----- Original Message -----
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, September 09, 2000 7:33 PM
Subject: [STOPNATO.ORG.UK] What Future NATO/EU Troop Deployments Will Look Like


STOP NATO: �NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK

[Oppose them in the Balkans or oppose them at home. The same unelected
officials in Brussels won't hesitate a moment to fire on their own
populace.]


France may send in troops to end protest
By John Lichfield in Caen
8 September 2000
The French government hinted yesterday that it was prepared to use
troops and police to free the country's oil supplies from a crippling
four-day barricade by trucks, tractors, taxis and ambulances.
Although tough state action of this kind is rare in France, it would not
be unprecedented. Special army tanks for obstacle clearing were used to
lift a siege of oil refineries by hauliers in 1992.
The veiled warning by French ministers came as truck-owners',
taxi-drivers' and farmers' protests against high oil prices brought
tempers to boiling point and large parts of France to a near standstill.
The European Commission demanded assurances from the French government
within 24 hours that it was doing everything possible to maintain free
trade and movement within Europe.
British motorists briefly barricaded one carriageway of the A16 motorway
near Calais yesterday in retaliation for a partial blockade of the
Channel Tunnel freight terminal. Although the car entrance to the tunnel
shuttle, and another freight entrance, were kept open by French police,
the British drivers grew tired of delays imposed by the farmers'
barricade.
They briefly parked their vehicles across the other carriageway of the
motorway, blocking traffic heading in the other direction.
Although there was no direct threat of intervention by the French
government to end the four-day refinery blockade, the justice, interior
and defence ministers all made strong statements yesterday warning that
France could no longer be "held to ransom". The Defence Minister, Alain
Richard, said the blockade could pose a threat not just to the economy
butto the "security" of the French nation. That comment was widely
interpreted as a justification for intervention by the army and
gendarmerie, both of which come under Mr Richard's control.
Four-fifths of the petrol stations in France were estimated by oil
companies last night to be out of fuel or likely to have exhausted
supplies today.


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