Site Map


2001
» News index 2001

Previous:
3rd October 2001
» Terrifying Evidence From Defence Expert Witness in Trident Trial

Next:
4th October 2001
» Activist Wins Appeal Against Maverick Magistrates’s Sentence

News Index
» 1998
» 1999
» 2000
» 2002
» 2003
» 2004
» 2005
» 2006
» 2007
» 2008

Contact details
Trident Ploughshares,
42-46 Bethel St, Norwich NR2 1NR
0845 45 88 366
Email addresses:
» TP
» Media
» Newsletter
» Legal Support
» Website


Press Releases & Updates 2001

3rd October 2001

Trial Of Trident Disarmers Could End Today

Police Witness Describes Lax Security at Barrow Submarine Dock

After a day in which the court heard again about lax security at the dockyard where Trident nuclear submarines were built, the adjourned trial in Manchester Crown Court of Trident submarine disarmers Rosie James and Rachel Wenham could end this afternoon.

On 1st February 1999 Rachel and Rosie swam to and boarded the Trident nuclear weapon submarine HMS Vengeance, then docked at Barrow-in-Furness. They draped banners, painted slogans and damaged testing equipment on the conning tower.

Yesterday, the 2nd October, the Crown case closed with the testimony of Michael Warner, the detective who interviewed the two activists. Under cross-examination from defence barrister Marguerite Russell the officer confirmed that security was so slack on the night in question that any number of people could have slipped away unnoticed. He told Rachel that her dismantling work was on a "more permanent basis than normal".

Giving her testimony Rosie told the court their action had been taken against a backdrop of heightened international tension, with Operation Desert Fox ongoing and Foreign Secretary Robin Cook not ruling out nuclear attacks on Iraq by the UK. February 1999 was the last chance, she believed at the time, to stop HMS Vengeance leaving Barrow. This would have cut the available nuclear strike force 25%. Had she and Rachel had terrorist intentions they could easily have planted mines and slipped away again.

In her testimony Rachel said that Trident was not an ornament, it was there to be used. That is why they had to act. She described how it would be legal to slash the tyres of a car bomb: that was all they had done, they had damaged the transport system of a dreadful weapon before it could be used. When the prosecution suggested that they had acted for publicity, Rachel was adamant. "At the time I did it to stop Vengeance from going out. The action spoke for itself".

It is expected that the defence will call only one more witness, Professor Paul Rogers of Bradford University. Unless the final speeches and the judge’s summing up are very long it is likely that the jury will at least begin deliberations today.


 Printer friendly version

Search the Website


 

Trident Ploughshares, 42-46 Bethel St, Norwich NR2 1NR
Tel: 0845 45 88 366
info@tridentploughshares.org