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CND in the News

CND in the News: 30Jun-7 July 2005
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1 200,000 march against poverty
Scotland on Sunday, 2 July 05
http://scotlandonsunday.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=730912005

IT WAS not so much a demonstration, more a mass carnival that brought the centre of Edinburgh to a standstill yesterday.
The tidal wave of marchers which swept through the streets in a never-ending flow, whistled, drummed and chanted its way around the city, buoyed up by a seemingly endless supply of good humour. The trouble that broke out on the margins, when a few breakaway groups staged a confrontation with police, could not dent the general air of cheeriness. Rarely can poverty have been challenged so genially.
It may have had something to do with the white. This was the dress code of the day, requested by the organisers of the Make Poverty History march, and the vast majority responded. White T-shirts, white jeans, white ponchos, even white surplices stood out in the hot July sun. The must-have accessories were whistles, bandanas, and white anti-poverty wrist-bands.
Their wearers streamed out of the Meadows, down George IV Bridge and The Mound, then all the way along Princes Street before doubling back again to form a solid unbroken ring around the city centre. It was an immensely impressive expression of mass protest.

There was one stunning climax to the day. At three o'clock the sound died away, and the thousands of marchers who had returned to the Meadows to watch the transmission of the Live 8 concert in London, stood in absolute silence for a minute before releasing white and blue balloons into the air amid a cacophony of applause. It was not only by far the largest single march that Edinburgh has ever witnessed, it was probably the most disciplined as well.

For all the geniality, there was no doubting the seriousness of the cause - or rather the causes. For though fighting poverty was the central theme, there were almost as many versions of how to do it as there were groups taking part. Cancel Debt, Increase Aid, Guarantee Fair Trade, declared most of the posters. Others ran the full gamut of political dissent: Stop Bush's War on Terror, Bread Not Bombs, Capitalism Although this was a 21st-century protest, there was a distinct whiff of previous eras. I lost count of the Che Guevara T-shirts, the CND posters, and the vendors handing out leaflets for organisations like the International Socialists and the Workers Revolutionary Party, most of which I thought had long since withered on the bough. One marcher from Hampshire was parading a Stop The By-Pass placard. One, from Geneva, urged: Abolish Swiss Banking Secrecy. Another simply proclaimed: Eat the Rich.

The age range ran from babes in arms to one veteran of almost 70 years of protest. Chris Small, 85, and a member of Scottish CND, went on his first march on May Day 1937, when he marched to the sound of crowds jeering and horns blaring. He was last on the streets for last year's Stop the War demo. Did he think that demonstrations changed anything?
"It's hard to say," he admitted. "Sometimes I think the only thing they achieve is that people can let off steam. Governments have become inured to them. I'm sorry to say, it's only when there is a riot that they begin to sit up - look what happened in Genoa." That has not, however, dented his enthusiasm. He gave me what he believed was the central message of the day: "The real problem is not the debt that the poor countries owe the rich, but the debt the rich owe the poor - because they have been living off the poor for thousands of years."

Amongst the hundreds who had come to Edinburgh from Africa itself was Zukiswa Wanner from South Africa, who was sure that the march would have its effect on the G8 leaders. "It is poverty that makes wars," she said. "But it is not enough just to cancel debts. We have to make corrupt leaders in Africa more accountable to the people. We have come here to show people that the Africans are not just sitting down and doing nothing. "We don't want to be treated as a charity case. We want to change our own lives - and this march will help achieve that." Beaming, she added: "It is a privilege to be here. Thank you for allowing me into your country." Others had a more poignant message.

One woman from Swaziland, who has HIV Aids, said her task was to persuade the G8 countries to stick to their promise to commit up to $10m to combat Aids. Cardinal Keith O'Brien agreed.
He said that getting the leaders to listen to the people and stick to their promises was probably the most important aim of the day.
"This will make a difference. When people come together like this it does convey a certain sense of power. What has happened today is really important," he said.
His Roman Catholic colleague, Cardinal Cormac Murphy O'Connor, agreed. "My main hope is that the leaders will listen to the people and stick to their aim of halving world poverty by 2015."
Was that why he had come up to Edinburgh himself? "Yes, I'm showing I care," he said, "and I'm showing that actions count more than words. I'm putting my feet where my mouth is, if you see what I mean."
Grinning happily he set off, with the businessman and philanthropist Sir Tom Farmer, to conduct one of two Catholic services held in the city before the march. As the crowd swelled and the numbers grew, so did the carnival atmosphere.

Stalls selling hot dogs and hamburgers flanked others campaigning for every Third World cause under the sun, from saving Tibet to combating the tsetse fly.
Everyone I spoke to agreed that the day had been a worthwhile one, and they were glad to have been there. As to why they thought so, opinions differed. As two schoolgirls from Ireland put it: "It's all to do with poverty, and something has to be done. But just what we have to do about it is for someone else to decide."
They echoed almost precisely what Mrs Howden says in Walter Scott's Heart of Midlothian: "I dinna ken muckle about the law, but I ken when we had a king and a chancellor, and parliament-men o' our ain, we could aye peeble them wi' stanes when they were nae guid bairns."
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2 Nuclear weapons are a part of the poverty system
http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/article.php4?article_id=6852

Kate Hudson, chair of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, spoke to Socialist Worker about the renewed threat from nuclear weapons
Tony Blair's public position is that no decision has been made on replacing Trident submarines with a new generation of nuclear weapons.
But many reports have indicated that a decision has already been made to do that. And Blair has repeatedly stressed how important he thinks it is for Britain to have a “nuclear deterrent”.
The issue of nuclear disarmament, and ending war generally, is a central part of the campaign against global poverty.
Britain spends £25 billion on arms each year, compared with just £4 billion on aid.

Trident costs £1.5 billion a year. A replacement will cost at least £10 billion. Nuclear weapons are about securing power in a world of privatisation and neo-liberalism, which are part of the fundamental causes of world poverty. There is a staggering hypocrisy over nuclear weapons. The US and Britain talk a lot about non-proliferation, by which they mean stopping other states getting nuclear weapons. Iran and North Korea are the two most often cited.

But the western leaders say nothing about the responsibilities they have under the non-proliferation agreements. They are developing new nuclear weapons. That in itself is proliferation, and it is linked to the aggressive doctrine of regime change. The result is further destabilisation across the globe, leading to an increase in world arms spending.
The wars the US and Britain have fought are themselves leading to greater poverty. There is greater violence and poverty in Iraq now as a consequence of the occupation.
So one of the key messages CND is taking to the G8 protests is “Fight poverty, not war.”

We have to get to the fundamental roots of the problem. That means the whole issue of economic justice for people around the world.
This week will see significant protest action at the Faslane nuclear base in Scotland as part of the mobilisations against the G8. Many other protests are planned throughout the year.
This year is the 60th anniversary of the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. We should remember that the US is the only country to have every used nuclear weapons in war. There will be many events to mark Hiroshima Day on 6 August. It’s time to make nuclear weapons history, along with poverty.

The Faslane demonstration is on Monday 4 July.
Buses leave George Square, Glasgow, at 5.30 am, and Waterloo Place, Edinburgh, at 4am.
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3 Scotland says Make Poverty History: Where to make your voice heard

Sunday Mail, 2 July 05
http://www.sundaymail.co.uk/news/tm_objectid=15693859&method=full&siteid=86024&headline=scotland-says-make-poverty-history--where-to-make-your-voice-heard--name_page.html

# GLENEAGLES, PERTHSHIRE Tuesday - Beacons will be lit in the hills around Gleneagles Hotel. Meet at the Gathering Stone, Stirling, at noon.
Wednesday - March to Gleneagles Hotel gates, followed by massive rally. Meet at noon at Auchterarder's Western Road. At 1pm, march up Orchil Road, down Easthill Road and Tullibardine Road and back to the start point. This is the amended route to allow protesters to march within 500 metres (547 yards) of the hotel. March ends 4pm. See www.g8alternatives.org.uk. For transport, phone: Glasgow, 07980 662416; Edinburgh, 0131-220 6259; Aberdeen, 07840 101 589; Dundee, 01382 452547.

