Path: mit!news From: omega@ibb.berlinet.in-berlin.de Newsgroups: mit.apsintl Subject: ecn/uk:protests all along the British state imposed border Message-ID: <4ueVc2Hfae@IBB.berlinet.in-berlin.de> Date: 27 Jan 93 16:33:00 MET Sender: news@mit.hacktic.nl Organization: INFO - BOX - BERLIN, West Germany On January 1st 1993 there were protests all along the British state imposed border between the north-eastern 6 counties of Ireland and the remaining 26 counties. Thousands of people took part in actions which included reopening roads and bridges, demonstrating at British barracks and posts and marching through military checkpoints. Despite the rhetoric about 1993 heralding free movement within Europe, along this heavily militarised border it is business as usual. Since the early 1970s, British forces have been closing roads (with craters and barriers) and destroying bridges all along the border. As a consequence, the daily life of border communities has been massively disrupted, with people having to make a detour of several miles to visit their neighbours just across the border. The road closure programme has gone hand in hand with increased militarisation, with army bases and checkpoints being built alongside the main roads that remain open. This means that in order to cross the border people often have to pass through army checkpoints, where they may be searched, photographed, have their car registration number fed into a computer, and subjected to verbal and physical abuse. All this also leads to lengthy delays which make normal social life impossible. For instance Lifford in County Donegal is only half a mile away from Strabane in County Tyrone, but travelling from one to the other by car can sometimes take up to two hours due to delays at the Camel's Hump military checkpoint. In the last few years border communities have been taking direct action to secure unrestricted access back and forth across the border, reopening roads and rebuilding bridges in the face of often severe harassment from the crown forces. The Border Roads Campaign has now been established with the support of the Combined Community Associations, and they organised the day of action on January 1st. Lackey Bridge near Clones (on the Monaghan/Tyrone border) has become the symbol of the border resistance campaign. It has been re-opened by local people, and closed by the army, on numerous occasions since the start of the present campaign. On January 1st, 400 people turned out to re-open the Lackey Bridge crossing. With supporters from America, Wales, Germany and Brittany, local people maintained a 72 hour vigil to keep the crossing open. At Aughnacloy, 200 people marched through the British army checkpoint, carrying placards reading "Ireland's Berlin Wall". They paused in memory of Aidan McAnespie, a young man shot dead by a British soldier at the checkpoint in 1988 while walking to a Gaelic Athletic Association match. In Crossmaglen up to 700 people attended a rally in the main square in support of the road opening campaign. They were also protesting against the health risks posed by the British army's hi-tech surveillance equipment. The community's intensive exposure to non-ionising radiation emissions from the equipment has been linked to the high incidence of cancer and cancer-related illnesses in the area. A cross-border environmental group, the Campaign Against Radiation Emission (CARE) has been formed. There were other actions at various points along the border, including protests in Newry and at the Lifford/Strabane crossing.