McDonalds vegan protest picnic

On the 30th March Ani­mal Rights cam­paign­ers protest­ed inside the McDon­alds restau­rant in the city cen­tre of Cam­bridge, the pro­test­ers were dressed as cows and ate food that does not con­tain ani­mal prod­ucts. They held a ban­ner and dis­trib­uted leaflets. The event fell with­in Ani­mal Aid’s veg­gie month and aimed to high­light the issues asso­ci­at­ed with the con­sump­tion of meat, eggs, and dairy prod­ucts.

On the 30th March Ani­mal Rights cam­paign­ers protest­ed inside the McDon­alds restau­rant in the city cen­tre of Cam­bridge, the pro­test­ers were dressed as cows and ate food that does not con­tain ani­mal prod­ucts. They held a ban­ner and dis­trib­uted leaflets. The event fell with­in Ani­mal Aid’s veg­gie month and aimed to high­light the issues asso­ci­at­ed with the con­sump­tion of meat, eggs, and dairy prod­ucts.

The pro­test­ers hope to high­light the ben­e­fits of a diet free from ani­mal prod­ucts includ­ing the high­ly top­i­cal issue of child obe­si­ty that is linked to sat­u­rat­ed ani­mal fats. A 17-year-old cam­paign­er from the group said, “McDon­alds and oth­er fast-food out­lets have become syn­ony­mous with unhealthy food, a great way chil­dren and young peo­ple can improve their health is the pro­gres­sion to a bal­anced plant based diet”

The cam­paign­ers also wish to high­light the fact that ani­mal agri­cul­ture is a huge con­tribut­ing fac­tor to cli­mate change. “A report by The Food and Agri­cul­tur­al Organ­i­sa­tion Of the Unit­ed Nations says that ani­mal agri­cul­ture caus­es more green­house gas emis­sions than cars, when the UN is say­ing this, sure­ly its time for envi­ron­men­tal­ists to sit up and take note”

How­ev­er the focus of their cam­paigns is not for­got­ten in all of this, ani­mals, who are kept in ter­ri­ble con­di­tions, in most cas­es on fac­to­ry farms. “Britain is often con­sid­ered a nation of ani­mal lovers, yet we still treat ani­mals in a way we would not deem accept­able for pris­on­ers of war, this is true even if the prod­uct meets so-called ‘eth­i­cal’ stan­dards”.

The group hope peo­ple will think about cut­ting down on their con­sump­tion of ani­mal prod­ucts or cut them out com­plete­ly, free veg­e­tar­i­an starter kits are avail­able from PETA (Peo­ple for the Eth­i­cal Treat­ment of Ani­mals) from http://www.vegetarianstarterkit.co.uk

Peo­ple inter­est­ed in help­ing ani­mals who live in Cam­bridge, may wish to join Ani­mal Rights Cam­bridge, who are open to new mem­bers and meet on the 4th Mon­day in the Month at the Bath House just off Mill Road.

The Ani­mal Rights Cam­bridge web site is http://animalrightscambridge.bravehost.com/

Climate Change: Corporate Criminals ExxonMobil (Esso) Targeted in Surrey

Around 100 peo­ple turned up on a glo­ri­ous­ly sun­ny Good Fri­day at Exxon­Mo­bil (Esso)‘s UK head­quar­ters in Leather­head, Sur­rey for an East­er action organ­ised by Cam­paign Against Cli­mate Change. The vig­il and protest ran for 24 hours, start­ing from Thurs­day ear­ly evening. There was a chilled-out fes­ti­val vibe on Fri­day, with colour­ful cos­tumes and ban­ners, live acoustic music, speak­ers, poet­ry, food stalls and face-paint­ing.

Esso HQ protest 1Around 100 peo­ple turned up on a glo­ri­ous­ly sun­ny Good Fri­day at Exxon­Mo­bil (Esso)‘s UK head­quar­ters in Leather­head, Sur­rey for an East­er action organ­ised by Cam­paign Against Cli­mate Change. The vig­il and protest ran for 24 hours, start­ing from Thurs­day ear­ly evening. There was a chilled-out fes­ti­val vibe on Fri­day, with colour­ful cos­tumes and ban­ners, live acoustic music, speak­ers, poet­ry, food stalls and face-paint­ing.

Exxon­Mo­bil (Esso) has for years been using its vast wealth to run a cyn­i­cal glob­al cam­paign of fund­ing junk sci­ence to spread dis­in­for­ma­tion and delib­er­ate­ly mud­dy the waters on our under­stand­ing of cli­mate change, and using its clout with the Bush admin­is­tra­tion to block recog­ni­tion of cli­mate change and glob­al action to reduce emis­sions.