# EDINBURGH Today - G8 Alternative Summit: 10am-9pm, Usher Hall. Debate including Scott Ritter, the former UN weapons inspector, and Bianca Jagger. Box office: 0131-228 1155. G8 Corporate Dreams Global Nightmare, 11am -6pm, Assembly Hall. Counter conference. Box office: 0131-226 2428 Tomorrow - Aid for Africa: Will it reach farmers, will it power development? National Museum of Scotland, 2 - 5.30pm. For more information: 01926 634514 Carnival For Full Enjoyment: Noon at west end of Princes Street. Musical protest and entertainment. See www.nodeal.org.uk Tuesday - GW8 (Global Warming 8): 9.30am12pm, Our Dynamic Earth, Holyrood Road. Various speakers. Tel: 0131-550 7800.

# GRANGEMOUTH Tuesday - 1-3pm: Protest at oil refinery by Friends of the Earth and People & Planet. Meet at Inovene/BP visitors' centre, Bo'ness Road. See www.foe-scotland.org.uk.

# STIRLING July 3-8 - People & Planet Festival, Borrow Meadow Farm. Speakers, workshops, entertainment. Phone 01865 245678 or email: g8@peopleandplanet.org# STRATHAVEN, LANARKSHIRE Tuesday - Demonstration at Dungavel Immigration Removal Centre. Shuttle buses from George Square, Glasgow, all morning from 9.30am, and Waterloo Place, Edinburgh, from 9.30am to 11.30am. Book a place: 0141946 6193. See www.g8alternatives.org.uk# FASLANE NAVAL BASE Tomorrow - Non-violent blockade of all gates into the base, preventing traffic from entering, organised by Scottish CND and Trident Ploughshares. Peace campaigners highlight their opposition to the war, nuclear weapons and militarism. Venue: the Royal Navy Submarine base on the Clyde. For more information: www.faslaneg8.com.
# GLASGOW Today - Make Borders History tour. 1pm at Buchanan Street Underground for tour of city's immigration facilities. For more information: www.makebordershistory.org.

# ABERDEEN Wednesday - Live8 Murrayfield screening, Aberdeen Exhibition Centre. Doors open 5pm, with live entertainment. Murrayfield concert 7pm. Free tickets: 01224 824824. # WORLDWIDE Thursday - 1.45pm, people will ring bells, sound alarms and make other loud noises to show time is running out to tackle climate injustice. See www.foei.org/g8
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4 Hill to climb for anti-war rally
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/4647411.stm

Edinburgh has made its name as a festival city but it's heading for another title - protest central.
The anti-war movement picked up on Sunday where poverty campaigners left off the day before, by marching through the streets of the capital.
Police estimated that about 2,500 people turned out to support the Stop the War Coalition as it demonstrated against the conflict in Iraq.

Protesters gathered on Calton Hill to hear the list being read out
Like Make Poverty History (MPH) on Saturday, participants let their feet do the talking as they walked from The Mound along Princes Street before finishing at the top of Calton Hill. A strong police presence was visible along the march route but with far fewer than the 5,000 protesters originally expected, the small event passed off without incident. Lothian and Borders Police said no arrests were made. A spokesman for the organisers said the atmosphere was "quite sombre". Notable faces spotted in the crowd included Respect MP and vocal war critic George Galloway, who led the march, songwriter Billy Bragg and Rose Gentle whose son Gordon lost his life while serving in Iraq..

Mother's sorrow
The short event culminated in an "Iraq Naming the Dead ceremony" where the names of those who died during the war were read out on a PA system to a relatively hushed crowd.
Rose Gentle was the first person to address the crowd. Fighting back tears, she started by rhyming off the names of young soldiers who she said were "friends of my Gordon".
Her voice faltered as she struggled to say her son's name before passing the microphone to a fellow anti-war campaigner.

People from around the UK took part in the demonstration
One by one, selected speakers made their way through a long list which included the names of Iraqi citizens and children known to have died since the invasion took place. Among them was Kate Hudson, chairwoman of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND), whose organisation had draped large banners around the Calton Hill monument.

Marcher Margaret Jackson, 32, from the Borders, said that although the turnout was not as large as first hoped, the demonstration still sent "a strong message to the establishment".
She added: "We want to let people in power know that their illegal actions in going to war has not and will not be forgotten. Lives have been needlessly lost and this ceremony is a way of marking that.
"People in Scotland were against the war and are still against the war and our fight will not stop until all our troops are home."
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5 Comment
The Guardian, Monday July 4, 2005
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,9115,1520672,00.html

A new generation of nuclear weapons? Let's talk about it
The Trident decision must not be made in secret

Marjorie Thompson and Julian Lewis

Just three days before the last general election, Tony Blair was reported to have secretly decided that Britain would build a new generation of nuclear weapons to replace Trident. The story was denied, which is why so many believed it to be true.

Since then it has been very difficult to get a straight answer out of either the prime minister or his new defence secretary, John Reid. In the debate that is happening without them, there have been some surprises. Among them is the assertion by Michael Portillo, the former Tory defence secretary, that "the case for Britain having an independent nuclear deterrent depended on the existence of the Soviet Union". With the downfall of communism, he says, the capability became redundant. It is time Blair and Reid stopped trying to circumvent what is undoubtedly an unpalatable debate for Labour.

In December 2003, the defence white paper Delivering Security in a Changing World stated: "Our minimum nuclear deterrent capability, currently represented by Trident, is likely to remain a necessary element of our security ... Decisions on whether to replace Trident are not needed in this parliament but are likely to be required in the next one."
That parliament has now arrived, but there is little sign of those decisions being opened up to democratic debate. Why is this? History gives us a clue. The transition from the V-bombers to Polaris saw the first wave of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament break on to the British political scene in the late 1950s.

The transition from Polaris to Trident, coupled with the deployment of US cruise missiles, saw the second wave of CND rise up even more dramatically in the early 1980s. The hugely expensive Chevaline upgrade of Polaris attracted no debate or protest between these dates, because no one knew anything about it. Is this New Labour's model for the Trident replacement programme?
For more than 20 years the authors of this article have debated, disputed and totally disagreed about almost every aspect of British nuclear-weapons policy. From our opposite perspectives, we anticipate that any announcement on a successor to Trident will swiftly rekindle CND. This prospect gives New Labour nightmares. Yet, irrespective of one's viewpoint, it is essential that key questions are addressed.
To what extent, if any, are nuclear weapons relevant after September 11? Have they any role at all after the end of the cold war? Is a new generation of British nuclear weapons compatible with the non-proliferation treaty and its strictures on vertical proliferation? Can British nuclear disarmament be safely reconciled with the unpredictable nature of international relations? Could conventional military campaigns be stymied by enemy WMD that cannot be stalemated? And what type of successor generation, if any, could Britain afford to deploy and maintain?
It is beyond the scope of this article to attempt to answer any of these questions: we would be unable to agree on a single point. But we both know that these are the key points that need to be publicly debated - and that this is unlikely to happen.

Reid was repeatedly asked in the House of Commons on June 6 if the government intends to replace Trident and keep nuclear weapons as long as other countries have them. He equivocated: "Labour's recent general election manifesto spelled out our commitment to the retention of the independent nuclear deterrent. However, as I confirmed to the house on May 18, no decision on any replacement for Trident has been taken either in principle or otherwise."

