Camp residents have occasionally breached the security of the Naval Base by getting inside the fence, by canoeing or swimming into the base, by successfully disrupting the road transportation of the
Trident missile warheads, which are heavily guarded by the
Special Escort Group (Ministry of Defence Police), and by blockading the two gates. They are also active, with
Trident Ploughshares and
CND, in large public blockades of the base, attended by members of the public and a few politicians. Such annual events aim to keep the base closed for as long as possible by preventing its staff from arriving for work, and usually involve large numbers of protesters being arrested.
Faslane 365 The Faslane 365 campaign was an effort to establish a continuous protest at the base for a 365-day period using autonomous groups of 100 people. The campaign was launched in September 2006 with the first protest action commencing on 1 October 2006 carried out by a campaigning group of women associated with protests at
Greenham Common. Arrests were made on 2 October of 12 women, and on 9 October of 7 unspecified people. On 16 October 23 Swedes and 19 Finns were arrested. There had been 473 arrests up to 8 January 2007. The most recent independent corroboration of the number of arrests appeared in
The Guardian on 12 December 2006, in an article which reported that there had been 344 arrests up to that date. On 7 January 2007, a group of around 40 world-renowned academics including Sir
Richard Jolly and 25 students from Oxford, Cambridge, Sussex and Edinburgh held a seminar discussing the replacement of the trident missiles at the base. Protesters subsequently managed to stage the most successful blockade of the campaign (apart from a negotiated three-day blockage over Christmas) so far closing the North Gate for six hours. All those who blockaded were arrested and held overnight. The majority of these arrests were for
breach of the peace, with 22 prosecutions being made; the vast majority of arrested protesters were released, receiving a letter from the
Procurator Fiscal's office explaining that although "evidence is sufficient to justify my bringing you before the Court on this criminal charge", the Procurator Fiscal has "decided not to take such proceedings". ==Political situation==