See Cam­paign Against Cli­mate Change web­site for more details:

www.campaigncc.org

For more on evil Exxon:

www.exxonsecrets.org
www.exxposeexxon.com
www.campaigncc.org/stopexxon.html

M For Media Malarkey — SchNEWS Alternative Media Gathering 2007

M For Media Malarkey — the SchNEWS Alter­na­tive Media Gath­er­ing 2007

May 11–13th 2007: Cow­ley Club, 12 Lon­don Rd, Brighton, BN1 4JA

You are invit­ed to SchNEWS’ first mul­ti-media-activist gath­er­ing. As well as a com­ing togeth­er of those already involved in web, video, print, pho­tog­ra­phy, and radio in alternative/independent media – as well as activists who use this media — this event will also be for new peo­ple want­i­ng to get involved. Start­ing on Fri­day evening and going through to Sun­day evening, there will be a range of dis­cus­sions, hands-on prac­ti­cal work­shops in the var­i­ous media, as well as stalls and screen­ings through­out the week­end to show­case what’s cur­rent­ly being pro­duced.

M For Media Malarkey — the SchNEWS Alter­na­tive Media Gath­er­ing 2007

May 11–13th 2007: Cow­ley Club, 12 Lon­don Rd, Brighton, BN1 4JA

You are invit­ed to SchNEWS’ first mul­ti-media-activist gath­er­ing. As well as a com­ing togeth­er of those already involved in web, video, print, pho­tog­ra­phy, and radio in alternative/independent media – as well as activists who use this media — this event will also be for new peo­ple want­i­ng to get involved. Start­ing on Fri­day evening and going through to Sun­day evening, there will be a range of dis­cus­sions, hands-on prac­ti­cal work­shops in the var­i­ous media, as well as stalls and screen­ings through­out the week­end to show­case what’s cur­rent­ly being pro­duced.

After dis­cus­sions amongst SchNEWS, as well as oth­ers’ imput, about what aspects of inde­pen­dent media should be high­light­ed dur­ing the gath­er­ing, sev­er­al key points have emerged:

* Pro­mot­ing cam­paigns and mobil­is­ing com­mu­ni­ties: eval­u­at­ing and improv­ing the way inde­pen­dent media helps the cam­paigns and actions it cov­ers, as well as how cam­paigns use var­i­ous media them­selves – with speak­ers from cam­paigns talk­ing about their expe­ri­ences, and those work­ing in alter­na­tive media.

* Improv­ing Skills: Acknowl­edg­ing that many peo­ple in alter­na­tive media come from ‘activist’ back­grounds, and are often get­ting by with very lit­tle ‘train­ing’. For video activists it may be about the bat­tles with tech­nol­o­gy to pro­duce and dis­trib­ute video, for writ­ers it may mean they have lim­it­ed research or ‘jour­nal­is­tic’ skills, and those cre­at­ing leaflets/flyers/publications would often ben­e­fit with more knowl­edge about design etc. There will be work­shops and dis­cus­sions to help improve skills in these and oth­er rel­e­vant areas.

The gath­er­ing will accom­mo­date for the fact that while both these top­ics, and many oth­ers, are com­mon to all media, and many peo­ple work in sev­er­al media — there is also areas spe­cif­ic to each — so there­fore some of the key ses­sions will start with the whole group togeth­er, then split off into the var­i­ous types to dis­cuss aspects in more detail.

As well as this there will be talks from those involved in Pirate Radio, mobile Indy­media set-ups for such events as the G8 protest in Scot­land, and more to be con­firmed.

While some speak­ers are con­firmed, if you have rel­e­vant expe­ri­ence in these areas and would like to be involved, please con­tact SchNEWS now.

Like­wise if you want to come along, and need accom­mo­da­tion, con­tact SchNEWS — we need to know num­bers as soon as, so please give us fair notice.

The event will be free/donation, and veg­an food will be avail­able dur­ing the week­end in the Cow­ley Club.

email schnews@brighton.co.uk tel 01273 685 913
Keep check­ing www.schnews.org.uk for updates.

Climate Camp How to Deliver Direct Action Workshops Workshop in Oxford

We have space for some more peo­ple to attend a small week­end work­shop deliv­ered by Seeds for Change, on HOW TO DELIVER direct action train­ings for cli­mate activism. The idea is that peo­ple come to this, get trained up on how to give train­ings on direct action tac­tics, talk­ing to the media/cops, some legal stuff, quick con­sen­sus deci­sion mak­ing, maybe tri­pod usage etc… So that they can then go off and train peo­ple up in the run up to the Camp for Cli­mate Action (14–21 August).

