21 February 2002 Edition

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Irish protestors blockade Sellafield

BY MARC DARDIS


On Thursday morning, 14 February at 6pm, just as Sellafield staff arrived to work so did we, a group of 200 concerned individuals from Ireland. Our plan was simple, we wanted to close Sellafield for a day, by preventing staff getting to work. We blocked the two main entrances, leaving only minor roads to cope with 11,000 workers.

The police had been notified of the protest weeks in advance, but they where totally unprepared, inexperienced, and outnumbered and reinforcements took an hour and a half to arrive due to major traffic delays. One group stopped the traffic by simply dancing around and continuously crossing the road, while some members of the other group had to "lock on", (linking people together by placing their arms inside a metal tube with chains and clips).

Having blocked the roads successfully for four hours, both groups converged on the main gate, only to find that police had already done our job for us and blocked the gates. We sat talking to the police, with the Mountains of Mourne that sweep down to Dundalk as a backdrop. Before we left, the police kindly let us block workers leaving the plant so the press could take photos of the blockade. Although the British media machine don't generally cover stories of this nature, the message came through loud and clear on local radio, "Stay clear of Sellafield".


Louth backs Morgan on Sellafield



At the monthly meeting of Louth County Council, Sinn Féin candidate in the forthcoming Leinster House election, Councillor Arthur Morgan proposed a motion outlining the council's alarm at the decision to permit the opening of Sellafield's MOX (mixed oxide) plant and the threat that it represents to the people of County Louth.

The motion, which was passed unanimously, also called on Louth County Council to write to the Environment Ministries in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Sweden and Norway to solicit their support for a diplomatic campaign to close Sellafield completely.

During the debate, Morgan told councillors that he believes the British government are under pressure over Sellafield. He pointed out that he had been talking to a Japanese journalist who expressed the view that the Japanese government would not give any new contracts to Sellafield.

"I genuinely believe that by building a strong International coalition against Sellafield we can force the closure of this dangerous plant," he said.


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