----- Original Message -----
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, September 14, 2000 6:19 AM
Subject: [STOPNATO.ORG.UK] Blair Sends For The Troops


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

http://www.the-times.co.uk (Britain)

[Last year, as the U.S., Britain and their NATO
cohorts were intentionally destroying all of
Yugoslavia's major petroleum storage facilities,
releasing burning petro and other toxins into the
earth, water and air; and as they were targeting power
grids and generators with graphite bombs to deny
hospitals and ambulances electricity and gasoline,
Blair's mouthpieces Jamie Shea and George Robertson
were blustering that 'Slobo' should use his emergency,
backup generators/fuel supplies for the maternity
wards being hit by cruise missiles, etc., instead of
for "waging genocide," ad nauseam. Nary a word then
about a "national crisis that was putting lives and
jobs at risk." The shoe is on the other foot now - and
watch how the Blairites squirm.]



The Times (London)
September 14 2000  BRITAIN

 Panic buying of bread and other perishables began
after supermarkets issued a warning of shortages by
the weekend. These shelves in Bristol were cleared out
by early afternoon
Photograph: JOHN EVANS/REUTERS


Blair sends for the troops

BY PHILIP WEBSTER, POLITICAL EDITOR


Petrol protest: Day 7


TROOPS were put on standby last night to intervene in
the deepening fuel crisis as the health service went
on emergency alert, supermarkets began rationing food
and schools and businesses closed.
In a dramatic move to put pressure on the oil
companies to do more to get petrol out of the
refineries, the Government deployed 80 Forces' oil
lorries near hospitals and at other strategic points.

They will deliver oil from the Forces' "considerable
stocks" to essential services if Tony Blair's latest
pleas to the petrol companies fail to bear fruit. The
troops will not deliver oil from refineries. The
Ministry of Defence said: "They are being deployed,
not employed."

The move came after Mr Blair admitted - exactly a day
after predicting that the country would begin
returning to normal within 24 hours - that Britain
faced a national crisis that was putting lives and
jobs at risk.

As the number of tanker movements remained painfully
low, he appealed directly to hauliers, farmers and
taxi drivers to end their protests because "real
damage is being done to real people . . . there is a
real danger now for the NHS and other essential
services. Lives are at risk".

By far the biggest demonstration yesterday was outside
the Grangemouth refinery in Scotland where 500 people
set up pickets - far more than before Mr Blair spoke
on Tuesday - and there were another 200 at Stanlow in
Ellesmere Port. But police reported mere handfuls of
protesters at other depots, so that a total of fewer
than a thousand people were blocking the country's
petrol supplies.

Mr Blair indicated that 500 deliveries were made
during the day - on a normal day there are more than
5,000 - but a survey by The Times suggested that the
true figure was much lower. And both ministers and the
industry admitted that even if the tankers started
delivering at their usual rate, it could be three
weeks before Britain gets back to normal.

Mr Blair said that the idea that a picket at a
refinery gate could determine whether hospitals or
ambulance services or public transport qualified as
essential services was an affront. Doctors and nurses
needed fuel to get into work.

In a notable softening of tone on the demand for lower
fuel duties, Mr Blair and Gordon Brown insisted
through the day that they would "listen" to the
public, but Mr Blair said: "We will listen; we will
not be intimidated."

Grim-faced but calm, he said it was time the country
told the protesters: "Look, whatever your views, this
is not on. This is not right. It is not the way to do
things."

But opinion polls last night suggested that the
demonstrators still had the backing of most of the
public. In a telephone poll for Tonight with Trevor
Macdonald, only 6 per cent of more than 700,000
callers approved of Mr Blair's handling of the crisis.


The news that the health service was on "red alert"
for the first time for 20 years - meaning that it has
to draw up contingency plans to deal with emergencies
only - was given in a statement from Alan Milburn, the
Health Secretary, after more hospitals cancelled
non-urgent operations and some began running out of
fresh food and supplies. High street chemists reported
a drugs shortage and said: "People will die as a
result."

Some ambulance services received petrol, but others
were maintaining emergency services only, and said
that elderly people at home were at risk because GPs
and nurses did not have petrol to visit them.

Supermarkets meanwhile rationed bread, milk and sugar
as the Sainsbury's chief executive wrote to Mr Blair
to say that food would run out within days.

All the big oil companies admitted that they had got
out only a fraction of their usual deliveries. By late
evening, Shell said it had made 100 deliveries,
compared with more than 700 on a normal day, while
Texaco said only 34 of its 957 filling stations had
received any fuel. Elf had delivered to 30 instead of
the normal 400.

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