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Press Releases & Updates 2000
14th August 2000
Biased Police Are Ignoring Crime, Say Activists
Nine More Arrests at Ploughshares Camp
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As nine more activists were arrested for a variety of alleged offences the
Trident Ploughshares campaign has accused Strathclyde Police of bias and of
failing to deal with crime on their own patch.
The campaign acknowledges the good relationships that exist between the
activists and police officers but is seeking a further step in the right
direction. Their letter to the Chief Constable says:
"If Strathclyde Police officers intervene by arresting and bodily removing protesters from a
blockade of a gate at Faslane or Coulport in order to allow base workers to
enter that base, they are not acting impartially but have chosen to confer
"lawful business" status on the Trident operation,... It is not good
enough to say that Trident is a government operation or sanctioned by
parliament. Many partisan actions by police in the former Yugoslavia and
elsewhere in actively supporting or turning a blind eye to ethnic cleansing
or murder had governmental sanction... To put it as bluntly as possible
mass destruction is being planned on your patch and you seem not to be
interested. We are deeply frustrated that police and legal authorities
consistently turn a deaf ear to our pleas for their intervention."
Last night’s arrestees were: Brian Quail (62), a retired teacher from
Glasgow, Carol Kirby (35), from Oxford, David Mackenzie (56), an
educational consultant from Larbert in Scotland, Jane Tallents (42), from
Helensburgh in Scotland, Ulla Røder (45), a peace campaigner from Odense in
Denmark and member of the "Trident Three", David Heller (24), a geographer
from Hull, Georgina Smith, a longtime anti-nuclear protester from the
Highlands, Niels Herre de Boer (26), from Holland, Frances Howe (21), a
student from Brighton. These brought to 158 the total of arrests so far at
the Trident Ploughshares disarmament camp which concludes today.
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