
Press Releases & Updates 2001
23rd April 2001
Trident Ploughshares Activists Reclaim the Law
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At courts today in Scotland and England Trident Ploughshares campaigners
have been re-asserting the primacy of moral and humanitarian law as they
defended themselves on charges relating to their disarmament actions at the
Clyde nuclear weapons bases.
In Helensburgh District Court Barbara McGregor, an actor and artist from
Glasgow, was charged with breach of the peace for her involvement in the
"Crimebusters" blockade of Faslane in February 1999. She said that she had
been carrying out her duty under the Nuremberg principles. It was Trident
which breached the peace. Since the shameful verdict of the High Court in
March the law itself was being held hostage to violence. The court might
see her action as illegal but she stood by it. One of her witnesses, Morag
Balfour from Glenrothes, explained that at the blockade they were placing
their bodies as a physical objection to the tyranny of Trident. Before the
court could intervene Morag sang a verse of the song they were singing on
the day and supporters in the public benches joined in.
Barbara Maver, from
Edinburgh, claimed that her action at the same blockade had caused no
distress to anyone -the atmosphere had been one of fun and frivolity. Both
were found guilty and fined £100. At the end of the proceedings the
supporters graced the exit of the court officials with more of Morag’s song.
Earlier, charges against Grace Nicol, from Edinburgh, and Warren Canham
from Lanarkshire, relating to the disarmament camp in August 1999, were
dropped. In Warren’s case this was due to the complete lack of any
prosecution case and in Grace’s because of the poor and contradictory
quality of the police evidence.
Meanwhile, veteran campaigner Joy Mitchell of Berwick appeared in her local
Magistrates’ Court to account for unpaid fine incurred for cutting the
perimeter fence at Coulport. She was sentenced to 24 hours in police
custody but when she was sent down the police queried the precise nature of
the sentence and eventually some higher authority authorised her immediate
release.
A supporter at the Helensburgh Court said: "It’s thrilling to see the
increasing confidence of these Trident resisters as they argue against
their case in court. They have the court visibly wilting as they bring in
common sense, morality and humanitarian law and refuse to be fobbed off
with nonsense."
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