On Swampy ground: a brief history of protest tunnelling in the UK

As HS2 protesters dig down in London, veteran activists explain why the tactic can be so effective

Protest tunnelling, back in the spotlight thanks to subterranean anti-HS2 demonstrations in London, became a national preoccupation in the 1990s when environmental activists dug a complex series of tunnels in the path of an extension to the A30 in Fairmile, Devon, resisting attempts at eviction by police.

Swampy, the nickname of the well-known environmental activist Daniel Hooper, was one of a group of protesters demonstrating against rerouting the road, and spent seven days and nights in the tunnel. He was the last to emerge.

In 1996 the Newbury campaigners dug deep, and in March 1999 environmental protesters occupied a network of tunnels in protest against a planned leisure complex development in Crystal Palace. In 2013 activists again resorted to tunnelling as they tried to prevent the Bexhill-Hastings link road, which eventually opened in 2015.

Veteran activists who protested alongside Swampy in the 1990s say tunnelling is one of the most effective tactics protesters can use to thwart road or other transport building programmes, because it takes a long time to remove people from tunnels, costs a lot of money and can cause significant delays.

Ground encampments by activists are the easiest for bailiffs to clear, followed by treehouse protests. Tunnelling is the most difficult to deal with because it is skilled and delicate work to gain access to a tunnel and remove activists without causing a collapse and potentially risking lives.

According to the environmental activist tunnellers’ bible Disco Dave’s Tunnel Guide, the tactic was inspired by the Vietnam war-era tunnels at Củ Chi.

“At the end of the day it’s a money thing,” said one veteran environmental activist. “HS2 will be doing the maths and adding up the cost of police, security, delays to the building programme and the cost of specialists to remove the activists from the tunnel. There are six or seven anti-HS2 camps along the planned route of the high speed rail link. If all of those camps build tunnels the HS2 project could be in real trouble.”

Contributor

Diane Taylor

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Euston tunnel HS2 protesters walk free from court
Charges against six protesters dropped as HS2 was not carrying out work on the site at the time

Diane Taylor

06, Oct, 2021 @4:21 PM

Article image
Anti-HS2 protesters face eviction from Wendover camp
Activists, including veteran Swampy, barricade themselves inside tunnel at site in Buckinghamshire

Diane Taylor

10, Oct, 2021 @3:24 PM

Article image
Activists evicted from longest-running HS2 protest camp
Three-and-a-half-year protest at Harvil Road camp west of London ends with removal of seven activists

Diane Taylor

13, Feb, 2021 @1:44 PM

Article image
HS2 protesters plan ‘nationwide day of action’ over rail expansion
Activists say bill being presented to parliament sanctions irreversible destruction of environment

Mark Brown North of England correspondent

24, Jan, 2022 @11:34 AM

Article image
HS2 protesters hope to occupy Euston tunnel for weeks
Tunnel was secretly constructed to prevent next phase of work on HS2 high speed rail link

Diane Taylor

27, Jan, 2021 @2:57 PM

Article image
Veteran activist Swampy among protesters in HS2 site standoff with police
Protesters are trying to stop construction at site in Colne Valley nature reserve, west of London

Gwyn Topham

08, Dec, 2020 @1:25 PM

Article image
Swampy is back, in the protest tunnels under Euston
Exclusive: famous Newbury activist is part of the HS2 demonstration, which he views as a potential ‘tipping point’

Diane Taylor

29, Jan, 2021 @6:00 AM

Article image
One protester left in Euston anti-HS2 tunnel as Swampy and others leave
Rail project protest has been ongoing for 30 days, with final activist said to have plenty of supplies

Diane Taylor

25, Feb, 2021 @10:16 AM

Article image
HS2: heavy machinery 'could destabilise Euston protest tunnels'
Safety expert expresses doubt that team conducting eviction of protesters have requisite skills

Diane Taylor

09, Feb, 2021 @7:00 AM

Article image
Digging, cards and chocolate: HS2 activists on life in Euston tunnel
Protesters ‘in the muck together’ since 27 January say they are in good spirits as they resist eviction

Diane Taylor

06, Feb, 2021 @6:42 AM