Jo, 19-07-2003 21:39
During the last six weeks, unknown to most people, there have been a series of public debates up and down the country about whether the government should allow the commericalisation of GM crops in the UK. The deadline for public input is now over - did you have your say?
In an exclusive film made for Indymedia, people from all over the country reveal that the public consultation was a poorly advertised, ill concieved and miss-managed farce that failed to engage ordinary people. The film also demonstrates that much of the public believe that the decision has already been made to push ahead with GM (regardless of the will of the people) and that the government is an undemocratic tool of U.S. interests and big business.
Watch the video,
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ian, 27-06-2003 00:00
Arundel in West Sussex already had a bypass built in the 1970's, now they plan to build another one over the old one. A 5.2 kilometre area of ancient woodland is threatened with the chop at Binstead Wood and Tittington Common, and
a protest camp is now up and running at Tittington. Bypassing the existing bypass, it would cross the important River Arun wetlands south of Arundel on concrete stilts or a huge embankment, and then plough through a mile of precious Sussex woodland. Thousands, probably tens of thousands, of trees would be lost, including some fine 100 foot oak trees, yews, and one particular 100 foot beech tree, thought to be the oldest tree in the woods.
Protestors are meeting on Sunday 29th June for a walk along the proposed bypass route. Meet at 2pm outside the 'Red Lion' Pub, High Street Arundel.
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andi / ionnek (17.6.), 17-06-2003 00:00
IMC UK has changed to a new codebase (
Mir). Welcome to the brand new site!
Users and moderators alike need to get used to the new code - please bear with us during this transition.
Click "
Read more" for info on various browsers and instructions for publishing.
We had lots of
feedback and hope you'll continue speaking up and getting involved by posting to the
imc-uk list or the thread on Urban 75 [
thread 1] [
thread 2] Check our
Documentation of the migration to
Mir, the archives of the tech and features lists, and a summary of our
working practices.
If you find any
bugs please mail to the
tech list - thanks!
we'll keep u posted
IMC United Kollektives
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, 01-05-2003 03:09
, 21-04-2003 10:48
On the eve of the invasion of Iraq, Sir Ray Tindle (owner of over 100 local newspapers) ordered the editors of his papers to censor any dissenting views about the invasion of Iraq.
In Totnes, Devon, the Editor of the Totnes Times, Gina Coles, wrote a front page article (20th march) in which she refered to Tindles demands as a 'brave move' and said she was proud to back him.
Residents of Totnes were not amused and as well as boycotting the censored papers, they produced a
one-off independent paper to provide a forum for the issues being censored by the editors of newspapers owned by Tindle. On Wed 23rd, a group
visited the offices of the Totnes Times.
[
Press Release |
Full Report |
PDF of Paper |
Video ]
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, 19-03-2003 06:45
Wednesday 19th saw a National
Student Day of Action Against War. Across the country students walked out of classes, held meetings, protested and engaged in civil disobedience. There were several reports of clashes with police. Thousands took to the streets blocking traffic in Birmingham,
Edinburgh,[
audio1|
2|
3],
Sheffield,
Cardiff,
Liverpool,
Manchester (12 arrests), and Whitehall in London (
video: heavy handed police). There were also demonstrations in Leicester, Swansea and other towns and cities across the country including
Presteigne and
Worcester.
On Monday, 700 students took to the streets in in
Totnes, South Devon, with over 200 blockading a petrol station. Students at Atlantic College in South Wales joined in a
Global Peace Vigil as part of a
worldwide show of opposition to War on Sunday. Members of
University College London stop the war coalition dropped a banner reading 'No war for oil' and 'End the occupation' in Oxford Street during the Friday lunch hour, while others blocked traffic outside Parliament (
die-in pics).
Six pupils from Hove who walked out of school last week to take part in an anti-war demonstration were
suspended for two months and not be allowed back till their GCSE examinations. Eighteen students at another School in Herts, have been also been excluded for participating in an anti-war rally. Police refused to monitor an anti-war demonstration by more than 500 children in
Oxford last week and blamed their schools and parents for allowing it to happen. The pupils brought chaos to the city centre after storming out of schools at lunchtime. In Sheffield on March the 5th, angry pupils stormed into 4 different colleges after having made their point in a noisy protest at the City Hall [
Pictures and report].
This follows the thousands of children that have walked out of their schools across Britain and
globally. Many student anti-war demonstrations since the beginning of March co-insided with the
'Books not bombs' campaign.
