Trident Ploughshares
Trident Ploughshares originally named
Trident Ploughshares 2000 is an anti-nuclear-weapons group, with the aim of "beating swords into ploughshares" (taken from the
Book of Isiah). This is specifically by attempting to disarm the UK
Trident II nuclear weapons system, in a non-violent manner.
The group has attracted media attention for both its high profile "disarmament" actions, and mass
civil disobedience at the gates of
Royal Navy establishments with connections to the UK's
Trident II nuclear weapons systems.
One example of a high profile "disarmament" action is an action on
27 April 2001 when three women members of the campaign boarded the research vessel
Maytime in
Loch Goil and destroyed scientific equipment. They were acquitted at the subsequent trial in
Greenock, which was later appealed to the Scottish High Court with the
Lord Advocate's Reference 2001. Although under
Scottish Law the High Court did not have the power to overturn the acquittals, their judgement was that the basis of the defence case should not have been admissible.
Much of the mass
civil disobedience has taken place at
HM Naval Base Clyde (Faslane) where the UK Trident submarines are based. Other actions have happened at nearby RNAD Coulport and Loch Goil,
Downing Street, the
Scottish Parliament, Rolls Royce in Derby, and the
Atomic Weapons Establishments at Aldermaston and Burghfield.
Trident Ploughshares co-founder
Angie Zelter was a recipient in
2001 of the
Right Livelihood award.
In May
2005 the group occupied
Drake's Island in
Plymouth Sound declaring it a "nuclear free state" in protest against the refitting of British nuclear submarines and the servicing of Trident missiles in
Devonport Dockyard.
Members of Trident Ploughshares sign a pledge for their conduct, and are aften referred to as
pledgers.
*
- Main Trident Ploughshares website*
- Nippon Myohoji: friends of Trident Ploughshares*
The official site of the Right Livelihood Awards