St Paul's protest: legal action is launched Published duration 28 October 2011

media caption A prayer service was led by the Right Reverend Graeme Knowles, the Dean of the cathedral, while protesters continued with their occupation outside

St Paul's Cathedral and the City of London Corporation are to take legal action to evict protesters camped outside the London landmark.

The corporation's planning and transport committee voted to proceed with court action to remove tents from the public highways by the cathedral.

It came as the cathedral doors reopened after being closed for a week.

The Occupy London Stock Exchange protesters said the corporation wanted a "long, costly legal battle".

Members of the group set up their tents on 15 October and there are now more than 200 erected around the cathedral.

The cathedral closed its doors to the public over health and safety fears about the camp.

Hundreds of people, including some protesters, were allowed into the cathedral to attend a service to mark its reopening at 12:30 BST, although the dome and galleries remained closed to the public.

Michael Welbank, who chaired the Corporation planning committee meeting, said: "Protest is an essential right in a democracy but camping on the highway is not and we believe we will have a strong highways case because an encampment on a busy thoroughfare clearly impacts the rights of others."

Earlier Prime Minister David Cameron said: "I don't quite see why the freedom to demonstrate has to include the freedom to pitch a tent almost anywhere you want to in London."

St Paul's Cathedral is also taking legal action to remove those protesters camping on its own private property.

A spokesman said legal action had "regrettably become necessary".

He said: "The chapter only takes this step with the greatest reluctance and remains committed to a peaceful solution.

"At each step of the legal process the chapter will continue to entreat the protesters to agree to a peaceful solution and, if an injunction is granted, will then be able to discuss with the protesters how to reach this solution."

'Costly legal battle'

Stuart Fraser, chairman of policy and resources at the corporation, said: "We have no problem with a peaceable 24-hour protest by people without tents - provided the highway is fully usable - but campsites and important highways don't mix."

Speaking to BBC Radio 4's Today programme earlier, Mr Fraser said they were in a "very, very difficult position".

He said: "The Church has asked them to go, the archbishop has asked them to go, everybody has asked them to go and they are not going, so I am not sure what more we can do to ask them to move.

"This is going to be long and complicated, I fear."

Ronan McNern, from OLSX, said: "We have requested that the Corporation of London and others engage in open dialogue with us and Liberty has offered to facilitate and mediate it.

"But the corporation showed their determination to take us down a long, costly legal battle at a time when public services are being cut."

The spokesman added that the demonstrators were "so glad" that the cathedral had reopened and invited visitors to "pop by our camp".

Conservative MP Mark Field, who represents Cities of London and Westminster, welcomed the corporation's decision, saying: "It's like a third world shanty town outside St Paul's which is a Unesco world heritage site.

media caption BBC's Sarah Campbell spoke to one of the protesters who was one of the first to enter the newly re-opened cathedral

He told the BBC2's Daily Politics show: "We've got Remembrance Sunday, the Lord Mayor's show all within the next fortnight.

"On that basis I think they are doing the right thing to try and get these people removed but it's going to be a long process."

Addressing the service at the cathedral, the Dean of St Paul's, the Rt Revd Graeme Knowles, said: "Today we rejoice that we are once again are able to worship in an open cathedral.

"It stands at the heart of this city as a sign of God's presence, a presence which has the power to save and to transform. A building has stood on this site for well over a thousand years testifying to that truth."

Dr Giles Fraser, who stepped down as the canon chancellor on Thursday, attended the service.