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A report from the ‘Pedal for Peace, Hallowe’en Ride Against War’, October 31st

biker | 10.11.2002 12:23

A report from the ‘Pedal for Peace, Hallowe’en Ride Against War’, October 31st
2002

A report from the ‘Pedal for Peace, Hallowe’en Ride Against War’, October 31st
2002

Arriving at the Imperial War Museum for the Pedal for Peace was a
heartbeat-quickening experience, what with the specially laid on lashings of
police riot vans, motorbikes and cyclists. Did they know something we didn’t
about a massive turnout? The odds didn’t seem that good, since the only
unpolice in the park alongside the Museum were 10 or so occupants of the
makeshift peace camp set up there a few weeks ago, and 3 or 4 earlybird
cyclistas. On arriving, I made my way to the Museum to use their excellent
conveniences and to pass a leaflet or two to anyone who might be wondering why
the place was crawling with police and barely-concealing-their-excitement
security personnel. I gave one leaflet to a bewildered cashier, inviting
her to
pass it round her peers, since I could only imagine what tales of
anarcho-peace-brutes had been spread around by the authorities. I also pressed
a leaflet into the willing hands of a security head deep in conference with
two
policemen, informing him no doubt of the possibility of hordes of maniacal
cyclists ditching their plans for an afternoon’s ride around selected dark’n’
dodgy haunts of war in favour of a direct assault on their museum. He seemed
grateful.

Back in the park, a few more friendly folks had turned out, including some
women fresh from their brief blockade of Westminster Bridge, which had been
brought to a sudden and brutal end by riot police who were obviously rearing
for a scrap and managed to arrest, assault and abuse a woman who seemed to
have
aroused their bored random ire.

Numbers grew slowly but surely as 2pm came and went, building up to, oh, a few
under one hundred maybe? Some had obeyed the Hallowe’en dress code and sported
scary masks or maybe decorated bikes (like the guy with red bike lights in the
eye holes of the pumpkin he’s strapped to his frame.) Others didn’t bother,
which was a pity but a fact of life I suppose.

A jocular senior policeman strolled up with a couple of pals and enquired who
was in charge, and where we were heading first, to spectacularly poor
response.
To be honest, there had been a group working on the ride idea for 3 or more
weeks, and there was a rough route already mapped out. The leaflet, which
clearly listed who and where the contenders for our ‘Burning Planet’ awards
were, had already been sent to those contenders, as well as the media. So
you’d
have expected the police to be up to speed with the plan, but they still
seemed
pretty much in the dark until the pattern (ie. cycle to various dodgy places,
make a speech and a bloody great racket, then hand over (or throw in) the
award, which was actually a miniature pumpkin with a Hallowe’en scary face
carved into it), made itself clear to them after 2 or 3 visits.

Anyway, when the last stragglers and late leaflets had arrived, a small but
sexy segment of the Rhythms of Resistance samba band drummed us out of the
park, leaving the camp dwellers and friends to their refreshments. Banners
held
between two bikes read ‘Pedalling for Peace’ and ‘Cycle Paths not
Psychopaths’,
and at least one and a half sound systems serenaded us to our first
destination: Shell Centre opposite Waterloo Station. Here a ceremonial
exhortation was made on a dodgy PA to the assembled throng (made up of
cyclists, one skateboarder, passers-by and police) to ignore Shell’s savvy
greenwash and see that behind the caring faced there still lurks a company
dedicated to global injustice and ecological mayhem, all in the name of
cashmoney. Oh, and that if you were boycotting Esso, then you might as well
include the whole sorry lot of them as they’re pretty much all the same, it’s
just the PR budget that’s different. Then the problem of how to deliver the
Burning Planet award. The police had passed through our request to Shell staff
that one of their number was invited to be the lucky recipient, but no one had
appeared through the police line from within. Lobbing it onto the roof above
the door was one possibility, though the police advised against that. In the
end, the only option seemed to be to roll said deeply threatening
non-incendiary device between the legs of the policemen into the revolving
doors behind them. This was duly done, to whoops of delight from the
pedallistas; rumours that the award has been placed in a place of honour in
the
Shell lobby have yet to be confirmed.

Although the police obviously didn’t like the uncertainty and
leaderlessness of
the ride, they still ‘facilitated’ it with very little complaint. Which is
weird, because to have the road in front of a deliberately disobedient ride
emptied of motorised traffic by the police can emasculate that aspect pretty
successfully, even if the whole thing is being monitored by a stack of police
vans and a helicopter. Also, the presence of police cyclists inside the ride
was, to me, a bit like having them stroll through a temporary autonomous zone
like a street party ie. an invasion, albeit a low-key one. For that
reason, as
well as the fact that they’re likely to be ‘intelligence gathering’ at some
level, I’d recommend not interacting with them either aggressively or
chattily.

So the ride headed over the sun-spattered river and into the West End, hoarse
voices calling out ‘No Blood for Oil’ and similar slogans to bewildered
cabbies, tourists and shoppers. The main sound system greeted the Strand
with a
blast of Rage Against the Machine telling us all that no, they weren’t
going to
tidy their room, but were followed by a burst of spoken word Jello Biafra
(once
of the Dead Kennedy’s), probably talking a load of sense but unfortunately
coming out of the speakers sounding a bit furry. One other aspect of the
ride’s
outreach was the leaflet which explained a bit about what we were up to, and
detailed all the candidates for awards, along with their addresses and phone
numbers, just in case someone felt like getting in touch to unleash a piece of
their mind. We were a bit short of those sadly, but apparently the response
from onlookers was pretty positive, which is a useful reminder that opposition
to war against Iraq has enormous unifying potential amongst a wide swathe of
British (and overseas) people. But are we doing enough to catalyse that
potential? Answers on a postcard please…

From the Strand (in the excitement missing out the Armed Forces recruitment
office and MoD!) we headed over to Carlton Gardens to visit UK arms giant BAe
Systems who are currently (as of November 2002) running a despicable
advertising ‘Innovating for a safer world’ ad campaign, and who have a huge
office there next to Robin Cook’s mansion. In a touching act of
self-deprecation, they had taken down the big company logo that usually greets
visitors as they enter the building. But our advance recce meant that we
weren’t foxed, and the ceremony duly took place. ‘I’m sorry you’ve got such
nasty neighbours,’ I said to a friendly woman having a look at us on the porch
of the Institute of Pathologists opposite.

Next it was a short pedal to BP’s new head office in St. James’ Square, where
they’d already shut the huge imposing new doors by the time we arrived.
None of
the BP reception staff, decked out in ridiculous beige suits, greeted us
either, so again we invoked the powers of resistance with whistle blows,
foghorns and a rant that plugged the current campaign to prevent BP from
building a 1000+ mile pipeline with US & UK government support from Baku in
Azerbaijan to Ceyhan in Turkey, (which a diverse coalition of groups will
achieve sometime next year, I predict).

The rest of the winners were as follows: arms company GKN in Cleveland Row
next
to the Queen Mother’s old nest; Lukoil (Russia’s biggest oil company, with a
huge contract for Iraqi oil, situated in the heart of the British
establishment’s tailoring district, at 86 Jermyn Street; Lockheed Martin (the
world’s biggest arms company, once in Berkeley Square, though moved elsewhere
when we got there, embarrassingly; and, last but not least, the US Embassy in
Grosvenor Square (tel: 020 7499 9000) where we were noisier than ever (almost
dislodging that big old brass eagle from its perch). The only wrong foot came
when we found ourselves blocking a bus lane, so thought a short cut through
the
(very posh) Burlington Arcade might do the trick (or treat). But the security
man walked bumptiously towards us as we started wheeling our bikes through,
saying ‘You can’t come through here no bikes are allowed!’ ‘Even if we push
them?’ we asked. ‘That’s right it’s private property.’ ‘Who owns it then?’
‘Prudential,’ he replied. We took him at his probably inaccurate word, and
took
Regent Street instead. So remember: don’t do your Christmas shopping in
Burlington Arcade, as I’m sure you were planning to do.

Dusk was falling at our feet by that point, and it was time to amble gently
towards Parliament, our final destination, to join the disobedient Hallowe’en
festivities down there, designed to wake MPs out of their stupor, or better
still get rid of them and run things ourselves, (in time, all in good time, I
hear you mutter…)

On the way there we gambolled down Park Lane, waltzed merrily around Hyde Park
Corner (twice), drifted down to Victoria and from there through to Parliament
Square. More bikes joined us along the way, as did a few schoolkids who
thought
it’d be a wheeze to see what was going on, (and receive some anti-capitalist
propaganda into the bargain.) The green in the centre of the Square was jammed
with people waiting to hear the usual luminaries queuing up to speak. We rode
round until we found ourselves on the road directly in front of Parliament,
which seemed like as good a place as any to take a break and settle down on
the
tarmac. But however much we implored, cajoled, asked or demanded those
green-dwellers to join us, since after all ‘Direct action could stop this
war!’, very few of them took the plunge and did so. Also, the Disobedience
occupation of Parliament had either been delayed or pre-emptively arrested, so
after five minutes or so, the police horses reared up in front of us, and we
were very unceremoniously shoved off the street. After that, we rode around
the
Square a bit longer, in fewer and fewer numbers, getting in the way of things,
but the moment had passed, and it was time to join the crowd following the
samba band towards Whitehall and Downing Street.

All in all it was a pretty good day we could have done with a few more
banners
and leaflets, not to mention cyclists, but the concept of weaving a web of
complicity can really be effective in telling a dastardly untold story. All of
the award recipients rely on their good PR and our ignorance as to their true
activities, and many are located in the very guts of the British
establishment,
where making a hearty racket can prove embarrassing at least, and might even
nudge some of their less messianic employees to start asking questions about
what their employer is really up to in the world. After all, anything that
destabilises this lot has to be a good and necessary thing, and as the leaflet
said, ‘We will also be requesting them to shut up shop, permanently…Now more
than ever we need to talk to eachother, to share what we know, what we
believe,
and what we can imagine.’

There are quite a few photos from the ride on the Guilfin website:
 http://www.guilfin.net/

Winners of the ‘Burning Planet’ award, 2002, (in case you feel like
congratulating them):
Ministry of Defence (Whitehall, Tel: 010 7218 9000 or 0870 607 4455): War for
sale.

Shell: York Road, SW1; Tel: 020 7934 1234; fax: 7934 8060

Armed Forces Recruiting Centre: 453 Strand, W1; tel: 08457 300111; fax 7930
8603; www.army.mod.uk. (Did you really think everyone else on this list would
actually do the fighting?)

Ministry of Defence: Whitehall; tel: 010 7218 9000 or 0870 607 4455

BAE Systems: 6 Carlton Gardens, SW1; tel: 01252 373232; fax: 01252 383 9911

BP: St. James’ Square, SW1; tel: 020 7496 4000; fax 020 7496 4574;
email: bponthestreet@bp.com

GKN: 7 Cleveland Row, London SW1A 1DB; tel: 020 7930 2424/01527 517715; fax:
7930 3255

Lukoil: 86 Jermyn Street, SE1, Tel: 020 7839 6778/7771; fax: 7432 0901

Lockheed Martin: tel - 020 7412 0555; fax: 020 7412 0547

The US Embassy (24 Grosvenor Square, SW1; Tel: 020 7499 9000

Runners-up:
Raytheon Systems Limited (arms): 80 Park Lane, London W1; tel: 020 7569 5500;
fax: 7569 5591

Rolls-Royce (arms): 65 Buckingham Gate, London SW1E 6AT; tel: 020 7222 9020;
fax: 7227 9170

Alvis (arms): 34 Grosvenor Gardens, SW1; tel: 7808 8888; fax: 7808 8883

The American Chamber of Commerce (aka. the British American Business Inc., 75
Brook Street, London W1Y 2EB,Tel: 020 7467 7400; fax: 020 7493 2394;email:
 ukinfo@babinc.org): This is a lobby group and meeting point for US
companies in
the UK. It also gives advice on obtaining MoD contracts.

TotalFinaElf (French oil company, big in Iraq): 40 Clarendon Road, Watford;
tel:
01923 694000; fax: 01923 694400

Contacts:
Hallowe’en Pedal for Peace:  pedalforpeace3110@yahoo.co.uk
Baku-Ceyhan Campaign:  baku@gn.apc.org;
 http://www.bankwatch.org/issues/moilclima.html; www.ilisu.org.uk
Rising Tide UK (grassroots action on climate chaos):  info@risingtide.org.uk
www.risingtide.org.uk
Rising Tide London:  shells@gn.apc.org
Indymedia: www.uk.indymedia.org
A Critical Mass London site:  http://www.cm-london.cjb.net
Disobedience: www.disobedience.org disobedient action to dismantle the war
machine
Campaign Against Arms Trade: www.caat.org
Stop the War Coalition: www.stopwar.org

biker