New ‘Writing To Prisoners’ Leaflet

Leeds ABC have pro­duced a new ‘Writ­ing To Pris­on­ers’ laflet. Basic text fol­lows, and it can also be down­loaded as a PDF, or a hard copy can be obtained by send­ing an SAE to Leeds ABC at the address below.

Leeds ABC have pro­duced a new ‘Writ­ing To Pris­on­ers’ laflet. Basic text fol­lows, and it can also be down­loaded as a PDF, or a hard copy can be obtained by send­ing an SAE to Leeds ABC at the address below.

Leaflet — pdf 109K

WRITING TO PRISONERS

Prob­a­bly the eas­i­est and arguably most impor­tant aspect of sup­port­ing pris­on­ers is writ­ing to them. One of the hard­est things for many pris­on­ers to cope with is the feel­ing of iso­la­tion – being cut off from friends and fam­i­ly and every­thing they know in their nor­mal lives. A let­ter or post­card from the real world, even from a com­plete stranger, helps to main­tain a con­nec­tion with the out­side, relieves the infer­nal tedi­um of a regime that often involves spend­ing 23 hours of the day in the same cell. For a first-time pris­on­er, espe­cial­ly in the ear­ly stages of a sen­tence, this type of sup­port can make a huge dif­fer­ence, help­ing them cope with the unfa­mil­iar and often intim­i­dat­ing sur­round­ings. For polit­i­cal pris­on­ers, vic­tims of mis­car­riages of jus­tice and those fight­ing back from with­in, it’s a sim­ple mes­sage of sol­i­dar­i­ty – you’re not on your own.

In many cas­es, con­tact from the out­side lets the prison author­i­ties know that there are peo­ple on the out­side who care and are mon­i­tor­ing the sit­u­a­tion. For exam­ple, spe­cial dietary require­ments (veg­an etc) are more like­ly to be adhered to if an inmate is obvi­ous­ly not for­got­ten.

Please be aware that this isn’t meant to be a list of rules – we’re just try­ing to hon­est­ly answer some of the queries we get asked. And of course, the com­ments about prison pro­ce­dure only apply to UK pris­ons.

WHERE DO I FIND A PRISONER FROM?

Well, there’s cur­rent­ly around 80,000 to choose from in the UK alone but if you want to nar­row that down slight­ly the eas­i­est way is to con­tact one of the many anar­chist / ani­mal rights / pris­on­er sup­port groups you can find online. Be aware that pris­on­ers are often moved and mail not always for­ward­ed so if in doubt email or write to check details are up to date. You can con­tact Leeds ABC at the address below for a list of the pris­on­ers we cur­rent­ly sup­port both in the UK and fur­ther afield.

SO WHAT DO I WRITE THEN?

Ok this is the bit that trips most peo­ple up. You’re wor­ried about what you write might sound stu­pid, or make the pris­on­er feel worse or you sim­ply can’t think of any­thing. Of course if the pris­on­er is your mate then this bit is easy but what about a total stranger, some­one you know noth­ing about apart from their names, charges and sen­tence? Well, there’s no for­mu­la here but for the first let­ter you should intro­duce your­self. Tell them about your­self, what you do, what you’re into, where you got their address and so on. This breaks the ice and also makes a reply eas­i­er. Apart from that, just fill a side of A4 of what­ev­er you can think of – crap jokes, rem­i­nis­cences, what you did last Fri­day night after 10 pints etcetera. One for­mer inmate com­ment­ed to us that some of the best let­ters he received were an ongo­ing debate about the mer­its of var­i­ous Iron Maid­en songs which might seem inane but put a great big smile on his face once a week! Here’s a few point­ers that we’d like to remind you of:

1. Every let­ter is read by screws (the­o­ret­i­cal­ly at least) so don’t write any­thing that might incrim­i­nate your­self or oth­ers in any­thing dubi­ous. The rule of thumb here is don’t put any­thing in a let­ter that you would­n’t say to a cop­per’s face.

2. If the pris­on­er is in for a polit­i­cal charge you should obvi­ous­ly let them know you sup­port their actions but don’t start prais­ing them as some sort of hero to the cause. Rhetoric to the effect of “I’m in awe of your great sac­ri­fice blah, blah…” is frankly cringe­wor­thy. If some­one is banged up for a polit­i­cal action they don’t (or should­n’t!) want to be seen as mar­tyrs – they’re just nor­mal peo­ple unlucky enough to get caught, so write to them like nor­mal peo­ple rather than fawn­ing!

3. A lot of peo­ple seem wary of telling pris­on­ers about ‘fun’ stuff, think­ing it will depress them or make them feel home­sick hear­ing about peo­ple hav­ing a laugh on the out­side. This is rub­bish! They’ll already be home­sick and it’s just reas­sur­ing to hear nor­mal life is going on so don’t feel coy about men­tion­ing gigs, par­ties and rau­cous nights down the booz­er.

4. Always ask a few ques­tions like how they’re doing, plans they have for the future, what their inter­ests are, etc. but try to keep it gen­er­al and don’t make it sound like you’re being nosey. Bear­ing in mind that they might be reply­ing to a total stranger, it makes writ­ing a response a lot eas­i­er.

5. Sim­i­lar­ly, some back­ground about your­self, even seem­ing­ly triv­ial things like favourite bands, foot­ball teams etc, can make writ­ing a reply that bit eas­i­er…

6. Don’t EVER promise things you can’t deliv­er. If you build some­one’s hopes up about say vis­it­ing them, send­ing things into them, etc then you let them down, that’s well out of order and hard­ly con­sis­tent with sup­port­ing them.

7. Polit­i­cal lit­er­a­ture – be care­ful! Unless the pris­on­er asks for it avoid send­ing any over­ly con­tentious polit­i­cal mate­r­i­al in as it can poten­tial­ly cause them grief. Depend­ing on the pris­on­er’s sit­u­a­tion and how they “choose to do their time” unso­licit­ed sub­scrip­tions to lefty news­pa­pers for instance may cause unwant­ed has­sle with prison author­i­ties and oth­er inmates. In some cas­es, par­tic­u­lar­ly abroad, polit­i­cal lit­er­a­ture to remand­ed pris­on­ers may even be used against them at tri­al. There’s no prob­lem send­ing this kind of thing as long as you ask the pris­on­er first and always respect their wish­es.

