Protestors tell US Embassy we don’t want your nukes on our doorstep

London CND and friends held a successful protest outside the US embassy in the early evening of Tuesday 21 March to oppose the return of Unite States nuclear weapons once again to the UK. This will make Britain a likely target for a nuclear attack, so it is essential that the US’s plan to base their missiles here does not go ahead.

Protestors heard about CND’s campaign to stop US nukes being stationed at Lakenheath air force base 70 miles north east of London from a range of speakers, including Sue Wright, Chair of Norwich CND which is the nearest group to Lakenheath and Junayd Islam from Cambridge Student CND.

Cllr Emma Dent-Coad, Stop the War’s Shelly Asquith, Jess Barnard, Labour National Executive Committee member, and John McGrath representing the International Committee of the Democratic Socialists of America also addressed protestors. Rev Nagase from the London Peace Pagoda offered prayers for peace, and members of CND groups around London and the Home Counties contributed songs and poems, and colourful banners.

CND’s social media platforms, plus coverage from Times Radio and other local and regional news media helped get the message across to Londoners, and publicise the next national protest at Lakenheath on Saturday 20 May.

Book your seat on London CND’s coach early to make sure of a place!


In remembrance of Hedy Fromings

Hedy Fromings

23rd December 1926 – 19th January 2023


Mostly I am interested in people and talking to them.
— Hedy Fromings

Hedwig (known as Hedy) was born in Ruprechtice Liberec in Czechoslovakia. In 1938 the Munich agreement was signed allowing the Germans to occupy the Sudetenland. Hedy’s father was a well-known trades unionist and edited a left-wing newspaper. He was arrested by the Germans and survived six years in a concentration camp. Hedy, aged 12, and her mother were helped to escape by a Quaker organization in Prague. Hedy and her mother spent the war in North Wales as refugees.

After the war, Hedy trained as an architect first in London and then Prague, but decided to return to England. In 1961 she married Tony Fromings, also an architect, and in 1963 they had twins, Andy and Lenka. In 1965 Hedy and Tony moved to Forest Hill, becoming stalwarts of the South East London peace movement for the rest of their lives. Tony died in 2006.

In the 1980s and 90s, they were both regular attenders of London Region CND events in Conway Hall and at SOAS, and also attended Nuclear Trains Action Group meetings. They were involved in many campaigns, including marches to Aldermaston, regular CND stalls in Forest Hill and Sydenham, and organising the annual Hiroshima Day peace picnic. In the 1980s, they toured South East London with Buddhist monks in an open top peace bus. Hedy also organized Morning Star bazaars for many years.

Hedy continued to be active after Tony’s death, and was secretary of Forest Hill and Sydenham CND. In this role, she was an organizer of the annual CND Plant Fair, which raised money for the Chernobyl Children’s Fund, and worked with other CND groups on stalls at Lewisham Peoples Day, on the distribution of White Poppies, and on the Remembrance Sunday laying of a peace wreath. She continued to campaign for peace until finally prevented by declining health.

Outside politics, Hedy’s greatest love was folk music and dancing. She was actively involved in a Czech dance group as a dancer and singer for over fifty years, and organized national and international tours returning regularly to Czechoslovakia.

Hedy had a warm and generous personality – she loved people and they loved her. Alongside Diane Gemie, Jim Radford and Gurbakhsh Garcha, she was one of a group of South East London peace activists who remained active into their nineties. They are all very much missed, and their contributions to the peace movement will not be forgotten.


Fukushima 12th anniversary vigil in London

12 years ago, the worst nuclear power accidents in the world happened at Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.

12 years later, 3 reactors are still melting down and radioactive wastewater is generated everyday. Over 1.3 million tonnes of contaminated is going to be discharged into the Pacific from spring this year.

On top of this, the Japanese government recently announced a change in energy policy to encourage the restart of idled nuclear power plants and build more new Small Module Reactors.

To remember the victims of the nuclear accident and oppose these disastrous decisions, Japanese Against Nuclear held a vigil on Friday 10th March 2023 in front of the Japanese Embassy, joined by London CND members.

A message from a victim follows.


Hello,

My name is Akiko MORIMATSU.

The Great East Japan Earthquake of March 11, 2011 was followed by the TEPCO Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident. What happened to us, the residents of Fukushima?  What damage did the people living near the plant suffer? I would like to tell you about it in a concrete way.

On March 11, 2011, I was living in Koriyama, a town in Fukushima Prefecture, located about 60 km from the Fukushima Daiichi plant. There were four of us. Me, my husband and two children. A 5-month-old girl and a 3-year-old boy.

