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Stafford comes out against war saturday...

sti nkbomb | 02.03.2003 02:42

a report on a peaceful, conciousness raising march on Stafford RAF.
Stafford comes out against war saturday...


and what a beautiful day; sunshine and rain led to the most beautiful rainbows at its end as I made my way by bus and train home. One could almost imagine the world was indeed at peace. It's what the people want, at least.

The county town of Stafford seems a quiet, archetypically post-Thatcherite middle england kind of place with its shopping center, quite large prison, markets and 'local' shops. Its people - well, I'll let them speak for themselves, as today they did.

Local peace activists deemed today ideal for organising a march through the town, leading with inexorable logic to RAF Stafford. That logic however was made carnivalesque by the invigorating presence of samba! Surdo, tamborim, agogos, shakers and a couple of djembe were out and proud; the support from the street was fantastic. People were dancing as we walked along the road with our police escort. Folk either ignored us or supported us - no nasty comments, just stoical disregard or loud and joyful support. No real social tension - or maybe I was dancing too much to notice.

At a march, it's sometimes difficult to tell who's in and who's out; who is demonstrating and who is just there as a bystander; but that is the whole point of the pink bloc isn't it, to create a feeling that everyone's involved, and there is no such thing as a bystander. That division is brought into question - power to the imagination. We were that town today, raising consciousness and feeding the vibe. Overground.

Once we got to the airbase of death though, 'twas easier to divide all present between the forces of peace and the forces of death. Into 2 sides. I would like to resist even this division, however; it is my fondest hope that at least one copper, at least one military, was made to think and wonder if they might be better off with us than behind their wire fence. This division did make numbers easier to estimate however, and those of us concerned with such things decided that 200 was a fair accurate figure. So if media reports say anything less, you'll know they lie. And, of course, this was the tip of the iceberg. During the march, as with other actions in the midlands, so many people came up to us and asked 'why did we not know about this? We would have made a day of it?'. A local muslim 'leader' was wondering why we had not got in touch, as he was well up for it. We could have had a thousand.

So, lessons. The setting up of a more active working group was expressed as a desire, and for my part, a more radical intervention might have been on the cards. Obviously police presence at the base was high, and a couple of squaddies walked up and down. But there's a big plane on display at the base, war porn that many identified as an obvious target. Entry was not gained or attempted. The only attempt at an inspection was some bloke jumping up a tree and shouting 'have you got any weapons?' at the squaddies, following up with 'how many kids you gonna kill?'.

These were the other actions taken at the base. First, we had an open megaphone, which was used for a number of inspiring and eloquently factual points: that this march and others like it is just as important as F15; that we reject the weapons used by the West on Afghanistan and Iraq: the cluster bombs used to maim children looking for food and water; that getting out on the steets was nothing to be afraid of yet totally necessary, to get your voice heard. And raised, controlled voices were directed at the base and its inhabitants, including 'get a proper job' and 'love of money money - the root of all evil'.
Secondly, we placed our banners and placards on the fence, as well as attaching luggage tags withour messages to the base. They expressed concern for the safety of Iraqis and military personnel. Hopes for peace and life. Simple. Symbolic. Beautiful.

So it was a pretty 'overground' action; no attempt on the base, and maybe there could have been. Yet, I feel no need to justify its overground, consciousness raising character against the demands of the direct action and civil disobedience movements. The movement in the Midlands continues. Benefit gigs, direct actions, disobedience, demo after demo; people are awakening. The long night is over. Power to the earth; power to the planetary imagination; lets arm our desires for an end to war.

The clock is ticking...
but the future is unwritten
all out for peace truth justice.



sti nkbomb

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

That is so nice

02.03.2003 14:04

Thanks for writing that. I wish I had written it myself, apart from the deliberate attempt to split the antiwar movement at the end of the piece.

stinkbomb
mail e-mail: nowar@stinkbomb.tk


more on stafford

03.03.2003 15:48

Just to add, here is a copy of the letter handed into the base.

STAFFORD PEACE COUNCIL
(c/o Friends Meeting House, Foregate Street, Stafford)

Air Commodore N.S. Morris
The Officer Commanding
Royal Air Force Stafford
Beaconside
Stafford ST18 OAQ.

Saturday 1st March 2003

Dear Air Commodore Morris,

On Saturday 15th February 2003, at least 500 Staffordshire
residents went to
London to join more than a million other British people on
the biggest
anti-war march and rally in British history. Many more have
signed the CND
"Don't Attack Iraq" petition at weekly Saturday vigils in
Stafford Market
Square.

After the London rally, Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said
that war against
Iraq would be "very difficult" with much of the public
opposed to military
action.

We write to let you know that "much of the public" in
Staffordshire are
completely opposed to the involvement of RAF Stafford in an
attack on Iraq.

We are opposed to the killing of innocent civilians through
bombing raids.

We are opposed to the deliberate targetting of power
stations, water
purification plants, and other installations essential to
civilian life and
health.

We are opposed to the use of cluster bombs, that lie on the
ground
unexploded, ripping limbs from unsuspecting children who
pick up the bright
yellow "toys".

We are opposed to the use of depleted uranium, a
radiological weapon, which
causes long-term radiation-related illness for decades after
use.

We applaud military commanders who caution the government
against war.
Andrew Marr, Chief Political Correspondent of the BBC, said
on a recent
Panorama debate that Brigadier Michael Rose had not been
able to find a
single general who thought war on Iraq was a good idea. Marr
also said that
a poll on a web-site for RAF fighter pilots found that over
60% of pilots
are against this war.

We also applaud local leaders, political and religious, who
have spoken out
against this unnecessary and unjustified war. We echo the
words of Bishop
Tom Burns, Roman Catholic Bishop to the Armed Forces who
said, in his
Remembrance Sunday sermon (November 2002):

"Moving against Iraq brings no guarantee that terrorist
incidents or suicide
bombings will be reduced or eliminated. Some might say, on
the contrary,
that the risk of further terrorism is increased. There is a
danger that a
war that is seen as winnable may become a useful diversion
from helplessness
in the face of bombers and terrorists, because world leaders
will feel
satisfied that they have done something..
Service people want to know that they are decent people,
carrying out decent
orders, given to them by decent superiors. The prospect of
British troops
arriving home from war in body-bags is never acceptable,
though sadly it is
often inevitable. The burden may be easier to carry if they
have died in a
just cause, in pursuit of something believed in, in defence
of a widely
embraced principle."

Along with countless millions all round the world, we people
of
Staffordshire have NOT heard any arguments of principle
which would justify
sending our young airmen and women to rain destruction on
the Iraqi people.

We plead with you to urge your superiors to redouble their
efforts to
persuade our political leaders away from the path to ruin
and destruction.

Yours sincerely,

Maureen Alcock Peter Blocksidge Sonia and Peter Burnhill
Malcolm Carroll Pam
Collard Margaret Crossland Alison Crane Bob Dew Joanne
Earley Mel Ellis John
Gale Joan and Dennis Gripton Nigel Hill Camilla Kurti Joe
Leadbetter Jeremy
Milln Stephen and Joan Moore Gabi and Roger Oldfields
Jennifer Pardue Brian
and Marie Proctor Neil Robinson Maggie Setterfield John
Sloboda Jane Woodman

On behalf of Stafford Peace Council and many thousands of
Staffordshire
residents

meercatz


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