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, 01-03-2003 09:14
Seven Midlands peace campaigners were arrested this morning after successfully closing the Rolls Royce site at Derby for 1 hour. The company was targeted for its crucial role in the manufacturing of fuel components for nuclear submarines. The activists from Trident Ploughshares, the direct action campaign to peacefully disarm the British Trident nuclear weapons system, closed the Raynesway site just before 7am. They locked themselves to the entrance gates with a variety of chains, padlocks and thumb locks, closing the factory just as employees were arriving for work. A traffic jam ensued and some employees were sent away. All 7 were charged with breach of the peace, taken to St Mary's Wharf police station in Derby and later released without charge.
Read report and photos
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, 02-12-2002 04:29
On Friday 29th Nov, otherwise known as International Buy Nothing Day,
shoppers in Plymouth were exposed to a barage of street theatre and
alternative 'commerical radio'. Giant credit cards ran around the shops encouraging consumers to "buy more sparkly things" while their 'owners' complained that their spending was getting out of control...
Also fed up with all of this homogeneous global monoculture, serving up the same bland "frapachapachocawhatevers" the fine chaps at
NOT CRICKET decided to host another of their tea & cucumber sandwiches soirees.
Various Indymedias featured BND 2002, including this audio and video from Ireland IMC. Germany, Houston, Italy, Los Angeles, New York City, Portland, Seattle, Twin Cities, Victoria, and Washington D.C..
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, 20-11-2002 07:14
Indymedia has an
exclusive interview with the two peace protesters who entered HMS Vanguard undetected last week. They were
released on bail having been held over the weekend and appearing in court Monday morning. The sub is one of the UKs four Trident nuclear submarines and is currently undergoing a refit at Devonport docks in Plymouth. The two broke into the base and wandered around for sub for almost half a hour before setting of a fire alarm in order to draw attention to their presence.
"I can't see the logic of a situation where Tony Blair is threatening Iraq with war if they don't grant access to weapons inspectors, when at the same time we were arrested for a peaceful inspection of Britain's illegal weapons of mass destruction."The action took place at the start of an International Disarmament Camp based at a squatted MOD complex near the docks. Other actions included street leafleting, a multi-faith service and
blockades at Albert gate and
Cammels Head Gate (video). Locals have pledged to
keep up the pressure. [ Further info |
Personal Account |
Photos |
Corporate Press |
Trident Ploughshares ]
See IMC-UK
World page for international reports on Civilian Weapons Inspections.
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, 17-10-2002 11:50
18/10/02 - Actions update:
-
Media Circus outside Daily Mail in London,
report-
Guerrilla Screening at London's South Bank,
report and photos -
MDD in Lancaster,
report.
-
MDD Radio Broadcast 5pm-6.45pm Resonance FM 104.4 Webstream
here International
Media Democracy Day, October 18th, sees events occurring in
over 25 cities across the world. Creative actions, protests, film screenings, discussions, lobbying,
print publications, subvertising and spoofs are all playing their part in the beginnings of a new global movement around
media issues.
Held for the first time last year in Canada and involving groups like
Adbusters and
FAIR, this year the day has gone global, supported by high profile groups like
The Media Channel, alternative news networks like Indymedia, and smaller grass roots community media groups.
Focusing on the key themes of "Education, Promotion, Protest and Change" it provide an opportunity both to unite and publicise the work of independent, alternative and community media projects, and to protest against the
failings of an exclusive corporate media system
enslaved by
advertising and profit.
In the
UK events include a
guerrilla film screening of the
European NewsReal on Friday 18th October in London, as well as
other events, screenings and discussions. Planning for 2003 is already underway with one eye on the
UN World Summit on Information Society in Geneva, December 2003.
Reclaim The Media!
Global MediaDDay Site /
UK MediaDDay Site Media Detox Plan Italy IMC Media Map pdf Mediachannel: October Media Action Month Media Mogul Ate My Hamster PDF
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, 16-10-2002 17:47
Over five hundred people supported the CND national Scrap Trident demonstration in Plymouth. They came from as far afield as Southampton and Birmingham with local support from Plymouth and the surrounding areas to march, chant and show solidarity in the campaign against nuclear weapons.
They called for the UK government to comply with International Law and scrap the Trident nuclear weapons program. They also rejected Tony Blair's hypocritical pro-war stance in relation to weapons of mass destruction.
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, 18-09-2002 10:07
Two British freighters "lightly armed" loaded with enough
plutonium to make 50 nuclear bombs, have now compleated the home straight of an 18,000 mile transport of terror. As the Pacific Pintail and Pacific Teal end their
journey from
Japan via Australia's
Tasmanian Sea, past South Africa,to the Irish Sea and home to Sellafield.
Protest has followed the pair on every leg of the journy.
A flotilla of sailboats from Ireland and the British Isles and the
Rainbow Warrior were waiting in the Irish Sea to peacefully protest and to highlight the madness of the shipment.The freighters were first spotted off the coast of Portugal and
entered the Irish Sea on their way to Barrow.