What are we to make of this? If no decision on replacement has been taken in principle, then it is possible that no replacement will occur; but the Labour manifesto committed the government "to retaining the independent nuclear deterrent". Did this refer only to the existing Trident system or to the maintenance of a British nuclear-weapons capability in general, whenever Trident comes to an end? Reid is not saying.
Nor was he pleased to be questioned from his own backbenches by such committed anti-nuclear MPs as Harry Cohen and David Chaytor. He was probably lucky that more Scottish MPs were not in the chamber given some of their constituents' concerns about hosting Trident and any submarine-based successor system. These concerns will no doubt find a voice in the Scottish parliament too, whether or not it is supposed to have jurisdiction over defence.

At Westminster, a series of written questions has produced singularly evasive answers. What is the relationship between the new building programme at Aldermaston and the next generation of British nuclear weapons? Answer: to "keep open options in respect of any decision on whether or not to replace Trident". What preliminary assessments have been made of the relative merits of extending the life of Trident and of replacing it with a new system? Answer: "We have not yet made an assessment of the relative merits of such options."

Do the options for the future of the UK deterrent include not proceeding with a new generation of weapons? Answer: "The Labour party's manifesto for the 2005 general election made clear our commitment to retain the UK's independent nuclear deterrent. Although decisions on any replacement for Trident are likely to be taken in the current parliament, it is too early to rule out, or rule in, any particular option." The prime minister has been no less delphic. Asked last Wednesday by Chris Mullin for an assurance that "before any irrevocable decisions are made, he will take parliament into his confidence", Blair said that the government "will listen to honourable members before making any decisions on replacing Trident". No decisions had yet been taken, he said, but "they are likely to be necessary in the current parliament". Labour's manifesto commitment "to retaining the United Kingdom's independent nuclear deterrent" was again trotted out, but immediately qualified with a promise of "plenty of opportunities to discuss that before the final decision is taken".

So there you have it (or not). We are going to keep Britain's "independent nuclear deterrent" but we are not ruling out "any particular option" - including an option of not proceeding with a new-generation weapons system at all. If, as is claimed, we are bringing democracy to Iraq, we should not be stifling it in the most important and controversial area of British military policy - whether or not we continue to possess nuclear weapons.

• Marjorie Thompson was parliamentary officer, vice-chair and chair of CND between 1983 and 1993; Julian Lewis MP was a director of the Coalition for Peace Through Security in the 1980s and is a shadow defence minister
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6 Live 8 stirs world to ride tidal wave of justice
Irish Examiner, 4 July
http://www.examiner.ie/pport/web/world/Full_Story/did-sg4ZqB4ZjFKvssgDQQ5wn3uAIg.asp

By Catherine Shanahan in London
IT was a day when hope and history rhymed, when, to paraphrase, the-once-in-a-lifetime longed for tidal wave of justice rose. And we all believed in miracles and cures and healing wells.
The momentum born of Live 8 will peak in Gleneagles, Scotland, in two days time when the heads of the world’s eight leading industrial nations gather to deliberate climate change, the world economy and the debt of African nations.

After a weekend of rock stars working to mould the global philanthropic spirit into a force to be reckoned with, the eight heads of state are under increasing public pressure to cancel African debt, scrap trade tarrifs and double financial aid. When the G8 summit opens at the Gleneagles Hotel on Wednesday, it will be asked to rubberstamp an African aid and debt package brokered by British Chancellor Gordon Brown at a pre-G8 meeting of finance ministers last month. It will include writing off €46 billion of debt owed by mainly African countries, with rich countries picking up the interest.

Live 8 organiser Bob Geldof said yesterday he is confident world leaders at the G8 summit will listen to the call for more action to tackle global poverty. He said the Live 8 concerts, which were watched by an estimated five billion people and protests had been “full of hope and possibility and life”. Much of the public campaign to Make Poverty History will focus on Scotland this week. Today, CND will blockade the Faslane nuclear submarine base west of Glasgow and anti-capitalist activists, the Wombles, are planning an anarchist carnival on Princes St in Glasgow.

Tomorrow, a mass protest will take place at the Dungavel Detention Centre for asylum seekers in Lanarkshire, from which staff and detainees have been transferred “for the safety of everyone” according to the British Home Office. A march to the gates of the Gleneagles Hotel will take place on Wednesday as well as a Live 8 gig in Edinburgh. Geldof has called for one million people to descend on the city. On Thursday, a protest group will attempt to storm one of Gleneagles’ five golf courses and a day of action on the causes of global warming will coincide with the close of the summit on Friday
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7 Politicians would sell their grannies for a crowd like this
The Herald, July 04 2005
http://www.theherald.co.uk/features/42377.html

Politicians in search of a motivated electorate need look no further than Scotland's capital on Saturday. People forswearing garden-centre browsing, pub lunches, their sport of choice, a precious slice of leisure and pleasure, to queue in jumbled masses – often for some hours – for the privilege of walking in unison around the city centre. The multi-coloured fleet of buses parked for miles around told their own story; of people from south Wales and south-west England who had risen in the middle of the night to come to Edinburgh, and would get home at roughly the same time the next morning. The demographic, too, would have gladdened the heart of any party leader in search of a faithful following; Quaker groups, faith-based charities, women's guilds, trades unions, environmental activists, ethical shoppers, conscience-stricken suburbanites.

Most striking of all, there were thousands upon thousands of young families, toddlers and kids and pram-bound babies. A focus group to die for. A focus group, if the last election statistics are to be believed, which may or may not put its trust in a heavenly being, but have assuredly very little faith to spare for the earthbound message of party politics. The sheer scale of the turnout in Edinburgh became slightly mislaid in the frenzied coverage of the Live8 concerts by huge sections of the London-based media. But few people who were there will forget the sights and sounds of a demonstration full of voters who individually and collectively had decided that it was important to make a personal appearance on a particular day for a particular reason.

Superficially, these reasons might have looked confusingly disparate; campaigns for fair trade cheek-by-jowl with anti-nuclear veterans and the persistent voice of those opposed to the Iraqi war. Yet the triumph of the Make Poverty History organisers was to distil the concerns of some 450 affiliated bodies into three headline messages about trade, aid, and debt, and, in so doing they contrived to get the attention of tens of thousands of marching "virgins" alongside the more usual suspects.

All of which begs an important question about the future of political involvement. For a younger, more predictably radical sector, single-issue politics like CND, Greenpeace and Amnesty have always had a ready appeal. For some, it used to be a rite of passage into mainstream politics – a certain Mr Blair had a well publicised flirtation with the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. For others it was little more than a phase, a heady fling with activism before settling into the humdrum world of two-point-five weans and a mortgage. I sense we are witnessing something different now; not the death of conventional politics because, ultimately, democracy demands representatives charged with making difficult decisions about competing priorities. But it is at least arguable that party politics has lost the capacity to energise, enthuse and inspire compared with the renewed appeal of street power.

Part of that is down to a relative dearth of inspirational figures within mainstream politics – the mobile charisma of a Nelson Mandela is an increasingly rare phenomenon in the grey world of summitry and civil service sherpas. Eight middle-aged men fine-dining in Gleneagles does not exactly shriek solidarity with the starving.
But Saturday may just have underscored a more positive force than a cynical disdain for the world of manipulative, mainstream politics. And it is a force which has radicalised the most implausible adherents. That insistent desire to participate on their own terms has caught up the grandmothers who left their herbaceous border to dig outside latrines at Greenham Common, the women's institutes who downed baking tins to march against going to war in Iraq, the young men and women who gave up jobs and studies to work with refugee groups in the middle east, or participate in agricultural programmes in Africa.
Neither is it easy to stick conventional political labels on this new breed of activists. The Countryside Alliance and the Stop the War Coalition are hardly interchangeable in terms of core beliefs, but both have the capacity to turn out people in serious numbers for causes which move and motivate them.

