18th March 2008
Police Lie About Banning Peace Activist Film
Sussex Police have caused the Duke of York's Cinema in Brighton to cancel
the showing of 'On the Verge' a documentary about local peace campaigners SMASH
EDO. The screening was due to be at 6.30pm yesterday (Monday March 17th) According
to the Duke of York's cinema they received an e-mail at 4.15 p.m yesterday (Mon
March 17th) from Martin New, a council environmental health officer. He explained
that the police had reported that the film had not been certificated and therefore
should not be shown. The Duke of York's were forced to pull the showing.
Chief
Inspector Laurence Taylor was quoted in the Argus newspaper as saying "We
would never get involved with the certification of a film- it is not something
we would do." However, both local Brighton Green Party councilor Keith Taylor
and Julie Harris from the council's press office confirmed that the council had
been contacted by Sussex Police about the film's certification.
A spokesman
for the production company SchMovies said I am extremely disappointed but
not entirely surprised by the police's action. As the showing of the film has
been widely advertised for at least six weeks, not least in the Duke of York's
programme any certification issues could have been dealt with well prior to the
event. Our film although focussing mainly on the rights and wrongs of protest
shows a number of examples of questionable police behaviour Perhaps this
is why they left their move so late
Andrew Beckett, spokesman
for the campaign said 'When the police are reduced to banning film showings via
the back door another blow has been struck against our rights to free speech and
free assembly'
CONTACTS:
Steve Bishop SchMovies 07879
261625
Andrew Beckett/Chloe Marsh 07875 708873 Arthouse Community
Centre, Southampton 02380238582 Sussex Police Press 01273 404173
Hampshire
Police Press 01962 871619 Notes
for Journalists THE FILM On the Verge An
independent film about the SMASH EDO Campaign View a trailer at
http://www.schnews.org.uk/schmovies/index-on-the-verge.htm
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.
The Company EDO MBM Technologies
Ltd are the sole UK subsidiary of huge U.S weapons manufacturer EDO Corp.From
their base in Moulescoombe Brighton, EDO MBM manufacture vital parts for the Hellfire
and Paveway weapons systems,laserguided missilesused extensively in Iraq, Lebanon,
Palestine and Somalia. EDO Corp were recently acquired by ITT in 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 o f 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. back
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