Campaigners condemn cross-border road transport of nuclear bombs during pandemic

Anti-nuclear campaigners have criticised the decision to transport nuclear warheads from the south of England to Scotland during the pandemic.

A convoy carrying the weapons is understood to have left the Atomic Weapons Establishment site at Burghfield, Berkshire, on Wednesday morning and arrived at the storage facility at the Royal Naval Armaments Depot Coulport in Argyll and Bute that evening.

Nukewatch UK claims the convoy would have involved at least 50 personnel, including a crew change, and said it travelled along the M6 and on the M8 through Glasgow city centre.

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Jane Tallents of Nukewatch UK said: “We never think this is essential travel and certainly at the moment there is no justification for putting us at further risk of potentially overwhelming the NHS if there was an accident.”

Nukewatch UK claims the convoy would have involved at least 50 personnel, including a crew change, and said it travelled along the M6 and on the M8 through Glasgow city centre.Nukewatch UK claims the convoy would have involved at least 50 personnel, including a crew change, and said it travelled along the M6 and on the M8 through Glasgow city centre.
Nukewatch UK claims the convoy would have involved at least 50 personnel, including a crew change, and said it travelled along the M6 and on the M8 through Glasgow city centre.

She also voiced fears over the movement of workers who could potentially be carrying coronavirus.

She added: “It is never right to possess and deploy nuclear weapons and transport them on public roads. Doing it right now is completely irresponsible.”

Scottish Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament chairwoman Lynn Jamieson said the “transport of nuclear bombs across the English-Scottish border is always an unnecessary journey”.

She added: “The purpose, ensuring British capacity to threaten mass destruction, diverts efforts away from genuine world security while risking a catastrophic accident.”

A Ministry of Defence spokeswoman said: “This move is part of an essential military operation and has been carefully planned.

“Government health advice is being followed at all times and the movement of staff in public areas will be kept to a minimum.”

A Scottish Government spokesman said: “The Scottish Government is strongly opposed to the siting of nuclear weapons in Scotland – in terms of the transportation of such weapons, we have made clear to the UK Government that we expect the Ministry of Defence to do so as safely and securely as possible at all times.”

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