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Bill for policing protests against submarine base tops £5 million

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Published Date: 03 September 2007
THE cost of policing anti-nuclear protests at a submarine base has exceeded £5 million in less than a year, it was confirmed today.
A Strathclyde Police report shows the daily protests at Faslane have resulted in 816 arrests by the force.

The year-long campaign of protests - which started on 1 October and involved people from across the UK as well as Japan, France, Germany an
d Belgium - have also seen Ministry of Defence Police make a further 118 arrests.

At times, as many as 150 officers have been deployed to the Faslane 365 protest, which has involved sit-down protests and people chaining themselves to fences and gates.

Much of the cost is due to police overtime payments to supply 24-hour cover, with the biggest single expense coming in the first month when £1.7 million was spent. Chief Constable William Rae, in a report to go before the Strathclyde Joint Police Board tomorrow, said: "Policing costs have been substantial, but, more importantly, many communities were denied the services of their local officers when they were deployed to Faslane."

Margaret Curran, the shadow justice spokesman at Holyrood, said: "People in areas where there is high levels of crime and a genuine need for a round-the-clock police presence are losing out badly."



The full article contains 225 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 02 September 2007 8:55 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Faslane
 
1

Maisie from Morningside,

Edinburgh 03/09/2007 00:16:31

It should be made plain that the cost of policing these troublemakers should come out of the overseas aid budget.
Let the protesters decide which is more important - money for their self indulgent grandstanding or cash for starving Africans.

2

Gnasher,

03/09/2007 00:47:28

I strongly disagree with Maisie from Morningside.

The people who take part in these manifestations tend to be either well heeled middle class professionals working in teaching, social work or other public services from the UK, or foreigners from wealthy countries.

Accordingly, the correct way of paying for the additional policing costs would be to monitor the origins of those attending - and don't tell me that the Special Branch aren't able to do this! - and bill the public bodies for which they work for a proportion of the overall cost. It would be for their employers to recoup the cost from their principled staff member.

For those protestors who are doleites, bill the Councils where they come from. For foreigners, slap on a special exit visa fee - they can't leave without paying us back.

Seriously - the impact on local policing in Strathclyde of having officers away on duty in Faslane is serious, and the criminals know it. The middle class trendies don't know this, and if they did they wouldn't care, until someone smashes their conservatory window, or nicks their Saab.

3

Suck--McCrunchie.,

http://www.stirlingpark.net for public contracts? 03/09/2007 00:47:55

Better five million spent confirming that there is a protest, than the infinite cost of thinking no one will care and using them.

I wonder who they are actually targeted at now?

Surely not Russia, the nation selling us gas as if there is a harsh winter, then we don't have the fuel to heat the nation.

4

Navvy,

03/09/2007 03:13:02

These protesters should pay. They block the road which stops children getting to school their social conciences are all mixed up

5

Conan,

Here 03/09/2007 03:50:57

#5 - Navvy - totally right, as well as the cost of the bullets used to shoot them.

6

Pilrig.,

Livingston 03/09/2007 05:28:23

£ 5 million ? isn't that the cost to the UK of 3 days in Iraq ?
Nice to see we have our priorities !

7

Nick_Byrne,

Glasgow 03/09/2007 08:40:40

And what about the social cost as Navvy says there have been too many days when people living in the peninsula from Garelochhead, Helensburgh, Rhu etc have been unable to get to work. Children unable to go to school, missing exams - Doctors unbable to see patients, ambulances caught in tailbacks.

Just so mainly foreigners can say they've done their bit for world peace.

Well, the camp has been there thirty years and Tridents is still here and will be for the forseeable future.

Grow up, go home, get jobs and do your protesting at the polls - leave everyone else to actually get on with their lives.

8

Billy,

Germany 03/09/2007 10:27:34

Bring our forces back from Iraq to guard these installations. They work without overtime. Force the police onto the Beat and demand they start fighting crime, not standing about doing feck all while piling up the overtime.

9

JPF,

03/09/2007 14:09:21

9 - Billy. Agreed - absolutely. I saw a couple of ednburgh's highly unprofessional police force the other day in a convenience store buying newspapers (the dumber tabloids of course...) sandwiches, chocolate etc. 'Fine' I hear you say, but not when they abandoned their car on the zig-zag are outside, which constitutes part of a pedestrian crossing. This offence is endorsable, punshable by 3 points and a fine, but hey... not if you are in the brotherho- sorry police force.

(And before any apologists come on here to correct me, they were not attending an emergency call - they were buying papers!!)

Unlikely to see the troops returning though - George Bush's puppet administration will be somewwhat reluctant to think for themselves - preferring white house doctrine to be dictated to them.

10

Norbert Dentressangle,

03/09/2007 15:56:43

#8 Yeah you're right, there's no point in protest, much like the sterile unionist voices on here, no point to them.

11

James (1),

03/09/2007 20:56:44

So what! It's only money and there is plenty of that.
What is unfortunate is that the protesters actually think anyone in power gives a jot what they are doing.
All that happens is the police budget is spent and needs to be topped up by the government. They get the money from us and the circle is complete.
#10 what did you do about it? Is writing on line the sum total of your protest or did you note the number and report it. No? Too busy no doubt or is it too lazy?
Let's have your excuse. You say you saw a blatant offence being committed by the police so what did you do about it? Why not say "nothing would be done any way so I did not bother" signed Pathetically Lazy

12

Hello,

UK 03/09/2007 21:59:24

#2 Gnasher. What about the overtime that the Police get? Who pays for that? The taxpayer!
"For those protestors who are doleites, bill the Councils where they come from. " What have the councils got to do with them? It's the Government that gives out giros, not the councils.
The Iraq and Afghanistan wars. The cost of Trident. All the wrongdoings by the Government, who pays for them? Is the Government (not the taxpayer) going to pay for it?

13

WL,

livingston 04/09/2007 11:51:11

If people want to campaign against nuclear submarines they have to go to Westminster and not to Faslane.


 

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