The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Dunkirk star: Don’t dredge up war graves

- By Simon Murphy and Mark Wood

DUNKIRK star Sir Mark Rylance has launched a damning attack on plans to dredge a sandbank that is the final resting place of dozens of Battle of Britain airmen.

The Oscar-winner asked what the ‘outcry’ would be ‘if it was announced France was going to dredge the sands of Dunkirk to make concrete and other constructi­on products’.

Dover Harbour Board wants to dredge Goodwin Sands, off the Kent coast, near Deal, to expand cargo facilities and build a marina.

But at least 60 RAF and German

‘Why are we disrespect­ful of these honourable men?’

aircraft are believed to have crashed over the ten-mile stretch of shifting sandbanks during the fierce aerial battles of 1940. Many of the airmen’s bodies were never recovered.

The sands have also seen more than 2,000 shipwrecks. In the Great Storm of 1703, on one night alone 1,200 men were lost there.

Campaigner­s say the plan to remove 2.5million cubic metres of sand and gravel will not only disturb wrecks but will cause coastal erosion and endanger delicate ecosystems.

Sir Mark, 57, said: ‘What is the problem with us, that we are so disrespect­ful of these honourable souls who perished in the English Channel defending the rest of us from fascism?’

After hearing his remarks, the Port of Dover issued a scathing rebuke, claiming it was ‘inappropri­ate to compare the Dunkirk evacuation with a small dredge of the Goodwin Sands – which have been dredged numerous times since the war’.

A spokesman said the ‘sad truth’ was that ‘Dover families, who survived Hellfire Corner [the heavy German shelling and bombing of Dover during the war], could be deprived of the regenerati­on they’ve wanted for more than 70 years’.

The Mail on Sunday first reported on the campaign against the plans, which has now amassed more than 13,000 signatorie­s to a petition, last year. Sir Mark, whose greatgrand­father lived in Dover and captained cross-Channel ferries, stars in the summer blockbuste­r Dunkirk about the May 1940 evacuation.

A third consultati­on is due to be held later this year over the dredging plans. The Marine Management Organisati­on, which will decide on the project, declined to comment.

 ??  ?? PROTEST: Sir Mark Rylance, seen in his Dunkirk role, attacked dredging plan
PROTEST: Sir Mark Rylance, seen in his Dunkirk role, attacked dredging plan

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