tiny patch of green behind the Vancouver Art Gallery is too much to allow for those who don't agree with the Olympics."

  The Civil Liberties Advisory Committee which met with the Integrated Security Unit, Vancouver City Hall, and VANOC had recommended the North lawn of the Vancouver Art Gallery be kept clear and available for public organizing, recognizing the traditional use of the space as a gathering point for rallies and demonstrations. The recommendation appears to have been completely ignored, as the space now features a pro-Olympic poster display, a provincial government log cabin, and a bobsled.
  "Free speech needs air and room in which to be spoken and heard," said Holmes. "With this effort to crowd out others, the Olympics organizers are offending the Canadian democratic principles that our governments committed themselves to uphold. 
 
For an organization supposedly dedicated to competition among athletes to be so fearful of competition of ideas is sad indeed.  Speakers will be deprived of the right to express themselves and listeners deprived of their right to hear.  This is a sorry start to the Olympics and must be quickly overturned by those in authority."

  This tactic of trying to block out the opportunity for others to communicate a message was used by VANOC in the fall of 2008 when it purchased all outdoor advertising in Vancouver and Whistler and resold it only to approved sponsors. The Hughes Commission into demonstrations related to APEC made recommendations that demonstrations not be unreasonably confined.


  MEDIA CONTACTS:


  Robert Holmes, President, (604) 681-1310
  David Eby, Executive Director, (778) 865-7997
 

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