We have space for some more peo­ple to attend a small week­end work­shop deliv­ered by Seeds for Change, on HOW TO DELIVER direct action train­ings for cli­mate activism. The idea is that peo­ple come to this, get trained up on how to give train­ings on direct action tac­tics, talk­ing to the media/cops, some legal stuff, quick con­sen­sus deci­sion mak­ing, maybe tri­pod usage etc… So that they can then go off and train peo­ple up in the run up to the Camp for Cli­mate Action (14–21 August).

This way we can max­imise the effec­tive­ness of our actions, and try to share the work­load.

Can you come? It’d be over the week­end of 14–15th April, at the Oxford Action Resource Cen­tre, Princes St, East Oxford.

( http://www.streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=452768&y=205877&z=1&sv=princes+st&st=6&tl=Princes+Street,+Oxford,+OX4&searchp=newsearch.srf&mapp=newmap.srf)

Crash space pro­vid­ed.
Let us know as soon as pos­si­ble at:
actionsupport@climatecamp.org.uk

Action Sup­port at Cli­mate Camp
http://www.climatecamp.org.uk

Cambridge GM Crop Trial — meeting (2nd April) & protest walk (14th April)

7.30 pm Mon­day 2nd April
Emmanuel Unit­ed Reform Church, Trump­ing­ton St.

Speak­ers:
Michael Anto­niou, read­er in Mol­e­c­u­lar Genet­ics at Guy’s Hos­pi­tal Med­ical School

GM free Britain - now or never7.30 pm Mon­day 2nd April
Emmanuel Unit­ed Reform Church, Trump­ing­ton St.

Speak­ers:
Michael Anto­niou, read­er in Mol­e­c­u­lar Genet­ics at Guy’s Hos­pi­tal Med­ical School
Hele­na Paul, chair of GM Freeze
Clare Oxbor­row, Real Food Cam­paign, Nation­al Friends of the Earth

Tri­als of GM pota­toes have been giv­en the go-ahead to be plant­ed from March 30th, at the Nation­al Insti­tute of Agri­cul­tur­al Botany (NIAB) in North Cam­bridge, on behalf of multi­na­tion­al firm BASF.

These are the first GM crop tri­al in Eng­land in the last three years.
If they go ahead unop­posed it gives a green light to the biotech indus­try to push for fur­ther tri­als.

Sim­i­lar tri­als in The Nether­lands were recent­ly stopped in the courts due to a lack of con­trolled test­ing and
envi­ron­men­tal impact assess­ments. A recent appli­ca­tion for tri­als in Ire­land was can­celled after a pub­lic cam­paign
and the set­ting of strict con­di­tions by the Irish gov­ern­ment.

This meet­ing aims to empow­er peo­ple with more knowl­edge of the GM debate.

Organ­ised by Cam­bridge GM Con­cern
e‑mail gmfreecambridge@lists.riseup.net

A fur­ther date for your diary: there will be a Protest Walk on Sat­ur­day 14th April at the site of the tri­als. Details will be post­ed on Cam­bridge Indy­media short­ly.

EXPOSE EXXON DAY 5–6th April

24 hours of protest at Exxon (Esso) HQ,
5.00 pm Thurs­day 5th April to 5.00 pm Good Fri­day, April 6th.

Mass Action 2.00 pm Fri­day

esso logo 1 subvert24 hours of protest at Exxon (Esso) HQ,
5.00 pm Thurs­day 5th April to 5.00 pm Good Fri­day, April 6th.

Mass Action 2.00 pm Fri­day

FAT CAT’S PARTY
CLIMATE VICTIMS’ VIGIL

Music, Street The­atre, Work­shops, Speak­ers

Come and tar­get the ulti­mate Glob­al Warm­ing Vil­lain More info on Exxon here.

Exxon HQ is South of Lon­don on the North­ern out­skirts of Leather­head, about 20 min­utes walk from Leather­head Rail­way Sta­tion (45 min­utes by train from Water­loo). See map here or close-up here

Floor­space avail­able overnight (details here): if you would like acco­mo­da­tion overnight for the 5th-6th, it will help to email us at info@campaigncc.org with “OVERNIGHT EXXON” in the sub­ject line. Please indi­cate, also, whether you would like to vol­un­teer for a shift at the overnight vig­il out­side Exxon HQ. A minibus will pick peo­ple up from Exxon HQ on Thurs­day evening and take them to the acco­mo­da­tion (and back in the morn­ing).

