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Christians stage peaceful protest at nuclear bomb factory


At 7.30 this morning a group of Christians from several denominations, acting as part of the ActionAWE. campaign blocked the gate of the AWE Burghfield nuclear bomb factory near Reading, causing disruption to the production of weapons of mass destruction with the power to kill millions.

Bound together with superglue eight activists knelt in the road, sang, said prayers, and remembered those who have lost their lives to nuclear arms. In using their bodies to directly obstruct the business of warfare, the worshippers were following the command of Christ to be peacemakers while not raising a hand in anger.

Dan Woodhouse, 25, a student Methodist Minister at Wesley House, Cambridge, said: "The Methodist Church has a strong anti-Trident policy, and so do I. Trident has always been a disgusting use of public money and the climate of cuts makes it even more despicable. Now is the time to put pressure on MPs to reject another 30 years of squandered resources."

Self employed businesswoman Nina Carter-Brown, 29, from Bradford, said: "Peace cannot be brought about through fear and greed. It must come from acts of love and justice. Trident's dependence on the threat of violence is obscene, and I cannot stand by and watch our government spend £100 billion of taxpayers' money to continue this evil."

Annelie Leinhos, 25, a project worker from Bradford, said: "Nuclear weapons are unethical, immoral and a horrendous waste of public funds in the face of cuts to health and care services."

Chloe Skinner, 25, a Ph.D student from Sheffield, said: "the planned renewal of Trident indicates that lessons haven't been learnt from past mistakes that have caused terror, destruction and the death of countless civilians. In the face of cuts to essential welfare systems, now is the time to take action against the government's dedication to this most horrific form of warfare."

The UK has an armed nuclear submarine at sea and ready to fire every day of the year, able to wipe out cities almost anywhere on earth within 15 minutes. The UK has a stockpile of around 225 nuclear warheads, each with around eight times the explosive power of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945 that killed an estimated 140,000 to 200,000 people. Running the Trident nuclear weapons system currently costs £2 billion a year, at a time when other government services are facing cutbacks across the board. The government will vote in 2016 to decide whether to invest in the UK's Trident nuclear weapon system for another 30 years.

Operated by a consortium of Jacobs Engineering Group, Lockheed Martin and Serco,
AWE Burghfield plays an integral part in the final assembly and maintenance of nuclear warheads for use in the Trident system. In 2011 Peter Luff, the then Minister for Defence Equipment, announced £2 billion of spending for redevelopment of the Burghfield and Aldermaston weapons factories.

The total spending on Weapons of Mass Destruction in the UK will soar to over £100 Billion should the government take the decision to renew Trident in 2016.

Action AWE (Atomic Weapons Eradication) is a grassroots campaign of nonviolent action dedicated to halting nuclear weapons production at the Atomic Weapons Establishment factories at Aldermaston and Burghfield. The purpose is for groups and individuals to undertake autonomous actions and events from February 2013 onwards to raise awareness of the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons and exert political pressure for Britain to end the production, replacement and deployment of Trident and join other countries in negotiating a global treaty to ban nuclear weapons.

For more information see: http://actionawe.org/welcome-to-action-awe/

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