It's interesting that this flowering of personal witness is happening in an age where we are all assumed to be locked in our habitats, only able to respond to the screen-based "stimuli" of computer games or reality television. Clearly, for millions of people from all age groups and all backgrounds and all cultures this has proved too thin a gruel to sustain a satisfactory life. Alongside the need to feed the victims of physical famine seems to have come the imperative to nourish our heads and hearts as well.

Now you can dismiss all this as cosy self-indulgence; indeed, many people have already written off Saturday's march as a bunch of middle-class liberals giving their conscience a brief outing before going back to a three-course dinner rustled up from a celebrity cookbook. That kneejerk dismissal of genuine and quite tangible emotion was made by very few people who actually became a part of Saturday's day-long event.
Of course there was self-satisfaction at having been there; the feelgood factor of being a small part of a mass movement to make more visible a cause nobody was likely to dispute. But conceding that does not diminish the feat of mobilising a quarter of a million people on a day when, in their wisdom, the kings and queens of rock'n'oll had decided simultaneously to stage an extravaganza available live on TV.

Veteran protester Bruce Kent made a telling point yesterday when he wondered aloud if the Live8 concerts might have had a greater resonance immediately post-Gleneagles – a sort of aide memoire to the presidents and prime ministers that we're still serious here boys . . . and a chronology which would not have taken any of the shine from the mass march in Edinburgh.

Regardless of that, it was clear in the Philadelphia gig at least, the audience was having their ignorance and innocence of African injustice at least partially addressed by rock stars able to lace their music with accessible rhetoric. Whatever your view of rich recording glitterati highlighting the poor, the not-so-subliminal messages flashing constantly around the Hyde Park stage at least reminded the groupies below of what is happening in a parallel dispossessed universe.

The next few days may bring us different kinds of protest . . . more direct action from the various communities who have convinced themselves that only the truly radical possess the keys of change. Only they have the vision thing. (That too, can demonstrate a high degree of self-indulgence, too right-on to risk being thought cuddly.) But I don't believe that Saturday was just a passing blip on the political radar. I think it helped define a new style of political involvement. Rock stars playing old numbers can count on nostalgia. Politicians singing old songs might find folk tuning out in ever greater numbers.

Politicians in search of a motivated electorate need look no further than Scotland's capital on Saturday. People forswearing garden-centre browsing, pub lunches, their sport of choice, a precious slice of leisure and pleasure, to queue in jumbled masses – often for some hours – for the privilege of walking in unison around the city centre. The multi-coloured fleet of buses parked for miles around told their own story; of people from south Wales and south-west England who had risen in the middle of the night to come to Edinburgh, and would get home at roughly the same time the next morning. The demographic, too, would have gladdened the heart of any party leader in search of a faithful following; Quaker groups, faith-based charities, women's guilds, trades unions, environmental activists, ethical shoppers, conscience-stricken suburbanites.

Most striking of all, there were thousands upon thousands of young families, toddlers and kids and pram-bound babies. A focus group to die for. A focus group, if the last election statistics are to be believed, which may or may not put its trust in a heavenly being, but have assuredly very little faith to spare for the earthbound message of party politics.
The sheer scale of the turnout in Edinburgh became slightly mislaid in the frenzied coverage of the Live8 concerts by huge sections of the London-based media. But few people who were there will forget the sights and sounds of a demonstration full of voters who individually and collectively had decided that it was important to make a personal appearance on a particular day for a particular reason.
Superficially, these reasons might have
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8 Two protesters have so far scaled fences at Faslane naval base
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/4647707.stm

Four arrested in nuclear protest
Four people have been arrested during a blockade at the home of the UK's Trident nuclear submarine fleet on the west coast of Scotland.
Organisers said 2,000 people were involved in the demonstration at the Faslane naval base on the Clyde. Police put the number at between 600 and 700.
The protest was organised to highlight links between militarisation, war and world poverty ahead of the G8 summit.
It was the eighth of its kind at the base since 2000.

As the blockade began a trumpet player sounded a mournful note but as the crowds began to gather, drummers took over and tried to create more of a carnival atmosphere.
The event at the base 30 miles west of Glasgow was organised by the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) and Trident Ploughshares. It was supported by groups such as the Campaign Against Arms Trade, Stop The War Coalition and G8 Alternatives.

These weapons are the most expensive scrap metal in the world because they won't be used. If they were used, the planet itself would be destroyed

Picnicking for peace at Faslane protestOrganisers estimated the number present at about 2,000 split between the base's north and south gates. If their numbers are correct, it would be exceed the previous highest turnout of 1,000 for a protest which took place in 2001. However, police gave a lower estimate. Politicians who took part included Green MEP for south east England, Caroline Lucas, along with Green, Scottish Socialist Party and Scottish National Party Members of the Scottish Parliament.

'Useless instruments
CND vice-president Bruce Kent, who was at the protest, explained the reasoning behind the blockade. "What we're saying is that to spend money on these illegal and useless instruments is really ridiculous when you talk about poverty in the world," he said. "I'm sure that there are many people who would agree with what we're doing here today.

"It's a serious demonstration to point out that we're spending a trillion dollars a year on weapons and the poor are starving in the world - that's the message."
SSP MSP Tommy Sheridan was one of the first to sit down outside the north gate. He said: "The message to G8 leaders is quite simple - if you are serious about saving millions of lives then stop spending £646bn a year on arms and start spending the money on food, medicine and clothing. That way, we can stop 50,000 humans a day from dying prematurely. "These weapons are the most expensive scrap metal in the world because they won't be used. If they were used, the planet itself would be destroyed."

'WMDs on our doorstep'
Deputy leader of the Scottish National Party Nicola Sturgeon said: "We have got some of the most powerful guys in the world meeting in our country and I think it is important to let them know that people in Scotland find it immoral that we are living in a world where millions of people don't have enough to eat and yet we have very expensive weapons of mass destruction on our own doorstep."
Chris Ballance MSP, Greens speaker on nuclear issues, said: "It has been a very successful day so far and there is a very positive atmosphere.
"Our aim has been to expose the unacceptability of militarism and nuclear weapons, and we have been successful in doing that."
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9 Protesters gather at naval base
4 July
http://www.utvlive.com/newsroom/indepth.asp?id=62197&pt=n

Hundreds of protesters today gathered at a key naval base to demonstrate against the UK's nuclear weapons. The demonstration, organised by anti-nuclear groups CND and Trident Ploughshares, began at the Faslane base on the Clyde at 7.00am. At least 1,000 people are expected to join the blockade, which will continue throughout the day in protest at the amount of money spent by G8 countries on weaponry. The blockade comes two days before the leaders of the world`s eight most powerful countries are to descend on Scotland for the start of the G8 summit.

By 8.30am, around 500 people had gathered at the north gate of the base where police have lined the entrance. Protesters sitting in front of the gate included Green Party MEP Caroline Lucas and Scottish Socialist MSP Tommy Sheridan, a veteran Faslane demonstrator.

Ms Lucas said: "We want to succeed in keeping the base closed for the day and I think we will achieve that. "By taking part in this peaceful demonstration we are ensuring the issue of nuclear weapons is on the agenda at G8 this week. "If the leaders are serious about poverty eradication then they can`t ignore the issue of nuclear armaments. The MEP for South East England added: "They don`t need to go to Iraq to find weapons of mass destruction - you can find them right here."