Cycle against Exxon : a cycle protest will leave from under Water­loo bridge on the South Bank at 100.am, Fri­day (from there it is 20 miles to join the protest at Exxon­Mo­bil HQ).

»> Draft Sched­ule with more details here.

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

Anti-Trident Protest at Atomic Weapons Establishment — 19th March

Almost thir­ty demon­stra­tors braved the chilly ear­ly morn­ing weath­er at the gates of the Atom­ic Weapons Estab­lish­ment in Alder­mas­ton, Berk­shire — Britain’s nuclear bomb fac­to­ry — to protest against Par­lia­men­t’s deci­sion last Wednes­day to renew Tri­dent, and against the con­struc­tion and devel­op­ment work that has been going on all the while at the site, even before any demo­c­ra­t­ic deci­sion has been made on the future of Britain’s nuclear war­heads. Par­tic­u­lar­ly notice­able is the work on the Ori­on laser, which is designed to cir­cum­vent the Com­pre­hen­sive Test Ban Treaty and facil­i­tate the devel­op­ment and test­ing of a new gen­er­a­tion of nuclear war­heads, in con­tra­ven­tion of the Nuclear Non-Pro­lif­er­a­tion Treaty.

Peace flagsAlmost thir­ty demon­stra­tors braved the chilly ear­ly morn­ing weath­er at the gates of the Atom­ic Weapons Estab­lish­ment in Alder­mas­ton, Berk­shire — Britain’s nuclear bomb fac­to­ry — to protest against Par­lia­men­t’s deci­sion last Wednes­day to renew Tri­dent, and against the con­struc­tion and devel­op­ment work that has been going on all the while at the site, even before any demo­c­ra­t­ic deci­sion has been made on the future of Britain’s nuclear war­heads. Par­tic­u­lar­ly notice­able is the work on the Ori­on laser, which is designed to cir­cum­vent the Com­pre­hen­sive Test Ban Treaty and facil­i­tate the devel­op­ment and test­ing of a new gen­er­a­tion of nuclear war­heads, in con­tra­ven­tion of the Nuclear Non-Pro­lif­er­a­tion Treaty.

The action was called by Block the Builders, fresh from their suc­cess­ful block­ade of Par­lia­ment Square in Lon­don on Wednes­day. Amongst those present on Mon­day were the Uni­ver­si­ty of Kent Stu­dent CND — mak­ing their debut at Alder­mas­ton; the knit­ting grannies; and Jane from Bris­tol, who went to school local­ly and was cel­e­brat­ing her 85th birth­day; and of course mass­es of police! The sto­ry was cov­ered by the New­bury Week­ly News, who were par­tic­u­lar­ly intrigued by the knit­ting grannies:

http://www.newburytoday.co.uk/News/Article.aspx?articleID=3997

The next planned block­ade and protest at Alder­mas­ton has been called by Tri­dent Ploughshares for Tues­day 10th April (just after East­er week­end). Please come along and bring your mates too, and help keep up the pres­sure!

More details:
http://www.tridentploughshares.org/events.php3#1477
http://www.blockthebuilders.org.uk/index.php

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!

Camp Titnore needs your help!

Camp Tit­nore near Wor­thing in Sus­sex could do with some com­mit­ted cam­paign­ers to come and lend a hand. Com­ing up to a year in res­i­dence (May 28) the camp could do with some new blood. Be part of group aim­ing to stop Tescos and oth­er scum-bags trash one of the last remain­ing ancient wood­lands on the Sus­sex coastal plain.

Camp Tit­nore near Wor­thing in Sus­sex could do with some com­mit­ted cam­paign­ers to come and lend a hand. Com­ing up to a year in res­i­dence (May 28) the camp could do with some new blood. Be part of group aim­ing to stop Tescos and oth­er scum-bags trash one of the last remain­ing ancient wood­lands on the Sus­sex coastal plain.

We could do with some new camp mem­bers down Tit­nore way. This is a very well defend­ed site, but vet­er­an anti-road cam­paign­ers as well as new blood would be real­ly wel­come. With sum­mer round the cor­ner this is a beau­ti­ful part of the coun­try and the camp ben­e­fits from a well organ­ised sup­port group in the near­by estate, Wor­thing and Brighton. The for­est eco-sys­tem, plus lake is threat­ened by 850 homes, a new Tescos and attached busi­ness units. An evic­tion order has been in place since Novem­ber, but as devel­op­ment plans are stalled, an actu­al attempt­ed evic­tion could be months fur­ther down the line.

http://www.protectourwoodland.co.uk