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DSEi: Princess of Wales fountain dyed blood red for victims of cluster bombs

DSEi disarmers | 13.09.2007 17:05 | DSEi 2007 | Anti-militarism | Terror War | London

Anti-arms trade protesters have today dyed the Diana Princess of Wales memorial fountain blood red in outrage at the continuing sale and use of cluster bombs, and the presence of cluster bomb manufacturers at the Defence Systems & Equipment International (DSEi) arms fair, currently taking place at the ExCel centre in East London.







PRESS RELEASE 13/9/2007
Cluster Bombs Bloody Legacy Continues
embargo: for immediate release

Anti-arms trade protesters have today dyed the Diana Princess of Wales memorial fountain blood red in outrage at the continuing sale and use of cluster bombs, and the presence of cluster bomb manufacturers at the Defence Systems & Equipment International (DSEi) arms fair, currently taking place at the ExCel centre in East London.

Although DSEi's organisers, Reed-Elsevier are too embarrassed by public concern over these weapons to allow the open exhibition of cluster bombs they have no qualms in inviting manufacturers and end-users, they also provide sound proof rooms for arms deals to be negotiated.

We take this action in solidarity with Disarm DSEi, and fully support their campaign, and have chosen the Diana fountain for this protest because of her work with Landmine Survivors Network.

14 cluster bomb manufacturers exhibited at DSEi in 2005, they were: Lockheed Martin, EADS, Daimler Chrysler, Nexter (formerly Giat Industries), MBDA, Rhienmetall, RUAG, SAAB, Denel, General Dynamics, L-3 Communications, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon and Textron. With the exception of Rhienmetall they have all returned 2007 ( http://www.dsei.co.uk/exhibitorlist/)/

In 2005 Denel's booth was shutdown when company representatives offered to sell cluster bombs to a journalist from The Independent newspaper.

Notes for editors

1. DSEi is the world's largest arms fair, In 2005, DSEi hosted 1,100 companies, 70 official military delegations and 20,000 visitors from across the globe. Many of the countries invited were at war, some with each other. Many were dictatorships with appalling human rights records. Many had huge national debts with populations in severe states of poverty and starvation.
official website: www.dsei.co.uk

2. Disarm DSEi is a campaign for direct action against the arms trade, focussed on ending arms fairs in the UK as a first step. dsei.org

2. Cluster munitions kill and injure civilians at the time of use because they indiscriminately scatter explosives over such a wide area and many of the bomblets or submunitions fail to explode on impact killing and injuring civilians long after conflict. There is an international campaign to end their use, see  http://www.stopclustermunitions.org/

3. Cluster bombs disperse 'bomblets' over an area up to three football pitches in size. These bomblets can be anti-armour weapons, incendiary devices or fragmentation bombs (effectively nail bombs) designed to maim rather than kill.

4. The sale of anti-personnel landmines is banned, but to get round it anti-vehicle landmines with anti-handling devices are produced - sensitive enough to be detonated by a human.

5. Human Rights Watch estimated that cluster bombs were responsible for more civilian casualties during the invasion of Iraq than any other military tactic.
 http://www.hrw.org/reports/2003/usa1203/

6. The Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fountain is a memorial to Diana, Princess of Wales, located in the southwest corner of Hyde Park in London, just south of the Serpentine Lake and east of the Serpentine Gallery.

Contact:  warpigs@hushmail.com

DSEi disarmers
- e-mail: warpigs@hushmail.com

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

media link

14.09.2007 16:25

see link to press association report
 http://ukpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5imjcYjSMPchdFs1OYUtSIWL7mwcA
my brother thought it was funny but got a slap from grandma

prince harry


landmines at this year's DSEi

15.09.2007 21:42

Landmines claim brings new controversy at arms fair
Rob Evans
Saturday September 15, 2007
The Guardian

An Indian government agency has been accused of promoting landmines, banned under international law, at Britain's biggest arms fair this week. It is the second embarrassment to hit the fair's organisers - on Tuesday, they ejected two firms for promoting leg irons, which can be used for repression and torture.

Anti-landmine campaigners yesterday called on customs officials to investigate the latest allegation. Indian officials said it was "totally false", adding that they were not doing anything illegal.

Article continues
The row centres on a brochure which was distributed at the Defence Systems and Equipment fair in London's Docklands by the Defence Research and Development Organisation, an Indian government agency which develops military technologies. Listed in the brochure were "anti-personnel minelets" which could be fired from a rocket launcher at high speed.

[continues...]

 http://www.guardian.co.uk/armstrade/story/0,,2169829,00.html

james hewitt


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