roya// on Tue, 11 Sep 2001 02:49:48 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] previewing protest against arms fair |
Greetings, After ignoring all press releases sent out by anti-arms trade protesters over the last weeks, the Police raid of two squats in south London this Friday finally seems to motivate some of the mainstream media to come up with something, Well some mainstream media, but not the BBC. A producer of the BBC (who is currently going through some internal quarrels on how to make their political coverage more appealing to the non-voting majority of british youth) explained the reasons behind the lack of reporting on tomorrows mass protests at Europes' largest Arms show. He explains that there are "some very high level discussions about the effect of previewing UK demonstrations and our culpability if, for example, someone gets hurt or there is violence." Er, however... here is some coverage The Guardian came up with.. so long + ahoi // roya* -*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-* Police fear violence at arms fair Protesters say 'fiesta for life against death' will be peaceful Special report: the arms trade Steven Morris and Richard Norton-Taylor Monday September 10, 2001 // The Guardian Police have raided squats in south London to head off what they fear could be violent demonstrations against an arms fair which begins tomorrow in the capital's Docklands. Activists accused the police of over-reacting, claiming they plan peaceful protests at the Defence Systems and Equipment International Exhibition, or DSEI, at the ExCeL centre. Almost all major arms companies will be represented, with state-of-the-art weaponry from hundreds of companies on show. Amnesty International and the Campaign against the Arms Trade have strongly criticised invitations to some of the countries expected at the exhibition, run by a private company in association with the government. Much of the protest is expected to come from Disarm DSEI, an umbrella organisation that is organising what it calls a "fiesta for life against death". On its website, it promises an "audacious intervention against the arms trade". The website invites protesters to: "Come in costumes. Think pink and silver. Bringdrums, instruments, food and water to share, props, puppets, banners, circus skills, your blue suede shoes, and your love of life." Scotland Yard, however, is fearful the demonstration could turn violent. Early on Friday officers raided two social centres in Borough, in south London. Four people were arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to cause violent disorder, and later released on bail pending further inquiries. The protesters claimed that the police had smashed up props, including a papier mché figure, for the demonstration. One protester, who asked not to be named, said: "The squats have been under observation. It's clear to us that the police are trying to sabotage our legitimate protest." Amnesty International has attacked the government for inviting countries with poor human rights records - Sri Lanka, Saudi Arabia, and Nigeria among them. Countries such as Angola, Pakistan, Morocco, Algeria, China and Turkey have also been invited, although government guidelines state that arms should not be exported to countries where they could be used for internal suppression or could exacerbate internal or regional conflicts. A ministry of defence spokesman said the government supported exporting of defence products, which underpinned 100,000 jobs. A spokesman said the fair promoted only "legitimate defence exports", and invited countries would not necessarily be given licences in order to import arms on sale. http://www.guardian.co.uk/armstrade/story/0,10674,549416,00.html *************************************************** Fiesta against Death website: http://www.disarm-trade.org/ _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold