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Arms company EDO MBM shut down for a day (Pics & Report)

unarmed dealer | 21.05.2004 16:50 | Anti-militarism

The arms firm EDO MBM in Brighton was shut down for a day by anti-arms trade activists who blockaded the entrance and occupied the roof. 10 arrests were made.

The view of arms dealers arriving for work
The view of arms dealers arriving for work

The ‘cage’ roadblock with protestors locked on
The ‘cage’ roadblock with protestors locked on

Banner drop: “Arms dealers out of Brighton”
Banner drop: “Arms dealers out of Brighton”

Banner drop: “… not welcome in our city”
Banner drop: “… not welcome in our city”


Early in the morning on Thursday the 20th May 2004, around 20 anti-arms trade activists arrived at the premises of EDO MBM Technology in Brighton. EDO MBM manufacture bomb and missile release components for military aircraft; they are on record as being “proud” to support the ongoing occupation of Iraq.

Five activists set up a ‘cage’ consisting of 7ft high fence panels blocking the access road to the small industrial estate where the factory is situated. Banners were hung from the cage with suggestions of what EDO may stand for, one offered a potential corporate slogan: ‘Every Death an Opportunity’.

Shortly afterwards, five more activists ‘appeared’ on the roof of the factory. Banners reading ‘Arms dealers out of Brighton’ and ‘EDO MBM not welcome in our city’ were hung over the edge. It later transpired that one of the roof-occupying activists had broken his ankle before getting onto the roof, and somehow made it up anyway.

As workers arrived they found the roadblock in their path and were given leaflets explaining what must have seemed an interesting intervention in their mundane trudge to work. All but suited senior management types turned around and had the day off; the suits parked nearby and walked the last stretch to calls of ‘are you proud of profiting from death?’ from the inhabitants of their newly autonomous roof.

The roadblock also prevented access to the other two companies on the industrial estate. A baking firm managed to park vans either side of it and carry their load around by hand. They declined the offer of help from some activists and were understandably annoyed by the disruption. Perhaps this is an illustration of the injustice of ‘collateral damage’.

The police arrived and pondered the situation for several hours before eventually working out how to remove the roadblock around midday. The five who were locked to it were arrested and charged with obstruction, they face Court next week. The police attention then switched to those on the roof. Progressively more riot vans appeared, peaking at eight, before they obviously realised WE WERE ON THE ROOF and so multiple vans were a little superfluous to requirements.

As it became apparent the injured activist on the roof wasn’t getting any better, he was plucked from the roof by on-strike fire fighters [solidarity guys] using a cherry picker at around 2pm. He was arrested in the ambulance for aggravated trespass but later de-arrested at hospital, with the possibility of re-arrest later. Three of the four remaining roof-dwellers came down from the roof later in the afternoon and were arrested for aggravated trespass.

A final protester weathered torrential rain for a while longer before coming down to join the others in police custody on the same charge. The four arrested for aggravated trespass have not been charged and were released on police bail. In fairness to the police they handled the situation in a fairly non-confrontational manner (perhaps because protestors were either voluntarily caged or 30 feet in the air?) and made no attempts at forced eviction from the roof for safety reasons. The company was effectively shut down for the day and there was reasonable mainstream coverage from BBC South Today – so all round it was a successful and worthwhile action – disrupting and highlighting the presence of accessories to war crimes in our own community.

More pics (which were on film, not digital) are on the way when they get processed.

unarmed dealer

Comments

Hide the following 9 comments

Beautiful work people

21.05.2004 18:17

Fantastic action and a good article too...thanks for your efforts to everyone involved :-)

Poon


Great photos!

22.05.2004 18:43

well done to all concerned!

Here's a link to 2 more short reports on this site:

 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/05/291932.html

dodgy pete


cage

25.05.2004 14:37

never seen the cage being used before - can you put info up on the idea? I guess the police would cut through the fencing to be able to get to the locks, or could they just cut the locks round people's necks from outside? What was stopping the fencing being separated, was it people locked to the two sections? How did they deal with it in the end?

Thanks.

wonder


re: the cage

25.05.2004 18:38

I know the police didn't damage the fences themselves, they even called the hire company to come and collect them after people were removed apparently. I assume the police climbed over and snipped off the d-locks? I'm not sure. Good idea though!

a protestor


cage

07.06.2004 22:04

Hi - the police were very concerned about moving the cage because 5 of the protestors had d-locks around their necks. It does need someone to remind them though, that moving the cage might strangle one of them, then they back off. One did start to try and shove the cage aside.

The sections were joined together with a nut and bolt (nut on the inside of the cage) and a metal clasp that comes with the sections. They could probably have undone these before picking the D-locks (they get professionals to sort this out too) but decided to wait until they had experts.

Another benefit of having a police force that can only follow orders.

Another protestor


Security clampdown at EDO

12.06.2004 22:27

Is this really what I do for £4-50 an hour?
Is this really what I do for £4-50 an hour?

Having learned the lessons of the above action and knowing we were going to be there today (sat 12th June) EDO brought in their finest security team. Guardian Security of Worthing  http://www.guardianguards.co.uk/ decided that one sixty year old is better at guarding their client's beloved arms factory than three 20 year olds.

Sometime after the event police decided that they'd teach those pesky peace protestors a thing or two and arrested one very violently and then violently arrested a passer-by who strongly objected to what he'd seen.

Dusty Shambles
- Homepage: http://boo.safp.org.uk


You don't want any weapons? Are you mad???

30.09.2004 04:24

Just a question. If you guys get your way and stop developing weapons... What will you use to defend yourselve just by chance these terrorist deside to come and attack you, enter your country and cut off your heads??? Hmmm... You know they do not listen to reason!

Darin Fansler


this seems pointless

13.04.2005 18:52

aside from the sheer waste of time your protests represent, what do you hope to achieve?
aslong as people want bombs others will make them. perhaps its better its done in our country than elsewhere. jobs are important, as we dont all want to be hippies

Alex

Alex