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Police gather to start evictions from Dale Farm near Basildon, 60km west of London, where supporters have clashed with bailiffs and riot police as the authorities work to evict illegal Irish Travellers from the site on Wednesday. Image Credit: AP

Crays Hill, England: British police in riot gear Wednesday used sledgehammers to clear the way for the eviction of a community of Irish Travellers from a site where they have lived illegally for a decade.

A large force of police and bailiffs faced resistance from several dozen residents and supporters who threw bricks and struggled with officers at the Dale Farm site, set amid fields 50 kilometres east of London.

One mobile home was set on fire as police moved in at dawn, and several protesters chained themselves to barricades with bicycle locks in a bid to slow down the evictions. Others scaled a 12-metre scaffolding tower, from which police began removing them one by one.

Missiles

Essex Police said two protesters were Tasered and one person arrested and that police officers had been attacked with rocks and other missiles.

"It's nasty, and it's only going to get nastier," said resident Kathleen McCarthy, who accused police of roughing up Travellers at the site, injuring three women.

"I've been through a lot of evictions, but I've never seen anything like this. They have come in and started a riot that we never wanted."

The conflict over the settlement has simmered since 2001, when Travellers bought and settled on a former scrapyard next to a legal site.

Planning issue

The local authority maintains it's a simple planning issue — the 86 families lack permission to pitch homes on the land. The Travellers, a traditionally nomadic group similar to, but ethnically distinct from, Gypsy or Roma people, call it ethnic cleansing — the latest chapter in a centuries-old story of mistrust between nomads and British society.

"We are being dragged out of the only homes we have in this world," said McCarthy. "We will do our best to stay but it looks like we have no hope."

Lily Hayes, who identified herself as a human rights observer, accused the police of using unnecessary force. Authorities said the violence was coming from the Travellers and their supporters.

"The premeditated and organised scenes of violence that we have already seen with protesters throwing rocks and bricks, threatening police with iron bars and setting fire to a caravan are shocking," said Tony Ball, leader of Basildon Council, the local authority.

"These are utterly disgraceful scenes and demonstrate the fact some so-called supporters were always intent on violence," Ball said.

There are estimated to be between 15,000 and 30,000 Irish Travellers in Britain, where they are recognised as a distinct ethnic minority by the government.