First of all, I would like to tell you that when a nuclear accident occurs, regardless of our age or sex, whether we are for or against nuclear power, we are all confronted with the problem of exposure to radioactivity. Radiation is invisible and colourless. There is no pain or tingling on the skin. And there is the issue of low-dose radiation exposure. At a great distance, you are exposed to low doses of radiation. Besides the fact that radiation cannot be perceived by the senses, people do not die instantly.

In this context, we, living 60km from the plant, lost our home in the Great Earthquake, and then after this natural disaster, we suffered a man-made disaster: the nuclear accident.

Of course, we did not hear the explosions at the nuclear power plant, nor did we see the damaged plant buildings directly. We only learned about the accident through the news on TV. Apart from that, there was no way to know that an accident with explosions took place. There was no way of knowing the exact situation of the Fukushima Daiichi plant, nor how much radiation we would be exposed to. We didn’t know how much radiation we had to endure, because neither the state authorities nor the operator TEPCO provided accurate information. We, the people living near the plant, had to make many decisions in this ignorance.

I’m going to tell you about the most difficult thing I have had to do in the last 12 years since the accident. After the explosions at the nuclear power plant, we were well aware of the explosions… But we, who were 60 km away from the plant, were not evacuated by force. Apart from the evacuation order, there was also a confinement order. Gradually, within a radius of 2 km, then 3 km around the nuclear power plant, the population was forcibly evacuated. The circular mandatory evacuation zone gradually expanded. And from 20 to 30 km from the power plant, there was the order to stay indoors. That was the order given by the government. But we, 60 km away, did not receive the confinement order. We were not evacuated either. We were left on our own without any protection.

In this situation, I learned from the TV that the tap water, the drinking water, was contaminated. The first information I got was about the tap water in Kanamachi in Tokyo. They had found radioactive substances in the water. It was on a television program.

The Kanamachi water treatment plant was 200 km from the Fukushima Daiichi plant. We were only 60 km from the plant. Within the 200 km radius, the radioactivity increased, and with the rain radioactive substances contaminated the drinking water. Since the tap water at 200 km from the plant was contaminated, the water at 60 km had to be contaminated without any doubt. So, we learned about the radioactive contamination of our drinking water from the TV news.

Up to that point, it was known that radioactive material had been dispersed, but at 60km, there were no orders to evacuate or to stay indoors. There were repeated statements from the Prime Minister’s Office that there would be no immediate impact on health. The issue of exposure was indeed on our minds. But when I found out that the water in Tokyo was contaminated, and that the water in Fukushima was also contaminated, I realised that I was unknowingly drinking radioactive water. But even after learning this fact, I had to continue drinking the water. And so did my two children, aged 5 months and 3 years. My 5-month-old daughter was clinging to life through breast milk from a mother who was drinking contaminated water.

We also heard on the news that there had been a huge radioactive fallout in and around Fukushima, that shipments of leafy vegetables had been suspended, that farmers were going to lose their livelihoods, and that there had been suicides of desperate farmers. They had lost all hope in the future of their profession. All this we heard on TV.

So, we learned that there really was radioactive contamination. I learned that the farmers had milked the cows, but since shipping was no longer possible, they had to dump the milk in the fields.

As a nursing mother in Fukushima, I thought that we were also mammals like the cows. We humans were also exposed to high doses of radioactivity in the air, and we had to drink tap water, knowing that it was polluted.

I heard about the biological concentration. Milk was even more radioactive than water. That’s why the milk had to be thrown away. Yet I was drinking radioactive water, I was breastfeeding my 5-month-old daughter, and my milk concentrated the radioactivity.

I didn’t want to be exposed to radiation myself, and of course I didn’t want my five-month-old child to be exposed to radiation. But we were totally denied the right to choose to refuse exposure. Above all, a baby can’t say she doesn’t want to drink breast milk because it is contaminated. My three-year-old son brought me a glass when he was thirsty, saying “mummy, give me a glass of water”. Knowing that the tap water was contaminated, I was obliged to give him this water.

This is my experience.

The will to avoid exposure, the right to avoid exposure, are fundamental rights to protect life. Their violation is the most serious of all the damages caused by the nuclear accident. I think this issue should be at the heart of the nuclear debate.

I am not the only one who gave poisoned water to our children. Many people living in the area affected by the nuclear disaster had the same experience.

In order to avoid repeating these experiences and to improve the radioprotection policy, I would like you all to think together about the real damage caused by a nuclear accident, starting with whether you can drink radio-contaminated water. I think that this would naturally lead to a certain conclusion.

The most serious damage I suffered from the nuclear accident was that I was subjected to radiation exposure that was not chosen and was avoidable. 

This is the most serious damage to which I would strongly like to draw your attention.

Akiko Morimatsu


Testimony first published here.