The main concerns are that the ships are vulnerable to catastrophic accident or
terrorist attack, which could lead to large-scale contamination of the marine environment and coastal communities.
The Irish Government, backed by all opposition parties has condemned the imminent arrival of the plutonium shipment,who this summer issued
Iodine kits to households to protect against nuclear contamination , agreed to deploy naval vessels and aircraft to track the shipment and to ensure that it did not enter Irish waters.
The
Nuclear Free Flotlla, which the Rainbow Warrior supported, comprises individuals whose love of the sea and communities that it supports, has united them to take action to protect it.
BNFL and the British Government should take note of the strength of commitment of some of the people whose lives they risk with their deadly shipments and radioactive discharges from the Sellafield nuclear plant.
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, 30-08-2002 22:09
, 07-08-2002 14:53
Risks to Plymouth residents from nuclear facilities at Devonport dockyard are being deliberately downplayed for commercial reasons according to anti-nuclear campaigners and experts. Devonport Management Ltd. (DML) are hiding behind official secrets legislation, they say, to play down the danger the dockyard poses to the public.
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, 23-07-2002 00:57
UPDATE: At 1.45 pm, today, over 150 people, including families with children, held a colourful and peaceful demonstration at the DEFRA offices in Smiths Square, London. They left large bags of GM crops from trial sites around Britain at the entrance. They were calling for no commercial growing of GM crops and an end to GM crop trials. People left at about 2.40 p.m
See report and movie
of action. A convoy of people from Devon will arrive in London on Wedensday July 24, joined on route by other concerned citizens from all over the country. They will converge at
Westminster, to voice a strong message of public resistance to the commercialisation of Genetically Modified (GM) crops. The current GM crop trials, which are almost complete, have been contaminating the environment for over three years and are widely recognised as fraudulent.
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, 19-06-2002 09:44
After seven weeks, a GM crop squat in Dorset is over. The field had been occupied by protesters with a 20ft tall pink castle since April 25th. The GM maize crop has now been completely destroyed and the trial written off. Protesters celebrated over the weekend then packed up and left the site.
Read more.
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, 08-06-2002 09:13
STOP PRESS:wed.13th The Plymouth hunger strike is now
over. A group of 4 Kurdish men went on
hunger strike in Plymouth on Thursday 6th June because they are still waiting to hear from the Home Office after nearly two years. They want to be treated as asylum seekers. Their applications are in, but have not been processed.The men protesting outside the local immigration offices in Plymouth, they say they have reached breaking point and will continue their protest until someone listens to them. They are prepared to stay there until they die because that is their only hope. They have not heard from their wives or children and say; "we were going to die in our own country anyway".
They were joined by a
fifth man on Friday evening.
The protesters have secured use of VW Camper van (donated by local activists) for night shelter - will park outside IND offices from 5.00pm - 8.00am daily, providing protection from the elements (and some of the racist abuse). The Haringey
Campaign to Defend Asylum Seekers have sent their support and solidarity to the men on hunger strike.
A
mass picket will take place on Sunday, outside Ballard House, West Hoe, Plymouth. Messages of support should be sent to ncrmsouthwest@aol.com
Kurdish Human Rights Project
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, 10-05-2002 18:40
On May 7th, in broad daylight and in front of the gathered media, protesters dressed as chickens dug up GM maize from one of the farmscale trials in Dorset. They also hoped to draw attention to the findings of a study in which chickens feed the GM maize had a higher mortality rate than those feed on conventional varieties. About a dozen people took part in the action in Littlemoor near Weymouth. There were no arrests and the free ranging chickens had a quick organic picnic in the field before heading home.
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, 05-02-2002 11:03
HMS Vanguard – a trident class nuclear submarine arrived in Plymouth, in a blaze of media glory for a long overdue refit, circled by an impregnable ring of police boats. Hundreds of anti-nuclear protesters had travelled from across the country to demonstrate at her arrival. The demo marched around the dockyards, then sat down at the dockyard's gates and observed a moment of silence. The march then finished peacefully and dispersed, but seven
Trident Ploughshares protestors who stayed behind to block one of the gates were arrested for obstruction.
Numerous times before we have seen that when people feel strongly enough about something, they can make a difference. Those people may have gone away having made connections that will change their own lives and help to create a better future. The protest came just a week before the planned
Big Blockade at the Trident submaring base is Faslane.
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, 22-11-2001 09:55
Activists from the Nestle resistance group disrupted a lecture on Biodiversity, sponsored by the mining company, Rio Tinto, at the heavily-subsidised @t Bristol centre. Presenter Johnathan Dimbleby was to be on the panel but pulled out after recieving a letter from the concerned group, explaining the ethical and environmental record of the sponsors. Those attending were given leaflets outside, whilst inside an impromptu lecture took place.
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