
Press Releases & Updates 1999
22nd November 1999
Irish Activist Calls on Britain to Decommission Trident
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Appearing in Helensburgh District Court today Irish citizen and trained
nurse Mary Kelly criticised the British Government for failing to set a
timetable for the decommissioning of its illegal nuclear weapons. She had
been charged with breach of the peace following her participation in
February in a blockade of Faslane naval base.
Conducting her own defence she noted that every news bulletin carried an
item about the decommissioning of IRA weapons. Along with other peaceful
nations Ireland suffered from the threat of the UK’s nuclear arsenal. She
said it was time the equal attention and applied equal pressure was applied
to the urgent need for the Nuclear Weapons States to begin nuclear weapon
decommissioning.
During cross-examination by Kelly, two Strathclyde police offers, Sergeant
Joseph Logan and Sergeant Stuart Ogilvie, made the intriguing claim that
they were not aware that there were nuclear weapons inside Faslane.
In summing up Kelly asked JP Scullion to "continue that pioneering and
brave precedent set by Sheriff Margaret Gimblett * and uphold international
law." Scullion found her guilty and in view of the expense she had been put
to attend court, fined her only £20.
A Trident Ploughshares spokesperson said:
"Mary gave a brilliant summary of the moral and legal basis for the
struggle against Trident. Unfortunately, Helensburgh District Court still
fails to get the point. The ongoing direct action and the trials in the
pipeline will give it plenty more chances to get its legal act together."
* On September 22nd 1999 Sheriff Margaret Gimblett acquitted three Trident
Ploughshares activists, who had disarmed the Trident barge "Maytime", on
all the charges against them on the grounds that their action was justified
since Trident presented an active threat that was illegal under
international law.
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