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Just Stop Oil activists jailed after M25 blocked

Five environmental activists who aimed to "create mass disruption" have been jailed for their role in protests that caused widespread traffic disruption on the M25.

The Just Stop Oil campaigners climbed gantries on the motorway in November 2022, forcing police to stop the traffic, in an attempt to cause gridlock across southern England. People "suffered hours of delay" on 9 November 2022 as a result, Basildon Crown Court heard.

All the defendants, who pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to causing a public nuisance, received terms of between one year eight months and two years. The defendants were all either retired, students or recent graduates at the time, the court heard.

Judge Shane Collery KC noted that an accident happened near one gantry and it was "fortunate more accidents did not occur". "It's easy to be blasé and dismissive when it's not your life that's being disrupted," he said. He said the protesters "considered you knew better than everyone else", and suggested an element may have been "the day out and perhaps the excitement of a day's action".

An aerial view shows a collapsed overhead gantry structure blocking multiple lanes of a major highway. The white metal framework has fallen across the road surface, with blue highway signs visible. A police vehicle with high-visibility markings is positioned nearby, and traffic lanes are clearly marked on the asphalt.
Mass disruption was caused by Just Stop Oil protesters in November 2022, court hears

Protests over four successive days in November 2022 closed parts of the motorway in Kent, Surrey, Essex and Hertfordshire. The judge said the court "accepts a conscientious motive may be a relevant consideration". However he said "your actions were disproportionate to your aims".

The sentences ranged from George Simonson, 24, and Theresa Higginson, 26, receiving two years, to Gaie Delap, 77, and Paul Sousek, 73, getting one year and eight months. Daniel Johnson, 25, was given a suspended sentence.

Francesca Cociani, from Hodge Jones & Allen, who represents several defendants, said: "Today's decision to imprison peaceful protesters is a grave injustice and does not align with the UK's professed values. Peaceful protest is a fundamental right and a vital tool for enacting positive societal change. Increasingly lengthy prison terms for these types of individuals were previously unseen and it sends a disturbing message in our liberal democracy."