21st April 2009

Brighton bomb Factory Police Clashes Loom

Following police violence at the G20 protests in London, Sussex anti arms trade campaigners anticipate a repressive stance at their Mayday Carnival on May 4th. The Carnival will be a mass street party against war and greed.

Previous mass protests against the EDO MBM/ITT weapons factory in Brighton have been met with peppers spray, baton charges, attack dogs and indiscriminate police brutality. At the Shut ITT demonstration in October 2008 protesters were hospitalised and an NUJ journalist was savaged by a police dog. Police from the several counties including the Met's FIT team, were present.

There is photographic evidence, from October, of police violence and officers concealing their shoulder numbers.

For more info contact Chloe Marsh or Andrew Beckett on 07754135290

ENDS

For more Details call 07754135290

E-mail: smashedopress@riseup.net

Notes for Journalists

The Company

From their base in Moulescoombe Brighton, EDO MBM/ITT, a unit of ITT corporation, manufacture vital parts for the Hellfire and Paveway weapons systems, laserguided missiles used extensively in Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine and Somalia. EDO Corp were recently acquired by ITT in a multi-billion pound deal. ITT's links to fascism go back to the 1930s. The founder Sosthenes Behn was the first foreign businessman received by Hitler after his seizure of power.

The Campaign

There has been active campaign against the presence of EDO MBM in Brighton since the outbreak of the Iraq war. Campaigners include students, Quakers, Palestine solidarity activists, anti-capitalists and academics. Despite an injunction under the protection of harassment act (which failed) and over forty arrests the campaign is still going strong.Their avowed aim is to expose EDO MBM and their complicity in war crimes and to remove them from Brighton. They hold regular weekly demos outside the Moulescoombe factory on Wednesday's between 4 and 6.

THE FILM

On the Verge is an independent film about the SMASH EDO Campaign “In 2004 a group of Brighton peace campaigners began to bang pot and pans outside their local arms manufacturers EDO MBM in disgust of their part in the Iraq war. This has grown into the Smash EDO campaign, which has cost the company millions, been the subject of large scale police operations and has tested the right to protest in the UK.Using activist, police and CCTV footage plus interviews with those involved in the campaign, 'On The Verge' tells the story of one of the most persistent and imaginative campaigns to emerge out of the UK's anti-war movement and direct action scene.”



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