Actions against this year’s 6th biennial DSEi Arms Fair

Actions against this year’s 6th biennial DSEi Arms Fair at the ExCel Centre in London’s Docklands kicked off last week in the run up to the event. This week’s resistance began with a candlelit vigil on Monday night followed by a day of action of Tuesday, dawning to reveal a subvertised billboard as well as a huge ‘Destroy DSEi’ banner hung between cranes.

Actions against this year’s 6th biennial DSEi Arms Fair at the ExCel Centre in London’s Docklands kicked off last week in the run up to the event. This week’s resistance began with a candlelit vigil on Monday night followed by a day of action of Tuesday, dawning to reveal a subvertised billboard as well as a huge ‘Destroy DSEi’ banner hung between cranes.

A critical mass of cyclists was out and about all day with explosive sounds and various groups blockaded entrances to the arms fair and death dealing companies such as Aerospace Defence & Security Group. There were die-ins all over the place, including outside the BAe Systems building and at the National Gallery, where the official arms fair reception was held on Tuesday evening, guests being greeted with chants of “Scum!”

Actions in Westminster during the day included a CAAT ‘supermarket shopping’ event and a Christian demonstration against drones with street theatre. This later moved on to General Atomics, which makes the British Reaper drone. A priest from Bradford was allowed to reach the main DSEi entrance after announcing that he’d come to perform the official exorcism. Many other actions and visual events took place in and around Docklands. FIT were all over the place, some thinly disguised as ordinary cops, with FITwatchers keeping a close eye on them. Two arrests were reported during the day, one for spray painting anti- arms fair slogans and one for fence climbing. Several more arrests were reported outside the National Gallery in the evening. [More]

On Wednesday, around 15 people marched from central London to the Excel centre. Despite a blanket 30-day ban on marches still in place in the City of London and the borough of Tower Hamlets, there was no police harassment.