8. Avoid turgid left­ie-isms! Phras­es like “my com­rades and I have resolved to pass a motion of sol­i­dar­i­ty” sound pompous and imper­son­al how­ev­er well mean­ing they might be. “We hope you’re doing ok” is a lot more friend­ly!

I’M NOT SURE I CAN MANAGE A FULL LETTER…

That’s fine. A quick mes­sage of sup­port on a post­card can still real­ly bright­en up some­one’s day or what about tak­ing a card to a gig or the pub and get­ting a few peo­ple to sign it?

HOW DO I MAKE SURE MY LETTER GETS IN?

Well the cor­rect postage would be a start (you’d be sur­prised!) and the cor­rect address ensur­ing the pris­on­er’s full name and prison num­ber are includ­ed. Put your name and address at the top of the let­ter and on the back of the enve­lope. These don’t have to be ‘real’ if you’ve got any reser­va­tions but bear in mind this is what the pris­on­er will see if they’re going to write you a reply. Some pris­ons will refuse to accept let­ters with ‘care of’ or PO Box address­es so it’s best to use a street address. Some pris­ons have rules for­bid­ding cer­tain imagery (e.g. gang sym­bols being banned from U.S pris­ons) and this may encom­pass polit­i­cal sym­bols as well so cir­cled A’s, scrawled all over the enve­lope may not be a good idea! Some­times hand-made cards with a pic­ture glued to the front may be refused or defaced in case any­thing’s con­cealed under­neath. If you want to make sure a pris­on­er gets a let­ter, you can send it by record­ed deliv­ery – then you can check with the Post Office whether the prison received it; and all record­ed mail is only sup­posed to be opened in the pris­on­er’s pres­ence.

WHAT ABOUT GETTING A REPLY?

Bear in mind that you’re doing this to sup­port the pris­on­er not to acquire a new pen-pal although the two might go hand in hand. You may not get a reply for sev­er­al rea­sons: obvi­ous­ly the pris­on­er might not have received your let­ter or they might be get­ting a lot of post if they’re for­tu­nate enough so might not have time to reply to all cor­re­spon­dence. They may be lim­it­ed in the num­ber of let­ters they can write by the prison author­i­ties and pre­fer to pri­ori­tise friends and fam­i­ly. They may not have access to suf­fi­cient writ­ing mate­ri­als or stamps, they may have been moved, or they may sim­ply not be very good at writ­ing let­ters. Regard­less, don’t be put out if there’s no reply and don’t let this deter you from con­tin­u­ing to write.

CAN I SEND ANYTHING ELSE IN?

Unsur­pris­ing­ly, the file in a choco­late cake rou­tine isn’t going to work. The gold­en rule here is to ask the pris­on­er if you’ve got any doubts. You can always try con­tact­ing the prison, but they are noto­ri­ous­ly elu­sive, so you could spend ages try­ing to get through – for instance HMP Arm­ley has one phone line to cov­er 1250+ inmates. More to the point, screws have a habit of lying through their teeth, so don’t assume that the first answer you get will be any­thing close to the truth! The rules vary wide­ly between dif­fer­ent pris­ons and are some­times baf­fling. Food and toi­letries are not per­mit­ted in any pris­ons for obvi­ous rea­sons but some­times appar­ent­ly innocu­ous items are denied, for instance pho­tographs with the pris­on­ers face on them (actu­al­ly to stop pris­on­ers forg­ing ID cards!). If you send any­thing in, clear­ly write at the top of your let­ter what you’ve enclosed as this lessens the chances of light-fin­gered screws hav­ing off with it. Some things you might con­sid­er send­ing in are:

Books – you may be able to send used copies in but many pris­ons will only accept books from a recog­nised shop, dis­trib­u­tor or pub­lish­er so check first. It’s pos­si­ble to get round this in some cas­es if you know a sym­pa­thet­ic sec­ond-hand book­shop who will pack­age a used book with an offi­cial look­ingre­ceipt.. Screws may with­hold some lit­er­a­ture on the grounds of con­tent but this can gen­er­al­ly be dis­put­ed by the pris­on­er, cit­ing Human Rights leg­is­la­tion. Books and mag­a­zines are only meant to be cen­sored or refused if they’re racial­ly abu­sive, iden­ti­fy indi­vid­ual screws by name, or threat­en “good order and dis­ci­pline” (how­ev­er you choose to inter­pret that!). If you’ve any doubts again ask the pris­on­er.

Mag­a­zines – again the pol­i­cy varies so as above check first. Sur­pris­ing­ly, wide­ly avail­able pub­li­ca­tions are more like­ly to be refused while obscure zines may get through okay. This is because most pris­ons have an appoint­ed local newsagent which you have to use for ‘off the shelf’ pub­li­ca­tions. You pay for a mag­a­zine, news­pa­per or puz­zle book at the shop and give them the inmate’s prison num­ber and this is for­ward­ed to them. It’s even pos­si­ble to set up a sub­scrip­tion to a dai­ly news­pa­per this way.

Stamps – pol­i­cy varies (can you spot a pat­tern here?). Stamps are gold dust for pris­on­ers, if they can receive them, not only for send­ing let­ters but also as cur­ren­cy. Many pris­ons will not allow stamps and obvi­ous­ly screws will often pock­et them. UK pris­ons should all allow stamped-addressed envelopes in, which obvi­ous­ly makes it eas­i­er for a pris­on­er to reply. These are the safest bet (after all it’s hard­ly a huge out­lay) but write your address in pen­cil so the pris­on­er can remove it if they have a more impor­tant let­ter to send. If you want a reply, an SAE is real­ly a mat­ter of cour­tesy.