Banners are decorating the gates of the naval base, while protesters themselves are carrying placards bearing the slogans "No War, No Nukes" and "Water Not War". A spokesman for the Ministry of Defence confirmed a demonstrator had gained access to part of the Faslane compound. He said: "A protester climbed over a fence at the oil depot and was immediately arrested by MoD police. "This individual did not gain access to the base itself." He added: "We would estimate the number of protesters at about 550, which is much more low-key then we expected."
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10 Protestors blockade sub base
4 July
http://www.news24.com/News24/World/News/0,,2-10-1462_1731720,00.html

Faslane, Scotland - Hundreds of demonstrators on Monday blockaded a British nuclear submarine base in a protest aimed at the world's most powerful leaders who are in Scotland later in the week for the G8 summit. Police said a 24-year-old man was arrested after he broke through a fence by an oil depot on the base at Faslane on the west coast of Scotland as police in fluorescent uniforms stood before young protestors in a carnival-like atmosphere.

Ruth Tanner, spokesperson for the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND), said the protest "is about anti-militarism and the G8", the Group of Eight leading industrial countries which will hold a summit from Wednesday at the Scottish golf resort at Gleneagles to discuss poverty in the third world.

Promises about poverty
"Ninety percent of arms dealing comes out of G8 countries. You can't make promises about poverty when you're pumping so much into arms," Tanner said. Some of the protestors beat drums and one played a clarinet in a generally peaceful atmosphere. "The overriding aim is to stop work at the base today. That's obviously succeeding," Tanner said.

Police said there were only 700 protestors at two gates on the perimeter fence and by the oil depot. Strathclyde Police Chief Superintendent Mitch Roger, who is in charge of the police operations, said "we are used to these demonstrations at Faslane. "My priority is to ensure public security and that the integrity of the base is maintained ... there is a potential for arrest ... it will depend very much on the behavior of the protestors," he said.

The summit of G8 countries - Britain, the United States, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Canada and Russia - is due to discuss steps to end extreme poverty in Africa and other developing countries as well as to combat climate change. Four Vanguard-class nuclear submarines which carry Trident nuclear missiles are based at Faslane, on the Clyde estuary, about 40 kilometres northwest of Glasgow, Scotland's biggest city. Some 9 000 Royal Navy personnel, civilian defence workers and subcontractors work on the base.
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11 Hundreds blockade Faslane ahead of G8 meeting

4 July
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/07/04/ufaslane.xml&sSheet=/portal/2005/07/04/ixportaltop.html

Hundreds of protesters are blockading Scotland's nuclear naval base Faslane in the run-up to the G8 summit at Gleneagles.
Up to 2,000 demonstrators are expected to gather at the Clyde base, Scotland's largest, in protest at the amount of money the G8 countries spend on weapons.
About 500 people have so far blockaded the north gate of the base, challenged by police. One protester breached security and entered the compound, a Ministry of Defence spokesperson said.

The blockade, organised by anti-nuclear groups CND and Trident Ploughshares, comes two days before the leaders of the world's eight most powerful countries are to descend on Scotland for the start of the G8 summit. Protesters included Caroline Lucas, Green Party MEP, and Tommy Sheridan, a Scottish Socialist MSP and veteran Faslane demonstrator.
Ms Lucas said: "If the leaders are serious about poverty eradication then they can't ignore the issue of nuclear armaments." She added: "They don't need to go to Iraq to find weapons of mass destruction - you can find them right here."

Mr Sheridan, former leader of the SSP, called for the UK's nuclear weapons, which he described as "barbarian pieces of scrap metal", to be abandoned.
"The G8 leaders say they are concerned about poverty but I do not believe that," he said. "If they are concerned, then their $646 billion annual arms expenditure between the G8 nations would go on food and medicine and water."

Faslane is home to the Trident nuclear submarine. Today's protest is the eighth sit-down blockade of the base since 2000, and is expected to continue throughout the day.
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12 Hundreds protest at nuclear base
Monday July 4, 2005
http://www.guardian.co.uk/g8/story/0,13365,1520914,00.html

Hundreds of protesters today gathered at a key naval base to demonstrate against the UK's nuclear weapons. The demonstration, organised by anti-nuclear groups CND and Trident Ploughshares, began at the Faslane submarine base on the Clyde at 7am. Blockade organisers claimed around 2,000 protesters had gathered at the base, spread between its four main entrance gates. A Strathclyde police spokeswoman put the number at 600. The Ministry of Defence said one man was arrested when he managed to enter the compound, but he was quickly removed. Demonstrators good-naturedly goaded the police with drumming, dancing and - at midday - a religious communion in front of the barbed wire approach gates to Faslane.

Protest coordinator Joss Garman said: "We aim to keep the base shut for as long as possible. "The idea is to highlight the link between war and poverty and the way that the military is used to enforce destructive globalisation." Former Scottish Socialist party leader and MSP Tommy Sheridan was at the protest. He said: "Faslane is a carbuncle on the face of Scotland. It despoils our landscape, and represents all that's wrong with the G8 meeting in Gleneagles, spending billions on destruction, when we are standing here today for peace and solidarity." Declaring the protest a success, he added: "We've closed down Faslane for one day - I want to close it down for the other 364."

Former CND head Monseigneur Bruce Kent said he was disappointed that the Live 8 events had not focused more on militarisation. He said: "The NGOs have a responsibility to put militarisation on the map, because within six months or so, Tony Blair is going to make a decision on Trident's replacement, which will cost billions. "Trident itself was only supposed to cost £5bn when it was first proposed in 1980. To buy a replacment system would be a legal violation of our obligation to negotiate to reduce our nuclear capacity. But our so called independent nuclear British deterrent is none of those things - it's not independent, and who's it deterring?"

Also among the demonstrators were several members of the church who had travelled from all over the country to make their voices heard. Retired vicar David Platt, 74, a Christian CND member, had travelled for 10 hours by bus from Oxford to attend the demonstration. He said: "I think that nuclear weapons are inherently immoral. They are indiscriminate - you can't distinguish between enemies and civilians. They are illegal, they are irresponsible and totally irrelevant. If we are to make poverty history we must make war history."

The protest climaxed with a DJ set from a pedal powered electric generator, and ceremonial march past by the self-styled Rebel Clown Army.
First up was the "Rinky Dinky" sound system, a sort of portable PA on a tricycle which converted into a electric generator when a volunteer turned the pedals. Beats pumped out and a DJ imporovised raps about the G8 and Gleneagles.

Meanwhile, men and women of the Rebel Clown Army, dressed in Doc Martens, tiaras, tinsel and face paint paraded under the noses of the frontline of police officers in front of Faslane's heavily fortified north gate - but without provoking the police into a response. Some protesters maintained their sit-down protest outside the oil refinery entrances to the base, but the police tactic of patience and non-provocation seemed to have worked in exhausting protesters without inciting them
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13
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/4650049.stm

Many people would consider the banks of the Gare Loch, surrounded by breathtaking Scottish scenery, as an ideal place for a picnic. Ian Ruffell and a handful of his dinner suited friends certainly thought so - even if their view of the water was obscured by a line of police and a security fence topped with razor wire. However, the Cocktails and Canapés Collective were undeterred as they sat down with dozens of other anti-nuclear protesters and unfurled their rug at the north gate of the Faslane base. Their banners urged people to Make Lunch not War, while stressing that they were in favour of nibbles rather than nukes and snacks instead of slaughter.

