December meeting of the group takes place tonight, Thursday 12th as usual in Victoria road at 7:30. Supporters and new members welcome but it is a working meeting.
We have the carol singing next week.
Amnesty in Salisbury & South Wiltshire
Promoting human rights from Salisbury UK
December meeting of the group takes place tonight, Thursday 12th as usual in Victoria road at 7:30. Supporters and new members welcome but it is a working meeting.
We have the carol singing next week.
We have been holding our card signing for many years now in the centre of Salisbury but the numbers willing to sign – even at Christmas – have dwindled. So this year we took up the offe
r by the Cathedral to hold it there which we did this afternoon (8 December 2019) with great success. Well over a hundred signed our cards and we were back to the days of a crowd of people signing.
Interestingly, and perhaps appositely, many were at the Cathedral to see the Magna Carta which of course is where the human rights story started just over 700 years ago.
PAST EVENT
On Sunday 8th from noon till 2pm we shall be in the Cathedral cloister for our annual card signing. For many years, we did this in the centre of Salisbury usually by the Library but the recent 2 years have been disappointing so we have decided to try the Cathedral.
Look forward to seeing you there if you are in the vicinity.
We are pleased to post our minutes of the November meeting which discusses the things we have done recently and forthcoming activities. If you are interested in joining the group, then the events list at the end is a good place to start. You would be very welcome to come along and make yourself known.
The film Nae Pasaran is on this Wednesday 13th at the Arts Centre in Salisbury starting at 7:30 and tickets are available at £8.00 each. The film is set in Scotland. Details about the film can be seen here.
The minutes of the October group meeting are now available and can be accessed below. Thanks to group member Lesley for writing them up. A busy meeting with a number of events happening over the coming months.
The minutes of the September meeting are now available thanks to group member Lesley for compiling them. A full meeting with a number of future events in hand.
Septembers group meeting was held last night and the minutes will follow in a little while. Main points discussed;
More details in the minutes
The protests in Hong Kong have been going on since 9th June 2019 and we have seen regular incidents of violent police actions to quell the demonstrations. There have also been what appear to be organised attacks by thugs wielding bars and clubs with no sign of any arrests or indeed of police at all.
A statement by Amnesty following the July events said:
The violent scenes in Yuen Long tonight were in part because Hong Kong police chose to inflame a tense situation rather than deescalate it. For police to declare today’s protest unlawful was simply wrong under international law.
While police must be able to defend themselves, there were repeated instances today where police officers were the aggressors; beating retreating protesters, attacking civilians in the train station and targeting journalists. Alarmingly, such a heavy-handed response now appears the modus operandi for Hong Kong police and we urge them to quickly change course. Man-kei Tam, Director of Amnesty International Hong Kong
The police have been using tear gas supplied by the UK company Chemring. The firm has a factory outside Salisbury (pictured) although the cannisters are made by their plant in Derby. It is still under investigation for money laundering, bribery and corruption by the Serious Fraud Office.

Following similar incidents in 2014 – the umbrella movement – it was thought that a licence to sell tear gas was withheld or at least under review but it seems as though the company was free to sell it to the Hong Kong police. This is part of a wider government policy of allowing UK companies to sell weapons to all kinds of regimes whilst allegedly claiming to enforce a strict control policy. Chemring were granted an open licence in 2015. The former foreign secretary, Jeremy Hunt, recently withdrew the licence following the weeks of violence which makes inviting HKPF to the DSEI arms fair odd. The firm’s human rights policy (2019) says:
[We will] seek to uphold all internationally recognised human rights wherever our operations are based. para 3.14, 2019
Hong Kong police withdrew from the DSEI arms fare to be held this week having been invited by the Dept. for International Trade the minister for which is Liz Truss. A statement by the department said:
an invitation does not imply that any future export licences will be granted to Hong Kong
Campaign Against the Arms Trade, CAAT said:
The UK government approved the export of an unlimited quantity of crowd control equipment to Hong Kong. Police in Hong Kong have used tear gas, rubber bullets, water cannon and batons to violently disperse protests opposing the new Extradition Bill. At least six people have been taken to hospital after inhaling tear gas.
There have been many protests about this fair which invites a number of countries many of which commit a range of human rights infringements, use torture and in the case of Saudi Arabia are bombing civilian targets in Yemen.
The Omega Research Foundation established in 1990, provides rigorous, objective, evidence-based research on the manufacture, trade, and use of, military, security and police (MSP) equipment. Such technologies range from small arms and light weapons to large weapon systems; from policing technologies and prison equipment to equipment used for torture, amongst others. A recent tweet from them shows a photograph of a CS gas cannisters which appears to be made by Chemring.
The substance of the Hong Kong protests is that they do not want individuals to be extradited to China whose legal system is corrupt. Britain has a delicate role to play in protecting the agreement with China for ‘one country – two systems’. We wish to see essential freedoms in the ex colony to be upheld. Our integrity is a key component in that. As in so many other countries around the world, our willingness to sell arms and MSP equipment risks compromising that integrity.
UPDATE 5 June 2020 see also the firm’s alleged activity in selling arms to the Egyptian regime which commits many human rights abuses.
If you would like to join the local group you would be most welcome. The best thing is to keep an eye on this site or on Facebook and Twitter, and make yourself known at an event.
Sources: Financial Times; CAAT; Morning Star; Guardian; Fieldfisher; Omega Research Foundation; Chemring website
UPDATE: very successful morning and we were kept busy from before 10 till noon. Sold lots of cakes. Thanks to all those who came or helped or provided cakes.
There is a coffee morning today – Saturday – in St Thomas’s church in Salisbury. There will be lots of home made cakes (and some bought ones) and if you were thinking of joining the local group or wanted to know more, this would be a golden opportunity.