Cash – while the amount most pris­on­ers can spend on a week­ly basis is lim­it­ed, their actu­al income to spend on “lux­u­ries” such as usable razors, tobac­co, paper, phone cards etc is often micro­scop­ic, par­tic­u­lar­ly if they are refus­ing work. On top of this, Ara­mark, the pri­vate com­pa­ny who run prison can­teens, only sell expen­sive brand-named prod­ucts, and incred­i­bly get away with sell­ing it at more than high-street prices! Funds from the out­side can there­fore be vital, but cash is not used in pris­ons and inmates have an ‘account’ with a cer­tain amount freed up each week as ‘spends’. Obvi­ous­ly if you’re send­ing more than a cou­ple of quid it’s worth check­ing first, but as a gen­er­al guide funds should only be sent as postal orders made payable to “The Gov­er­nor, HMP [prison name]”. It is imper­a­tive that the pris­on­er’s full name and prison num­ber is writ­ten clear­ly on the back, or they won’t get it.

Phone cards – a myth. Not that you can buy them now any­way but even when you could, phone cards from the out­side did­n’t work on prison phones! If you want to help some­one with the cost of calls to friends and fam­i­ly send them a postal order as they’ll have to buy cred­it inside.

Music, footwear, radios and oth­er mis­cel­la­neous goods – this varies so wide­ly that you have to check. Some pris­ons will accept almost any­thing, oth­ers will flat­ly refuse every­thing, often because pris­on­ers are made to save up their spends and buy goods from ‘approved’ mail-order retail­ers such as Argos instead.

BUT… THEY’RE CRIMINALS!

One con­cern that is often voiced to us is that that the peo­ple you are writ­ing to will be ‘dodgy’ in some way. After all, the media bom­bards us with the notion that every­one in prison is a smack-addict­ed, child-molest­ing ben­e­fit-scroung­ing can­ni­bal, and it’s only to be expect­ed that many peo­ple who have no per­son­al expe­ri­ence of prison are wary of con­tact­ing those inside. The sim­ple answer is that pris­on­ers are human, and of course there may be a small chance of encoun­ter­ing idiots – about the same sta­tis­ti­cal chance of encoun­ter­ing idiots any­where! If you are not com­fort­able about writ­ing to a par­tic­u­lar pris­on­er for what­ev­er rea­son, sim­ply end con­tact – we have heard of iso­lat­ed cas­es of peo­ple pos­ing as polit­i­cal pris­on­ers to draw in sup­port and let­ters, but these instances are so scarce that it real­ly is not worth wor­ry­ing about, and you can be assured that any pris­on­ers sup­port­ed by organ­i­sa­tions like the ABC would be dropped like hot bricks if there was any con­cern about their integri­ty.

USEFUL CONTACTS

The inter­net is a gold-mine of infor­ma­tion about prison resis­tance, but be aware that many sites aren’t updat­ed very reg­u­lar­ly, so some details can be inac­cu­rate. We’d rec­om­mend the fol­low­ing sites as good places to start:

BRIGHTON ABC — www.brightonabc.org.uk

Brighton’s Anar­chist Black Cross group keep a good web­site with up-to-date news and details of pris­on­ers, as well as links to oth­er groups.

NO MORE PRISONS — www.alternatives2prison.ik.com

This infor­ma­tive site cam­paigns for prison abo­li­tion.

HAVEN DISTRIBUTION — www.havendistribution.org.uk

Haven is a reg­is­tered char­i­ty who run an invalu­able ser­vice pro­vid­ing UK pris­on­ers with free books and edu­ca­tion­al mate­ri­als.

GET IN TOUCH WITH US

If you want any fur­ther infor­ma­tion, please con­tact us. We do a reg­u­lar e‑mail bul­letin with updates on prison issues and a list of anar­chist pris­on­ers – let us know if you want to be added to this. We also do a dis­tro and pub­lish pam­phlets relat­ing to the prison strug­gle – get in touch for a full list. If you are writ­ing to us, please try to enclose a stamped addressed enve­lope or Inter­na­tion­al Reply Coupon if you want a reply.

Leeds ABC, PO Box 53, Leeds, LS8 4WP, Eng­land
LeedsABC@riseup.net
http://www.myspace.com/leedsabc

How many cops does it take to police a Tea Party? — Faslane 365

25.03.2007

Fifty peo­ple attend­ed a Tea Par­ty out­side the gates of the Faslane Nuclear Base in Scot­land. Tea was served in chi­na cups and saucers. A table dis­played veg­an scones, cucum­ber sand­wich­es and cakes. Local res­i­dents were invit­ed to share tea with activists and dis­cuss how to dis­arm Britians Tri­dent Weapons of Mass Destruc­tion.

Faslane tea party 1
Faslane tea party 225.03.2007

Fifty peo­ple attend­ed a Tea Par­ty out­side the gates of the Faslane Nuclear Base in Scot­land. Tea was served in chi­na cups and saucers. A table dis­played veg­an scones, cucum­ber sand­wich­es and cakes. Local res­i­dents were invit­ed to share tea with activists and dis­cuss how to dis­arm Britians Tri­dent Weapons of Mass Destruc­tion.

How many cops does it take to police a tea party?…Twenty Six Appar­ent­ly.

A small group of dis­ar­ma­ment activists trav­elled from Brighton to hold a Tea Par­ty at the Faslane Nuclear Base in Scot­land. An invi­ta­tion was sent out to local res­i­dents around the base who have been dis­turbed by the recent string of road block­ades which have been part of the Faslane365 cam­paign*. The Invi­ta­tion read “We would like to cor­dial­ly invite you to a Tea Par­ty full of sophis­ti­ca­tion, poise and wis­dom. We hope to talk with you and test the old eng­lish con­vic­tion that any prob­lem can be sort­ed out with a nice cup of tea”.

The Tea Par­ty was set up on the pave­ment out­side the base and a table dis­played an ele­gant array of veg­an scones, cucum­ber sand­wich­es and cakes. Fifty guests arrived from Glas­gow, Helens­burgh and all over Britain. Bemused passers by wit­nessed per­ma­nent res­i­dents of the Faslane Peace Camp** dressed in their finest gloves and hats, sip­ping tea from chi­na cups and saucers. Old gowns were worn and live gui­tar music enter­tained. The tea par­ty hosts said “We want­ed to counter the bar­bar­i­ty of nuclear weapons and show these uncivi­lased weapons of mass destruc­tion the prop­er way to behave”.

