
Press Releases & Updates 2002
3rd February 2002
News Report
Clergy Court Prison Over Nuclear Base
by Stephen Fraser, Scotland on Sunday
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Clergymen are planning to force sheriffs to send them to jail as part of a
new wave of direct action against the Faslane nuclear base on the Clyde.
Ministers and priests, many of whom have convictions or charges pending
from previous demonstrations at the base, have told Scotland on Sunday they
will seek arrest by blocking entry roads to the base.
They hope their actions, due to begin in eight days, will force sheriffs to
impose custodial sentences, helping to mobilise public opinion against the
government.
Their move will also clog up Scottish courts, which are still processing
more than 100 cases from a similar campaign last February.
Organisers behind the three-day campaign to blockade the base say they
expect a record turnout, with protesters attending from across the UK.
They have been touring Scotland since Hogmanay to round up recruits and
give instructions on non-violent protest techniques ahead of the protest.
The Rev David McLachlan, a parish minister from Elderslie, is planning to
participate in the knowledge he still has charges pending for an arrest
last year.
He is contesting a charge of alleged breach of the peace for blocking the
road and says he is preparing himself to go to jail. He said: "I was
offered a deal where if I paid a £50 fine, the case would be dropped and I
would not have a criminal record but I was not prepared to accept I had
been guilty of a breach of the peace. I did not pay that fine - as I felt
it would have been accepting a guilt I did not feel - and I am not prepared
to pay a fine in future."
McLachlan admitted his friends and family had urged him to pay up and stay
out of trouble this year, but he said he felt he could not stay away from
the event.
He said: "I don’t fancy going to prison but ultimately, if that is what it
takes to highlight the evil of nuclear weapons, then that is what it takes.
"As human beings, we have a duty to oppose things that are evil. To
threaten other people with annihilation is a nonsense and is not something
Jesus Christ would have condoned."
He admitted his decision is a ploy to mobilise public opinion and force the
British government to change its policy on nuclear weapons.
"The politicians are showing no sign of acting on this evil so we are
forced to find ways of drawing people’s attention to what is going on here
on Scottish soil," he said.
McLachlan’s Kirk colleague, the Rev Norman Shanks, who works for the Iona
community, is facing arrest for the third time in three years of attending
the event.
He is adamant he will not pay any fine and is reconciled to the prospect of
jail. "There is a well-established tradition of Christian protest that
states there is a higher authority to whom one owes obedience than the law
of the land, whatever that law might state."
The clergy are part of a 20-strong core group of ministers and priests who
have protested at the blockades ever since the annual event, normally held
in the second week of February, was launched in 1999.
The 20 are regarded as the most committed among a wider group of about 200
clerics who have attended the event.
Scottish Socialist MSP Tommy Sheridan and Lloyd Quinan, the Scottish
Nationalist MSP, have confirmed they will participate in the blockade even
though both have charges pending over a protest at the base in October last
year.
The event, held over three days for the first time, is expected to attract
record numbers. Last February it was attended by around 800, and resulted
in 385 arrests.
Numbers are expected to be swollen by anti-war activists and opponents of
globalisation.
David Mackenzie, a protest organiser, said: "We have always linked our
action to the whole problem of global oppression and the excessive power
held by the West over the rest of the world. The other thing that concerns
us is the way in which the US does not appear to care about international
law when it suits them, as in their treatment of prisoners from the Afghan
conflict."
He said non-violent protest workshops have been held in Edinburgh and
Glasgow to preserve the demonstration’s peaceful reputation. He added: "We
are trying hard to ensure everyone who attends this event has respect for
the other people there and does not cause trouble."
The Crown Office and Strathclyde Police said ministers and priests would be
treated just as any other protesters. A police spokesman said: "If
demonstrators block the gates, whoever they are, then we will arrest them."
A Crown Office spokesman said anyone behaving unlawfully would be arrested
and prosecuted.
sfraser@scotlandonsunday.com
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