The front of the assembling march
Regime change begins at home
Illegal war, illegal orders
Samba
No more blood for oil
Depleted Uranium shells
Plane coming in to land
If war is the answer it must be a very stupid question
Marching up to the gates of RAF Brize Norton
Panorama just before the rally started
Continuing down Brize Norton Road, the march then stopped in the centre of Carterton for a two-minute silence, which was observed by protestors and locals alike, before assembling in the recreation ground for a rally addressed by Lindsey German and Andrew Murray of STWC, Kate Hudson of CND, Gulf War 1 veteran Tony Flint, journalist Felicity Arbuthnot, Labour MP Jeremy Corbyn, Scottish Socialist Party MSP Colin Fox, Green MEP Caroline Lucas and a speaker from At Ease.
The protest was organised by local peace groups from Bristol, Oxford, Swindon and Faringdon, but was attended by people from as far away as Nottingham.
Here are some photos. Audio of the speeches to follow, and maybe some video.
Comments
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No Compromise at Brize
03.12.2006 10:57
No Compromise at Brize
No surprise we came to Brize
to make the doubters realise
that at Brize there can be no compromise
War with no democratic mandate
demands we march to Brize Main Gate
Angry that we gave no permission
for illegal, tortuous rendition
we’re demonstrating for a peaceful condition
As Iraq War dead names we read, children bleed
As flowers laid, women are flayed
Sadness for soldiers and torture tears displayed
Peaceful but resolute, more atuned than King Canute
we marched representing the turn of the tide
we marched with nothing to hide
so no surprise we came to Brize
to ensure any doubters swallow no more war lies
Poet and peace activist, Tony Hillier, reflects on the determined show of opposition to the occupation of Iraq at RAF Brize Norton which plays a key role in the Vietnamesque Iraq War.
2 Dec 2006
Tony Hillier
e-mail: tony.hillier@ntlworld.com
Same speakers, no ideas
03.12.2006 12:19
As the marched progressed to go past the gates of the base, flowers were left to remember the dead of all nationalities as requested by the organisers. I was disappointed that we were not allowed to lay these ourselves and had to pass them to a steward to do it for us - as explained to me by one of the stewards at the start of the march. The reading of names of the military dead and few of the Iraqi victims did not really seem to do justice to the 655,000 but what would? Police with cameras were there on a footbridge over the road waiting to photograph the serious organised criminals demonstrating. What is the point of this - why do they photograph us - and what will they do with the pictures taken??
I went to this event mainly to hear what the speakers had to say (the usual) and partly because some of the members of my local group were going. It went as expected except for smaller numbers than I thought for a national demonstration.
To discuss ideas on how to stop the war please go to my website.
Brian B
Homepage: http://www.brianb.uklinux.net/antiwar-discuss/