Peace activists and local res­i­dents alike, looked on with laugh­ter as twen­ty six police offi­cers arrived to ‘police’ the event. They formed a line across the gates to the base, cre­at­ing their own block­ade of the pre­vi­ous­ly unob­struct­ed entrance. After hun­gri­ly watch­ing cakes being eat­en, they made the rule that no one could cross the road. The guests con­tin­ued to ignore them and after three hours stood in a line they left.

Fun was had by all.

* Faslane365 is the cam­paign to con­tin­u­ous­ly block­ade the Faslane Nuclear Base for a year. www.faslane365.org
** Faslane Peace Camp has been locat­ed out­side the Sco­tish Nuclear Base for com­ing up to twen­ty five years. It has been wit­ness­ing and cam­paign­ing for peace, mak­ing it the longest stand­ing protest site in the UK.

Friday 8th June 2007 — International Day of Direct Action against Climate Change and the G8

Direct Action for Cli­mate Jus­tice — Resis­tance is Self Defense!

We all know the ter­ri­fy­ing sta­tis­tics: a mil­lion species extinct by 2050, 19 of the 20 hottest years on record since 1980, Green­land and Antarc­ti­ca melt­ing, droughts, floods, famines ? the G8 have had over 30 years to address cli­mate change and only suc­ceed­ed in pro­vid­ing tril­lions in sub­si­dies to the very indus­tries that are destroy­ing our plan­et and our future. And while the G8 con­tin­ues to line their pock­ets, island states dis­ap­pear and hun­dreds of thou­sands die as a result of the freak weath­er con­di­tions caused by their irra­tional and uncon­trol­lable obses­sion with nev­er end­ing eco­nom­ic growth.

Direct Action for Cli­mate Jus­tice — Resis­tance is Self Defense!

We all know the ter­ri­fy­ing sta­tis­tics: a mil­lion species extinct by 2050, 19 of the 20 hottest years on record since 1980, Green­land and Antarc­ti­ca melt­ing, droughts, floods, famines ? the G8 have had over 30 years to address cli­mate change and only suc­ceed­ed in pro­vid­ing tril­lions in sub­si­dies to the very indus­tries that are destroy­ing our plan­et and our future. And while the G8 con­tin­ues to line their pock­ets, island states dis­ap­pear and hun­dreds of thou­sands die as a result of the freak weath­er con­di­tions caused by their irra­tional and uncon­trol­lable obses­sion with nev­er end­ing eco­nom­ic growth.

We have a ten-year win­dow to act. As the mega­lo­ma­ni­ac G8 lead­ers meet in Ger­many, masked behind a bar­ri­er of fences and sol­diers, intent on lead­ing us fur­ther towards cat­a­stroph­ic and irre­versible cli­mate chaos, we must shout, scream and roar ‘no more’. Now is the time to take direct action and shut them down, them and their cli­mate crim­i­nal indus­try friends!

The 8th of June Inter­na­tion­al Day of Action Against Cli­mate Change and the G8 has been called by the Inter­na­tion­al Ris­ing Tide Net­work. This is a call for autonomous, decen­tral­ized actions appro­pri­ate for your town, city, or local area. Use this inter­na­tion­al day of action to sup­port local strug­gles against oil refiner­ies, gas pipelines, strip mines and coal-fired pow­er plants. Dis­rupt the finan­cial back­ers of the fos­sil fuel indus­try. Organ­ise work­shops to spread sus­tain­able post-petro­le­um liv­ing skills. Find a weak point in the infra­struc­ture of resource exploita­tion and throw a lit­er­al or sym­bol­ic wrench in the works. It’s time to vis­it your local pol­luters and give ’em hell!

We already know of actions planned across the UK, North Amer­i­ca, Ger­many, Cana­da and Aus­tralia and that’s just the start! By 8th June actions will be planned around the world. Pass this call out on to all envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice, cli­mate action, rad­i­cal sus­tain­abil­i­ty and relat­ed move­ments in all the G8 coun­tries and the Glob­al South.

Ris­ing Tide will cre­ate a col­lec­tion of out­reach and agit-prop mate­ri­als (includ­ing this call out in five dif­fer­ent lan­guages) that can be used by groups around the world to organ­ise local­ly. These mate­ri­als will be down­load­able from www.risingtide.org.uk and http://risingtidenorthamerica.org.

Direct action and civ­il dis­obe­di­ence are the ratio­nal response in this time of cri­sis. Sup­port the 8th of June Inter­na­tion­al Day of Direct Action against Cli­mate Change and the G8! Tell us about planned actions for cli­mate jus­tice being planned in your com­mu­ni­ty. Con­tact us — info@risingtide.org.uk and contact@risingtidenorthamerica.org

In June 2007 the G8 will under­stand the mean­ing of rebel­lion, revolt and rev­o­lu­tion. Their recipe for cat­a­stro­phe will be met with our world­wide resis­tance!

York Vikings go berserk over Trident

19.03.2007
A twelve strong group from York, dressed as Vikings, have suc­cess­ful­ly block­ad­ed both entrances to the Faslane nuclear sub­ma­rine base. The coor­di­nat­ed action com­plete­ly closed the base for half an hour this morn­ing. Four men and eight women were arrest­ed in the peace­ful protest.

Faslane Viking protest 1
Faslane Viking protest 2
Faslane Viking protest 3
19.03.2007
A twelve strong group from York, dressed as Vikings, have suc­cess­ful­ly block­ad­ed both entrances to the Faslane nuclear sub­ma­rine base. The coor­di­nat­ed action com­plete­ly closed the base for half an hour this morn­ing. Four men and eight women were arrest­ed in the peace­ful protest.

One of the pro­test­ers, Richard Lane, said “The Vikings slaugh­tered tens of thou­sands of peo­ple but they did so over half a mil­len­ni­um. Tri­dent could do the same in a minute.” Dave Tay­lor of York Green Par­ty said “What­ev­er hap­pened to the eth­i­cal for­eign pol­i­cy that New Labour once promised?” “There is noth­ing eth­i­cal about spend­ing bil­lions of pounds on weapons that the human race can­not afford to use,” he added.

The base is sub­ject to a year long cam­paign reject­ing nuclear weapons and, in par­tic­u­lar, the renew­al of Tri­dent. This has attract­ed a lot of inter­na­tion­al sup­port. So far, near­ly 600 peo­ple from all over the world have been arrest­ed in as many actions and block­ades.

4 anti-military activists from Spain poured gallons of red paint over themselves at Faslane

A group of 15 Span­ish activists from five dif­fer­ent areas of Spain, all belong­ing to the Span­ish Con­scien­cious Objec­tion Move­ment, arrived at Faslane for the week-end. With ban­ners, song and dance they protest­ed at the UK’s pos­ses­sion and deploy­ment of nuclear weapons.

Faslane red paint protest 2
Faslane red paint protest 3
Faslane red paint protest 1
A group of 15 Span­ish activists from five dif­fer­ent areas of Spain, all belong­ing to the Span­ish Con­scien­cious Objec­tion Move­ment, arrived at Faslane for the week-end. With ban­ners, song and dance they protest­ed at the UK’s pos­ses­sion and deploy­ment of nuclear weapons.

Last Thurs­day march 18th the British passed the updat­ing of their nuclear arse­nal, includ­ing the nuclear sub­marines nuclear­es with Tri­dent mis­siles with more destruc­tive pow­er (12 nuclear heads) than the bombs
thrown over Hirosi­ma and Nagasa­ki. The cost of this pro­grame goes up to 30.000 mil­lions of euros. These are real mass destruc­tion weapons

In view of this, anti­mil­i­tarist activists of difer­ent parts of the Span­ish State have trav­elled to the mil­i­tary base where this sub­marines are locat­ed in Faslane (Scot­land), to car­ry out an action of block­ade.
This anti­mil­i­tarist action is with­in the frame­work of a cam­paign that is tak­ing place since last octo­ber. Up to now there have been 579 peo­ple from all ovr the world arreested in sev­er­al actions of block­ade. Also,
in front of the mil­i­tary base, there is a peace camp (Faslane Peace Camp) to demand the dis­ar­ma­ment of the base and the non-pro­lif­er­a­tion of nuclear weapons. This Peace Camp has been oper­at­ing for 25 years.

AA-MOC has been work­ing for years to build a world with­out wars where Armies and weapons ‑par­tic­u­lary if they are nuclear- have no place, a world where the huge mil­i­tary expens­es (almost 18.000 mil­lions of euros
in the Span­ish State this year) are devot­ed to cov­er social neces­si­ties.

Today AA-MOC has bock­ad­ed the North gate of the Mil­i­tary Base of Faslane in Scot­land. To do so, two women and two men from Sala­man­ca, Madrid, Zaragoza and Ali­cante ‑sup­port­ed by oth­er activists of the State- have
poured red paint over them­selves. The red colour sym­bol­izes the suf­fer­ing and the blood­shed that these weapons of mass destruc­tion can cause. The paint has imped­ed the imme­di­ate deten­tion of the activists.
Final­ly they have been arrest­ed and moved to difer­ent police sta­tions. They were released ten hours lat­er with­out charges.

Tele­phone for inter­views: (34) 609.469.599 ó (34) 696.343.586
To dowm­load pho­tos: http://www.box.net/shared/1d8sqy8gcy
Video: http://www.box.net/shared/m1om1e29pc
Fur­ther info (span­ish): www.insumissia.org

http://www.faslane365.org

Faslane Peace Camp needs visitors!

Faslane Peace Camp recent­ly cel­e­brat­ed its 23rd year of direct action to oppose the Tri­dent nuclear sub­marines sta­tioned 30 miles north of Glas­gow. Vis­i­tors are always wel­come, for a day, a week, or longer!

Faslane Peace Camp recent­ly cel­e­brat­ed its 23rd year of direct action to oppose the Tri­dent nuclear sub­marines sta­tioned 30 miles north of Glas­gow. Vis­i­tors are always wel­come, for a day, a week, or longer!

Direc­tions: Train from Glas­gow Queen Street or 216 bus from Jamaica Street to Helens­burgh Cen­tral. Then catch the 316 bus to the peace camp.

For more info and to check the cur­rent sit­u­a­tion: 01436 820 901
faslanepeacecamp@hotmail.com

14 Landrovers covered in Paintstripper

Four­teen 4x4s were cov­ered in painstrip­per in a Land Rover Deal­er­ship near Here­ford in an action against cli­mate change. Slo­gans were also sprayed while the vehi­cles were left to ruin.

This action was tak­en to warn any deal­er­ship spe­cial­is­ing in these cars, that they are a tar­get. Dri­ving one of these vehi­cles is the equiv­e­lent to leav­ing the TV on for 32 years, cars like this must be stopped in their tracks.

Four­teen 4x4s were cov­ered in painstrip­per in a Land Rover Deal­er­ship near Here­ford in an action against cli­mate change. Slo­gans were also sprayed while the vehi­cles were left to ruin.

This action was tak­en to warn any deal­er­ship spe­cial­is­ing in these cars, that they are a tar­get. Dri­ving one of these vehi­cles is the equiv­e­lent to leav­ing the TV on for 32 years, cars like this must be stopped in their tracks.

Cli­mate Change is the most mas­sive glob­al­ly destruc­tive issue that is fac­ing us today, we can not wait for any­one else to take action but our­selves. The new dawn is com­ing for direct action in defence of the Earth. There will be no more tol­er­ance.

Earth Lib­er­a­tion Front

Climate Camp Meeting this weekend in Bristol, and Film

Last year saw 600 peo­ple gath­er in the shad­ow of Drax Pow­er Sta­tion for the ten day Camp For Cli­mate Action. This week­end in Bris­tol is the next nation­al plan­ning meet­ing, Sat­ur­day 17th and Sun­day 18th March. The venue is Bar­ton Hill Set­tle­ment which is 5 min from Lawrence Hill Sta­tion.

Last year saw 600 peo­ple gath­er in the shad­ow of Drax Pow­er Sta­tion for the ten day Camp For Cli­mate Action. This week­end in Bris­tol is the next nation­al plan­ning meet­ing, Sat­ur­day 17th and Sun­day 18th March. The venue is Bar­ton Hill Set­tle­ment which is 5 min from Lawrence Hill Sta­tion.

