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St Athan unspun
James Maiden
Thanks to concerted efforts on a
number of fronts, promoters of th
St Athan Defence Training Acade-
my have been on the back foot in
recent weeks.
At the end of October, the MoD
announced it had decided not to
hand over half of the proposed
military training to the Metrix Con
sortium  the group of arms and
construction companies hoping t
secure lucrative contracts as mili-
tary training is centralised and pri
vatised.
This means that thousands of
the proclaimed jobs will not now
be moving to St Athan in South
Wales, forcing Peter Hain MP and
WAG [Welsh Assembly Govern-
ment] First Minister Rhodri Mor-
gan to rush to reassure the public
that the Academy would still go
ahead.
Cluster bomb-maker
Campaigners challenged the
involvement in the St Athan proj-
ect of the US aerospace company
Raytheon, drawing attention to
their production of the AGM-154
Joint Standoff Weapon, used to
deliver cluster bombs in Iraq.
Rhodri Morgan, showing a dis-
tinct lack of moral fibre, reassured
the people of Wales that he wel-
comed Raytheon's involvement.
In contrast, Jill Evans MEP is
the first politician to publicly
express concern over St Athan.
For highlighting the involvement of
arms companies and challenging
the promoters' claims about the
number and quality of new jobs
that will be created for local peo-
ple, Evans has been accused of
being "naïve", "dangerous" and a
"nutter".
Recently, BBC news refused to
give Jill Evans coverage after a
Plaid Cymru debate on St Athan,
reporting only that her paper had
"been noted". Jill Evans told PN:
"I don't think people are aware
that Plaid did pass a resolution."
On 17 January, a year since the
proposed St Athan Defence Train-
ing Academy was announced,
there will be a "non-celebration"
outside the Senedd [National
Assembly, Cardiff].
For more information, contact:
no2militaryacademy@inbox.com or
www.cynefinywerin.org.uk
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