Criminalising Conscience: Gag Orders, Climate Protest, and the Imprisonment of a Generation

In July 2024, five young people were sentenced to prison for planning nonviolent protest action linked to Just Stop Oil. Among them was Cressida Gethin, a 22-year-old Oxford music student and gifted cellist, who received a four-year prison sentence. Her role? Participating in a Zoom call during which protest actions were discussed. She did not block a road, vandalise property, or harm anyone.

To many observers, including UN experts, her sentencing reflects not just a punitive response to protest, but a disturbing turn toward the criminalisation of climate conscience.

Jane Ripley, a scientist based in Hastings, attended the High Court proceedings. She shared her account with me in a recent interview. According to her, the most alarming part of the hearing was not just the severity of the sentences—but the explicit legal instruction given to the convicted:

“They were told they must not say why they had protested. Not in court, not to the press, not even outside the courtroom. If they ...

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Stop Climate Catastrophe - Blog

Criminalising Conscience: Gag Orders, Climate Protest, and the Impr...

In July 2024, five young people were sentenced to prison for planning nonviolent protest action linked to Just Stop Oil. Among them was Cressida Gethin, a 22-year-old Oxford m...

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