Any ques­tions, sug­ges­tions or pro­pos­als for the meet­ing can be sent to gath­er­ings [at] climatecamp.org.uk.

Last years camp was cap­tured on video and turned into a doc­u­men­tary by Cine Rebalde called Reclaim Pow­er. Copies are now avail­able on DVD in this coun­try from Ris­ing Tide and local groups work­ing towards this years cli­mate camp.

Those in Lon­don can check out the cli­mate camp film as part of two evenings of cli­mate chaos relat­ed films at the ram­pART social cen­tre (see http://rampart.co.nr for details). Also show­ing is the epic doc­u­men­tary The Plan­et, plus Glob­al Dim­ming and The Denial Machine. Addi­tion­al­ly there will be speak­ers and info.

More info on film at http://www.cinerebelde.org/site.php3?id_rubrique=22&lang=en
More info on camp for cli­mate action at http://climatecamp.org.uk

concrete lock-on tips (following Parliament Square blockade)

If they took only 20 mins to demol­ish each lock­on then your con­crete does­n’t sound up to scratch. Don’t mean to brag but a sim­i­lar lock on I once built took them 6 hours to demol­ish with jack ham­mers and angle grinders. In future you need to include some met­al rein­forc­ing mesh or crinkly rebar rods, either off­cuts of the prop­er stuff from builders skips or sawn up super­mar­ket trol­leys are ok. Includ­ing met­al mesh serves not only to bind the con­crete togeth­er but it spreads the shock­wave from jack ham­mers through­out the mate­r­i­al rather than allow­ing it to be con­cen­trat­ed at the chis­el tip. Also good to include some short lengths of blue 6mm rope which pre­vents the forces of dark­ness from being able to sep­a­rate the chunks of frag­ment­ed con­crete which real­ly winds them up. The oth­er real­ly impor­tant things are to use fresh­ly bought cement, be sure your con­crete mix is very thor­ough­ly mixed — absolute­ly no sandy or cemen­ty streaks vis­i­ble — and then poured in less than 20 mins or so and when pour­ing it, don’t do it all in one go but ram or tamp (jig­gle and shake) it in thor­ough­ly into the con­tain­er in stages with the end of a bit of 4 x 2. Your con­crete looks like it has voids in it which is always a con­sid­er­able weak­ness. Good luck with future coura­geous actions.

Lock-on after drillingIf they took only 20 mins to demol­ish each lock­on then your con­crete does­n’t sound up to scratch. Don’t mean to brag but a sim­i­lar lock on I once built took them 6 hours to demol­ish with jack ham­mers and angle grinders. In future you need to include some met­al rein­forc­ing mesh or crinkly rebar rods, either off­cuts of the prop­er stuff from builders skips or sawn up super­mar­ket trol­leys are ok. Includ­ing met­al mesh serves not only to bind the con­crete togeth­er but it spreads the shock­wave from jack ham­mers through­out the mate­r­i­al rather than allow­ing it to be con­cen­trat­ed at the chis­el tip. Also good to include some short lengths of blue 6mm rope which pre­vents the forces of dark­ness from being able to sep­a­rate the chunks of frag­ment­ed con­crete which real­ly winds them up. The oth­er real­ly impor­tant things are to use fresh­ly bought cement, be sure your con­crete mix is very thor­ough­ly mixed — absolute­ly no sandy or cemen­ty streaks vis­i­ble — and then poured in less than 20 mins or so and when pour­ing it, don’t do it all in one go but ram or tamp (jig­gle and shake) it in thor­ough­ly into the con­tain­er in stages with the end of a bit of 4 x 2. Your con­crete looks like it has voids in it which is always a con­sid­er­able weak­ness. Good luck with future coura­geous actions.

Nev­er ever use ordi­nary “build­ing” or soft sand which is only used for brick­lay­ing and will make very crumbly con­crete indeed. You should be using all in bal­last which is sharp sand already mixed with peb­bles. In some parts of the coun­try — most­ly the north — you can’t get this so will have to mix your own using SHARP sand and mixed size peb­bles from pea size up to the size of brazil nuts or so.

More Trident actions — London & Scotland (film & photos added)

Lon­don — Par­lia­ment Square: block­ade, Crit­i­cal Mass, inside House of Com­mons, demo & celebs ral­ly»»»»»»»»»

14.03.2007
Anti-Tri­dent pro­tes­tors today shut down Great George Street in Par­lia­ment Square at around 11:45 am today for about 15 min­utes in protest over the government’s plans to renew Britain’s nuclear capa­bil­i­ty. After police picked them up and moved them to the side, two of five lanes were reopened to traf­fic.

Lon­don — Par­lia­ment Square: block­ade, Crit­i­cal Mass, inside House of Com­mons, demo & celebs ral­ly»»»»»»»»»

Trident protest Parliament Square 1

Trident protest Parliament Square 314.03.2007
Anti-Tri­dent pro­tes­tors today shut down Great George Street in Par­lia­ment Square at around 11:45 am today for about 15 min­utes in protest over the government’s plans to renew Britain’s nuclear capa­bil­i­ty. After police picked them up and moved them to the side, two of five lanes were reopened to traf­fic.

9 peo­ple who have chained them­selves togeth­er using a mod­el of a Tri­dent Mis­sile and con­crete blocks, block­ing the roads around Par­lia­ment Square just hours before MPs are to decide on the replace­ment of the Tri­dent nuclear mis­sile sys­tem.

One of the pro­test­ers, Mell Har­ri­son from Bun­gay said “we were told that there would be a full and open debate but this has not hap­pened. Even some peo­ple who are cur­rent­ly in favour of Tri­dent are not hap­py about the way the debate has been con­duct­ed. This is an issue of inter­na­tion­al impor­tance and will not just affect us but leaves the spec­tre of nuclear holo­caust over gen­er­a­tions to come.”
She went on to say: “what we need for our secu­ri­ty is not a so called ‘inde­pen­dent’ deter­rent but an inde­pen­dent for­eign pol­i­cy”.