A trumpet player sounded a mournful note as the blockade began
These self-styled Aesthetes Against the Atom came equipped with alcohol-free cocktails, fresh strawberries and cream and a range of nibbles including tapanades, olives and blinis, which they were happy to hand round to those who arrived at Faslane with the aim of blockading the home of the UK's Trident nuclear submarine fleet. "Our theme is picnicking for peace and that nuclear weapons are a luxury we cannot afford," said Ian, a Green Party activist from the south side of Glasgow. "The billions that are spent on Trident and its support systems is money that could go on things that might actually improve people's lives, which is where the snacks and nibbles come in." They were among the first to set out their stall as the demonstration got under way at the base's main gate shortly after 0700 BST on Monday. Activism reawakened

They were joined by Scottish Socialist Party MSP Tommy Sheridan, the Green Party's Chris Ballance and Caroline Lucas and people who had come from across Europe to make a stand - or rather take a seat.
They included 14-year-old Anna Reid, from Aberdeen, whose determination to make her voice heard reawakened her mother's own activism. Christine last attended a protest march about 20 years ago, but said that her daughter had helped stir her conscience.

Christine and Anna Reid travelled from Aberdeen to protest
For her part, Anna said: "These weapons are immoral, they are against international laws and they are just sick. "I don't know if the protest will make any difference to the military, but if people see us on the news and more and more people know about it then we can make a difference." The protest got under way to the mournful strains of a trumpet before the drummers kicked in and attempted to create more of a carnival atmosphere. The numbers swelled as more and more coaches arrived, then dissipated as people strode off to protest outside the different entrances to the base. There were cheers when it was announced that one protester had managed to breach security and that another was sitting on top of the fence near the fuel depot.

The Clandestine Insurgent Rebel Clown Army was on manoeuvres
The 33-year-old care worker, from Banff, quickly became a bit of a celebrity as he held court from his vantage point - which he promised was free of midges. He maintained that position despite the calls of fellow protesters who suggested that he tried his hand at a piece of very risky crowd surfing. The demonstrators who had accompanied him to the gate also succeeded in blocking road into nearby Garelochhead. Police were prepared to let people make their protest without moving them on - but there was little sympathy for the action in the village itself. The streets were deserted, and business was suffering in the minimarket at the Faslane end of Garelochhead.

There was anger at the protest in nearby Garelochhead
Behind the counter Akram Mohammad admitted that the place was like a ghost town, and one of his customers could barely contain his contempt for the protesters. "They should be locked up for the vandalism that they cause," fumed the man, who declined to give his name. "They cause disruption, local shops lose business and nobody wants them here. They are just a bunch of jokes." Raising a smile was certainly the intention of some of the protesters, with slogans such as Newts not Nukes, Brunch not Bombs and Custard Creams not Cluster Bombs. Laughter was also the goal of the troops from the Clandestine Insurgent Rebel Clown Army (Circa).

Their arrival at the west gate provided a much-needed boost of energy for protesters who appeared to be flagging after their early start. The clowns' communiqué pointed out that Faslane was in the heart of a beauty spot - and brought a sense of panto to proceedings as the traditional "it's behind you" cry was wheeled out for the base's "weapons of mass destruction". They also took on the role of weapons of mass distraction, diverting attention from what they saw as the real issues which should be getting tackled by the G8 leaders when they meet in Gleneagles.

Retired church minister George Charlton has attended protests at Faslane in the past - but said the impending G8 summit made Monday's event the most important so far.
"It is a time when we can really confront the politicians," he said after travelling from Inverness for what he said would be "probably the most important thing I do all year".

Kate Hudson, the chairwoman of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND), said the issue was linked to those of debt and poverty, which have been prominent in recent days. "Poverty and war are in close relation to each other," she said. "Money spent on the arms trade fuels poverty and fuels war, and nuclear weapons are the ultimate weapons of terror." A spokeswoman for CND said the blockade, which was organised in tandem with Trident Ploughshares, had achieved its objective. She said the protest was the largest ever at the base, with about 2,000 people spread across the various gates - although police put the figure at between 600 and 700. "We have got a big contingent from the Basque country and people from New Zealand, America and Italy," said the CND spokeswoman.
"It has been really peaceful and the fact that we have got MEP and MSPs underlines that the movement is representing a really diverse group of people."
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14 ”Nukes Are Afraid of Protesters”
4 July
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=29337

Some 2,000 people began gathering in the area surrounding the Faslane Royal Navy nuclear submarine base in Scotland early Monday morning to "shut it down for the day" as part of the protests leading up to the Group of Eight summit this week. But the Royal Navy beat them to the punch, closing up the base preventively in the early hours of the morning: the base, in effect, "blocked itself."

"Nukes are afraid of protesters," said one activist. "It is a big success, the biggest march ever here in Faslane," Kate Hudson from the UK Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) told IPS. "We are giving a strong message to the G8 leaders: to put an end to their nuclear hypocrisy and disarm nuclear weapons."

About 200 nuclear bombs are stored in Scotland, at Faslane and Coulport military bases, on the banks of River Clyde. Most are on four Trident submarines operated from the Faslane base, 60 km away from Glasgow, according to the Scottish Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. There, the river widens and looks like a calm lake surrounded by beautiful green hills and posh houses. But since 1964, when the small military base was expanded to store the British nuclear submarines, activists have been trying to blockade the military activities by almost any means.

Each Trident submarine holds 16 nuclear missiles: they have the destructive power of 1,000 times the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima in 1945, according to the British anti-nuclear movement Trident Ploughshares, which organised the demonstration to "highlight the links between poverty and war, militarism and destructive globalisation." Protesters locked themselves in a human chain, with their arms inside plastic pipes. Normally this makes it difficult for the police to separate them, and would take hours to clear the entrance to the base. But not today. The police stayed away from the protesters. Because the base was already shut down, no criminal offence was committed.

"We want to tell the G8 leaders that if they want to resolve the issue of poverty they have to end the criminal waste of arms-spending and re-route towards meeting people's real needs," Hudson said.

Several countries in the world have confirmed that they have nuclear bombs: Britain, United States, China, India, France, Russia and Pakistan. Others, like Iran and North Korea and Israel, are suspected to be working on building their nuclear capabilities.

"We are busy telling Iran that it should not have nuclear weapons. If we are not prepared to get rid of our nukes, we have no moral authority to say that to any other country in the world," CND activist Isabelle Linday told IPS.

Four of the G8 countries -- France, Britain, United States and Russia -- have these "weapons of mass destruction." Russia has the most, but the U.S. bombs are modern and can be used from Trident submarines and aircraft and land-based missiles. The remaining four of the G8 nations -- Canada, Germany, Italy and Japan -- are not "nuclear states." The summit is being held at the golf resort of Gleneagles, Scotland, July 6-8.

"(U.S. President George W.) Bush says the U.S. is going to double aid to Africa in the next two years. Even if it does, which is doubtful, it will be the equivalent of two days of American defence expenditures," Linday said. "That puts into perspective the G8 talk about helping the poor countries, while the priorities are still on defence." The blockade turned into a pacific demonstration, full of music, drums and street theatre, featuring activists from anti-nuclear campaigns, parliamentarians and church leaders and campaigners involved with the Dissent! network.

One protester, who managed to climb the fences and get into the base, was arrested. Another one remained sitting on top of the fences for several hours before returning to the street. The clowns of the Clandestine Insurgent Rebel Clown Army performed in front of the base's main gate. About 15 people done up as clowns built up hilarious street theatre momentum in front of the police guarding the gate.

"We are here along with all the other protesters, against this place and the G8 summit. In a tense situation like this, we come to give everybody a laugh and a smile. We always create major panic and general alarms," Jamie, known as the Salt and Pepper clown, told IPS.