This action comes dur­ing an upsurge of anti-nuclear protests with near­ly 580 peo­ple arrest­ed since last Octo­ber, includ­ing 30 from the east­ern region, in a year long block­ade of the Faslane base where the nuclear sub­marines are kept and reg­u­lar actions at the Atom­ic Weapons Estab­lish­ment at Alder­mas­ton.
Trident Parliament square 4
Trident Parliament Square 5

they were strewn out across the whole road while sup­port­ers held a ban­ner ‘no tri­dent replace­ment’. traf­fic was redi­rect­ed and the road cleared of vehi­cles, and then police moved in and, despite the risk of caus­ing injury, man­han­dled the heavy blocks along with the pro­test­ers to the side of the road.

a spe­cial­ist team arrived and start­ed cut­ting away at the ‘tri­dent mis­sile’, while the activists were hand­ed notices by police telling them that they were tak­ing part in an ‘unau­tho­rised protest’ under the ‘seri­ous organ­ised crime and police act’ (soc­pa).

after about half an hour, two lanes of traf­fic were opened, and the three activists attached to the mis­sile were freed and arrest­ed. one of them had been slight­ly cut on her right hand dur­ing police attempts to release her.

a huge ham­mer drill was used on the first of the con­crete blocks. the block was mould­ed in a plas­tic bin with the paint­ed words ‘bin tri­dent’. press were moved well away and offi­cers blocked sight-lines. they claimed it was for health and safe­ty rea­sons, but con­tin­ued to allow traf­fic to pass by with­in feet of the oper­a­tion.

each block took a fur­ther twen­ty min­utes or so, and it was past four ‘o’ clock when the last of the pro­test­ers were removed. it is believed they are charged under the soc­pa leg­is­la­tion and for obstruc­tion of the high­way.

‘block the builders’ stage reg­u­lar block­ades at the alder­marston weapons lab­o­ra­to­ry and the next is planned for 19th march. they believe that the build­ing work at the lab has already start­ed for the next gen­er­a­tion of nuclear weapons and that today’s tri­dent vote is a sham.

more details avail­able at www.blockthebuilders.org.uk

Trident Parliament Square Critical Mass 1
Crit­i­cal Mass

The arrival of crit­i­cal mass livened things up and gave the legions of bored cops some­thing to do, albeit for a short time. At least two cyclists were told that if they ped­dled round the square again they would be arrest­ed. Sad­ly the sight of David Cameron being nicked on his bike as he cycled home was not to mate­ri­alise. He was far too busy show­ing off his green cre­den­tials by help­ing the gov­ern­ment make enough weapons to kill the entire plan­et twice over.

Inside House of Com­mons

As MPs debat­ed today over the UKs strate­gic nuclear deter­rence pro­gramme in the hours before a final deci­sion was made 3 peo­ple were arrest­ed in the House of Com­mons. They were just a few of the many across Britain who placed them­selves in the hands of police offi­cers to make their mes­sage, and that of the nations heard. Risk­ing their careers and their free­dom for their prin­ci­ples. Read more .…

3 peo­ple were arrest­ed yes­ter­day (13th march 2007) in the House of Com­mons, where from 1pm MPs were gath­er­ing to debate the issue of the UKs strate­gic nuclear defence pro­gramme and the replace­ment of Tri­dent, our cur­rent nuclear weapons sys­tem.

The debate may have opened with a pathet­i­cal­ly weak, lame dog of an argu­ment from Mar­garet Beck­ett, how­ev­er some inspir­ing speech­es were giv­en by the likes of Jere­my Cory­byn, Micheal Meach­er, John McDon­nell, Nigel Grif­fiths and many, many more.

At approx­i­mate­ly 6pm, 5 hours into the debate, two peace pro­test­ers in the view­ing gallery stood up hold­ing a peace flag. Though they remained both silent and sta­t­ic they were imme­di­ate­ly noticed my MPs, some of whom point­ed (and even smiled). The two pro­test­ers (one 18 year old girl and 21 year old guy, both stu­dents from Berk­shire) were jumped on imme­di­ate­ly by guards and escort­ed out. The 18 year old being car­ried by out secu­ri­ty. They received much applause and sup­port from peo­ple in the gallery and sub­se­quent­ly a gen­tle­man was arrest­ed for clap­ping.

One woman raised objec­tions as to the rough treat­ment the two young peo­ple received; thank­ful­ly she was not also arrest­ed for doing so.

Once removed from the view­ing area they were escort­ed to the police rooms where they were informed they had no right to a solic­i­tor or deten­tion review as would be the case out­side of par­lia­ment.
How­ev­er they were only detained for under 2 hours and were let out short­ly after the vote results was announced.

Twelve minute film shows celebs’ press-call in the morn­ing, the lock-on and par­lia­ment square block­ade of the after­noon, and the cyclists’ ‘fish on bicy­cle’ demo in the evening, fol­lowed by police harass­ment as the ‘offi­cial’ cnd protest fin­ish­es:
Video wmv ver­sion — video/x‑ms-wmv 17M
mp4 ver­sion — video/mp4 15M

Scot­land — Faslane nuclear base»»»»»»»»»»

There were four arrest­ed blockad­ing Faslane this morn­ing and a good pres­ence with ban­ners. Mean­while Faslane Peace Camp hung a ban­ner say­ing “What­ev­er the vote Tri­dent is still wrong” on the Scot­tish Par­lia­ment build­ing. 5 were arrest­ed.

I’m sure there will be more to come today and if the Par­lia­ment vote to con­tin­ue with nuclear mad­ness then Direct Action will only increase until they see sense.

Scot­land — Scot­tish par­lia­ment»»»»»»»»»»»>

At 8 o’clock this morn­ing activists attempt­ed to occu­py the roof of the Scot­tish Par­li­ment at Holy­rood. Whilst four activists were arrest­ed before they could reach the roof a lone activist man­aged to reach the canopy over the front of the build­ing. He unfurled a ban­ner read­ing, “WHATEVER THEY VOTE TRIDENT IS STILL WRONG”.
At around one o’clock the Police brought in a cher­ry pick­er and a spe­cial­ist police climb­ing team. They pro­ceed­ed to cut the ban­ner down whilst the coura­geous climber did a flit accross the roof. He was unfor­tu­a­nate­ly arrest­ed at the back of the Par­li­ment build­ing.