Meanwhile, a street parade known as the "Carnival of Full Enjoyment," organised by temporary and precarious workers, took place in the city centre of the Scottish capital, Edinburgh. Thirty people were arrested.
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15 Tiny Scottish village girds for summit
San Francisco Chronicle, Sunday, July 3, 2005
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/07/03/MNGLMDIIN21.DTL

Auchterarder, Scotland -- Although Sandra Murray works in the local tourist bureau, she wishes the visitors flooding into her town had stayed home.
"I'd like to ride my bicycle down the main street with a banner -- 'Blair and Bush, go home!' -- but I think I'd be put under house arrest," she said.
The security lockdown is almost complete in this town of 4,000 in the Highlands in anticipation of this week's Group of Eight summit at nearby Gleneagles resort, as days of protests get under way elsewhere in Scotland.

President Bush, British Prime Minister Tony Blair and the leaders of Germany, France, Italy, Canada, Japan and Russia will gather Wednesday through Friday to consider an agenda topped by global warming and African poverty, two issues that are grabbing headlines as the summit nears. Auchterarder is justifiably jittery. The gathering of world leaders has become a magnet for dissent. Since hundreds of anti-globalization protesters were injured and one killed during the G-8 meeting in Genoa, Italy, in 2001, the summits have retreated to remote locations.

For the past year, Britain, of which Scotland is the northern part, has been readying for its costliest-ever security operation. As many as 10,000 police, backed by British troops if necessary, will be ready to patrol the rolling hills and major counterdemonstrations. Forty miles from the summit site, more than 200,000 anti-poverty campaigners formed a human chain around Edinburgh, the Scottish capital, on Saturday for the Make Poverty History rally. Waving banners, blowing whistles and clutching balloons, protesters clad in white -- the symbol of the anti-poverty campaign -- streamed through the cobbled streets of the Old Town, over the Royal Mile and through the commercial district, encircling Edinburgh Castle with a giant human bracelet. The atmosphere was festive, with a percussion band from Ghana playing and some demonstrators wearing masks depicting the faces of G-8 leaders including Bush, Blair and Russian President Vladimir Putin. "We are citizens of the global village. We need help," said Siphiwe Hlophe, 45, who traveled from the African nation of Swaziland to participate in the march. "The G-8 leaders must live up to their promises. They must be accountable."

Steel barricades were erected around the Scottish Parliament and U.S. Consulate. Police helicopters hovered overhead and officers in riot gear, some on horseback, were on standby. But police said there were only minor disturbances, and the single arrest was for a drug offense, the Associated Press reported. An attempted blockade on Monday of Faslane on Scotland's west coast, home to Britain's four nuclear submarines, is in the works. Among those trying to close the base will be Miriam "Starhawk" Simos, a pagan witch and high-profile activist from San Francisco. She led nonviolence training sessions last weekend and helped set up an "ecovillage" for protesters in Stirling, 12 miles south of Gleneagles. "I'm not trying to influence the talks with magic," she said. "I'm trying to use magic to strengthen the sense of community and help us reconnect with the Earth."

David Solnit, another prominent Bay Area activist, will join the Clandestine Insurgent Rebel Clown Army. Dressed for fun, they will try to impose "house arrest," they say, on the G-8 leaders this week. Solnit helped organize anti-globalization protests in Seattle in 1999. Edinburgh will again be inundated by protesters on Wednesday, the summit's opening day, when Bob Geldof, the charity rocker and Live 8 organizer, is calling for a million demonstrators to join the "Long March to Justice" just hours before the capital city plays host to a Live 8 concert.

Gleneagles may be swamped the same day by several thousands protesters -- including George Galloway, the outspoken Scottish-born Member of Parliament who publicly scolded U.S. senators on Iraq last month. Singer-activist Bono has called for a march to the resort to pressure the leaders on African debt relief. Over the past year, front-line Scottish police officers have trained on techniques to clear roads with bulldozers and cut protesters down from tall trees. They have tested special fireproof underwear and "WMD suits," in case of chemical attacks. All leave has been canceled. Police "spotters" from France and Italy are on hand to help identify potential trouble-makers.

There already have been reports of confrontations. "Anyone with dreadlocks, a banner or leaflets has been approached by police," says David Mackenzie of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. Three busloads of protesters arriving from Northern Ireland for Saturday's march said they were stopped, photographed and searched by police, according to a BBC report. Others said police prevented them from boarding trains at London's Euston Station until they agreed to be photographed, the BBC said.

In a controversial move, British officials have confirmed that the government might invoke Section 44 of the Terrorism Act to arrest individuals and hold them without charges. The Scottish regional government has suspended the Freedom of Information Act, indefinitely, for all official security for the summit. Major financial institutions, such as JP Morgan Scotland, have told employees to work from home this week, while Standard Life is advising employees to dress down. Even the queen has delayed her annual visit to Holyroodhouse Palace in Edinburgh. Scotland's first minister, Jack McConnell, flew several weeks ago to Scotland's oil capital, Aberdeen, to assure the oil companies that their offshore rigs and offices can get extra protection. Rumors are rife, from imported police water cannons to U.S. Marines patrolling the Gleneagles. A Starbucks spokeswoman denied reports that the coffee chain is importing from Seattle a contingent dubbed the "latte police."

McDonald's, often a target of anti-globalization protests, also scotched rumors that it will close its outlets in downtown Edinburgh. The radical fundamentalist organization Hizb-ut-Tahrir, banned in much of the Muslim world, planned to participate, according to local news reports. Most dramatic is a tabloid report that an American aircraft carrier will anchor off the coast. "That is patently false. It's fiction," said an exasperated Susan Domowitz, at the U.S. Embassy in London. Auchterarder's jitters have not been helped by an official wrangle over whether protesters should be allowed to march past the resort. Galloway, the phrase-turning politician, has warned of "chaos" and "blood on batons" if protesters are kept at a distance.

Demonstrators are also angry because the local county is requiring that they buy insurance for $9 million worth of liability. "They are trying to stop people from participating peacefully," said Josh Brown, of G8 Alternatives, one of the groups behind the protests. On a recent warm afternoon at Gleneagles, amid manicured gardens, police cars patrolled the grounds. A helicopter circled above. Grates over water drains had been marked with black tags, to show they had been searched. Usually known for luxury golf and shooting, Gleneagles is now surrounded by five miles of security fence, 6 feet high and double-layered. Villagers who live inside the "ring of steel" must carry photo ID cards, unless they are under 8 years old.

By the opening day, camouflage-patterned fabric will cover the inside of the security fence. But the window-dressing will not appease everyone in the village, where the local parish church has opened its doors to protesters and where a replica African grass hut erected on church grounds emphasizes the protesters' focus on poverty.
"The G-8?" said a man smoking a cigarette in a doorway who was too angry to give his name. "I don't like it. It's everything. All the police. ... They should have held it on a bloody aircraft carrier off the coast."
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16 Anti-nuke protest in Scotland
CNN, Monday, July 4, 2005
http://edition.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/07/04/g8.naval.protest.ap/

FASLANE, Scotland (AP) -- Anti-nuclear campaigners on Monday massed outside the major naval base for Britain's nuclear-armed Trident submarine fleet, in a protest timed to coincide with the G8 summit.
About 450 activists sat in the road, blocking the entrance to the Clyde Naval Base in rural western Scotland. Some waved rainbow peace flags, and many carried placards reading "No War, No Nukes." A samba band added a carnival atmosphere.

"It is vitally important that people make the link between the industrial war machine and the poverty that so many people are suffering from around the world," said protester Jenny Gaiawyn, 26. "If the workers here cannot get to work, then it will slow down part of the machine."

Dozens of buses packed with demonstrators traveled from the Scottish capital Edinburgh and from Glasgow and other towns across Scotland for the protest, dubbed the "big blockade." An annual event, the protest this year has been billed as one of the major demonstrations ahead of the Group of Eight industrialized nations summit which begins Wednesday. "We went to war in Iraq on the pretext that they had weapons of mass destruction. At the same time we have weapons of mass destruction just a few yards from here," said Maureen Jack, a member of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, standing in front of the four-meter (13-foot) high fence topped with razor wire that runs around the base. "I invite Prime Minister Tony Blair to take a stand for peace and security by dismantling our nuclear weapons program," she added.

Yoshi Maruta, originally from Japan, gently tapped what she said was a celestial Buddhist peace drum as she stood outside the gate in front of a line of police officers. "We had the experience of Hiroshima," she said. "With many nuclear weapons millions of people will be killed. We want to close this base down so people can live peacefully." Sally Williams, who had traveled from her home in Horsham, south of London, for the demonstration, said Britain's nuclear submarines represented a "dreadful threat." "How can we press Iran not to go ahead with a WMD program when we've got our own? This is a real threat to everybody," Williams said.
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17 Einstein, Russell, and the Bomb
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=11&ItemID=8230

Einstein, Russell, and the Bomb:
The 50th Anniversary
by Lawrence S. Wittner
July 05, 2005

July 9, 2005 will be the fiftieth anniversary of one of the most important statements ever issued about the threat posed by nuclear weapons to human survival. Usually referred to as the Russell-Einstein Manifesto, it was initiated by Bertrand Russell, the famed mathematician and philosopher, and Albert Einstein, the world's best-known scientist.

After the annihilation of Japanese cities with atomic bombs in August 1945, both Russell and Einstein had warned the world of the enormous dangers of the new weapons. Nevertheless, by the mid-1950s, the rampaging Cold War produced an even more ominous situation: a Soviet-American confrontation, in which both sides were armed with the hydrogen bomb, a thermonuclear weapon possessing a thousand times the power of the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima. The Cold War competitors displayed little hesitation about integrating the new weapons into their war plans. Nuclear weapons, President Eisenhower declared publicly, should "be used just exactly as you would use a bullet or anything else." Taking note of this perilous situation, Russell wrote to Einstein on February 11, 1955, suggesting that "eminent men of science ought to do something dramatic to bring home to the public and governments the disasters that may occur." It was necessary "to emphasize . . . that war may well mean the extinction of life on this planet" and, consequently, that in the nuclear age, nations must learn to live in peace. In response, Einstein said that he agreed "with every word" in Russell's letter. Something had to be done to "make an impression on the general public as well as on political leaders." As a result, Russell drafted a statement that he circulated among a distinguished group of scientists in the hope of their joining him in signing it.

This proved a difficult task. In the Cold War context, it was not easy to get such intellectuals to ignore their political differences and to focus on the common interests of humanity. Indeed, scientists in the Soviet Union and China refused to sign the statement. Furthermore, after a short illness, Einstein died on April 13.

Nevertheless, in one of the last acts taken before his death, Einstein sent a letter to Russell saying that he had agreed to become a signatory. And, eventually, Russell lined up nine other eminent scientists: Percy Bridgman, Hermann Muller, and Linus Pauling of the United States; Cecil Powell and Joseph Rotblat of Britain; Hideki Yukawa of Japan; Frédéric Joliot-Curie of France; Max Born of West Germany; and Leopold Infeld of Poland.

On July 9, 1955, addressing a public meeting in London jammed with representatives of the mass media, Russell unveiled what became known as the Russell-Einstein Manifesto. "We are speaking on this occasion, not as members of this or that nation, continent, or creed, but as human beings . . . whose continued existence is in doubt," it declared. In the context of the Bomb, "we have to learn to think in a new way. We have to learn to ask ourselves, not what steps can be taken to give military victory to whatever groups we prefer, for there no longer are such steps." Instead, people must ask: "What steps can be taken to prevent a military contest" which would "be disastrous to all parties?" The question confronting the world was: "Shall we put an end to the human race; or shall mankind renounce war?" And a good "first step" along the way to ending war would be to "renounce nuclear weapons." The Manifesto concluded: "We appeal as human beings to human beings: Remember your humanity, and forget the rest." The reaction to this bold, uncompromising statement was surprisingly positive. Initially skeptical, the press ultimately treated it favorably, in part because of the dramatic news of Einstein's deathbed endorsement. Around the world, scientists and other intellectuals sprang into action. Among them was the Soviet physicist Andrei Sakharov, who began his heroic campaign to halt the nuclear arms race and the Cold War. Around the world, citizens organized Ban-the-Bomb movements, including America's National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE) and Britain's Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.

The signers of the Russell-Einstein Manifesto played important roles in the burgeoning campaign. Organized by Max Born, a group of 52 Nobel laureates in the sciences signed the Mainau Declaration, calling upon nations to "renounce force as a final resort of policy" or face the prospect of utter destruction. Together with Rotblat, Russell launched the Pugwash movement, drawing on scientists from both sides of the Iron Curtain to discuss the feasibility of nuclear arms control and disarmament. Rotblat and Pugwash went on to lay the groundwork for the Partial Test Ban Treaty (for which Rotblat was knighted by the British government). Both later received the Nobel Peace Prize. Speaking at the opening meeting of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, Russell subsequently became its first president. Muller issued powerful warnings about the harmful genetic effects of radioactivity. Pauling rallied scientists in the United States and, later, the world against nuclear testing, thereby becoming a thorn in the side of the Eisenhower administration and yet another recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize.

The Russell-Einstein Manifesto also affected policymakers. In large part, its impact was indirect, for it was the antinuclear campaign and the antinuclear opinion that it generated which helped to reshape their policy. Faced with strong popular resistance to nuclear testing, Eisenhower agreed reluctantly to a nuclear testing moratorium in 1958. Besieged by protests against nuclear testing and nuclear weapons, Kennedy drew back from atmospheric testing and tapped the founder and co-chair of SANE, Norman Cousins, as his test ban emissary to Khrushchev.

But sometimes the effects were more direct. Mikhail Gorbachev clearly drew his cherished concept of "new thinking" from the Manifesto. "The nuclear era requires new thinking from everybody," he told Francois Mitterrand. Or, as he stated in his book Perestroika: "All of us face the need to learn to live at peace in this world, to work out a new mode of thinking." And "the backbone of the new way of thinking is the recognition of the priority of human values, or, to be more precise, of humankind's survival." Gorbachev's choice for Soviet foreign secretary, his fellow party reformer Eduard Shevardnadze, recalled that "the Russell-Einstein Manifesto offered politicians the key to the most troublesome and complex riddles of the age." According to Georgi Arbatov, another of Gorbachev's top foreign policy advisors, major ideas for the new thinking "originated . . . outside the Soviet Union," with Einstein and Russell.

Today, fifty years after the issuance of the Russell-Einstein Manifesto, it should not take the world's greatest scientist or philosopher to see that, in a world crammed with nuclear and other devastating weapons, resorting to war is an immensely dangerous and destructive act. Nor should it be difficult to see that the world would be a safer place with fewer nuclear weapons rather than with more of them. Yet, somehow, leaders of supposedly advanced, civilized nations -- including the United States -- continue to go right ahead laying plans for building up their nuclear arsenals and plunging their countries into dubious battle, as if their soldiers were armed with sticks rather than with the deadliest, most destructive devices in human history. It is one of the tragedies of our time that, despite all the scientific, technological, and cultural advances over the centuries, so many nations are governed today by people with primitive values and limited intelligence.

Lawrence S. Wittner is Professor of History at the State University of New York, Albany. His latest book is Toward Nuclear Abolition: A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement, 1971 to the Present (Stanford University Press).
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