A sup­port­er on the ground was also arrest­ed for shout­ing sup­port to the activist, appa­rant­ly he was “incit­ing a breach of the peace”.

All those arrest­ed are to be held over night to appear in Edin­burgh Sher­riffs court tomor­row.

And from last few days:

Scot­land — MP’s office»»»»»»»»»»»>

9 Mar 2007

This morn­ing at 9:30am, pro-dis­ar­ma­ment activists occu­pied Alis­tair Darling’s (MP Edin­burgh West) con­stituen­cy office on Rut­land Square with a life-size inflat­able Tri­dent mis­sile. The mis­sile was inflat­ed as much as it could be giv­en the con­fined space, and left no room even to get to the door. The activists then, after they felt their voic­es had been heard, attempt­ed to deflate the mis­sile and get it up the stairs.

Unfor­tu­nate­ly, Alis­tair Dar­ling was not in his con­stituen­cy office (although Sarah Boy­ack MSP was)- con­ve­nient giv­en the fact that it should have been the last oppor­tu­ni­ty for con­stituents to lob­by him ahead the Tri­dent replace­ment vote. Very demo­c­ra­t­ic, Dar­ling. The activists then demon­strat­ed out­side the office with the mis­sile ful­ly inflat­ed, block­ing off the entrance to it.

The pur­pose of the action was to high­light the MP’s irre­spon­si­ble sid­ing with Tony Blair on the issue of replac­ing Tri­dent, and an attempt to put pres­sure on him to vote accord­ing to his con­stituents’ wish­es, as opposed to tow­ing the par­ty line.

The activists cov­er a broad range of anti-Tri­dent groups and hoped to influ­ence the par­lia­men­tary vote on Tri­dent replace­ment due to take place on Wednes­day 14th March. One activist has said: ‘If MPs are unwill­ing to acknowl­edge the opin­ions of their con­stituents, then con­stituents must make it a pri­or­i­ty to express their views to their MPs – through direct action if nec­es­sary.’

Anoth­er activist com­ment­ed: ‘The issue of Tri­dent replace­ment is big­ger than any MPs polit­i­cal agen­da or careerist aspi­ra­tions and big­ger than Tony Blair’s lega­cy. Dis­ar­ma­ment starts right here in the UK, we should be an exam­ple to fol­low not inter­na­tion­al bul­lies using nuclear weapons as bar­gain­ing tools.’

Join us at Faslane, 8am, Wednes­day 14th March to demon­strate against Tri­dent replace­ment and all nuclear weapons.

NO NEW NUCLEAR WEAPONS!

http://www.tridentvoteday.org.uk
http://www.faslane365.org

Lon­don — by Big Ben»»»»»»»»»»»»»»

Trident banner hung by Big Ben 1
13.3.2007

PRESS RELEASE

Green­peace vol­un­teers have scaled a crane next to Big Ben and hung a huge ban­ner from it declar­ing ‘TONY loves WMD’.

The protest comes as MPs pre­pare to vote tomor­row on whether to renew Britain’s nuclear weapons sys­tem and com­mit Britain to nuclear arms for the next 50 years. The four vol­un­teers aim to occu­py the crane until the vote takes place. They hope to tele­phone as many MPs as pos­si­ble urg­ing them not to sup­port new weapons of mass destruc­tion.

One of the vol­un­teers on the crane, Cat Dorey, said:‘Trident is a cold war rel­ic designed to destroy Russ­ian cities. If MPs buck­le under pres­sure from Tony Blair and vote to renew it, the reper­cus­sions will be felt around the world. We can’t oppose pro­lif­er­a­tion of WMD if we’re build­ing them at home.’

She con­tin­ued: ‘The gov­ern­ment promised a nation­al debate on Tri­dent but this is being rushed through quick­er than a shot­gun wed­ding. The real threat is cli­mate change and the bil­lions ear­marked for Tri­dent could help make Britain the world’s first low car­bon econ­o­my. We’re phon­ing MPs from the crane and ask­ing them to respect the will of the coun­try and vote against Tony Blair’s WMD pro­gramme.’

A recent poll com­mis­sioned by Chan­nel Four found that three quar­ters of the pub­lic oppose gov­ern­ment replac­ing Tri­dent now.

A report from Green­peace released last week esti­mat­ed the true cost of build­ing a new gen­er­a­tion of nuclear weapons to replace Tri­dent will be at least £76bn and could rise as high as £100 bil­lion. These fig­ures con­trast stark­ly with the £15–20bn fig­ure the gov­ern­ment has pre­vi­ous­ly stat­ed will be the cost of Tri­dent replace­ment. The report details how gov­ern­ment has spun the fig­ures by only includ­ing the design and build­ing costs of the sub­marines and not the far high­er price of main­tain­ing and devel­op­ing the nuclear weapons sys­tem over its life­time.

The cam­paign to oppose new nuclear weapons sys­tems has received sup­port across the polit­i­cal spec­trum

Kofi Annan says of Tony Blair’s pol­i­cy: ‘They should not imag­ine that this will be accept­ed as com­pat­i­ble with the Nuclear non-Pro­lif­er­a­tion Treaty.’

For­mer shad­ow defence sec­re­tary Michael Ancram says: ‘The threat of using nuclear weapons is not only illog­i­cal but incred­i­ble’ ‘the need for gen­uine­ly inde­pen­dent alter­na­tive and flex­i­ble non-nuclear deter­rence is if any­thing greater.’

Pro­fes­sor Stephen Hawk­ing says: ‘To replace Tri­dent would make it more dif­fi­cult to get arms reduc­tion. It would also be a waste of mon­ey because there are no cir­cum­stances in which we would use it inde­pen­dent­ly.’

Mohammed ElBa­radei, the head of the UN nuclear watch­dog said in Lon­don recent­ly: ‘Britain can­not expect oth­er coun­tries to refrain from acquir­ing nuclear weapons if it upgrades its tri­dent nuclear weapons sys­tem.’

»»»»»»»>demos in oth­er parts of coun­try too — see indymedia.org.uk or else­where Trident Parliament Square demo