Peace activist buys Texas site near Bush home for permanent protest

US: The principle of neighbourliness is about to be stretched to its limits in Crawford, Texas, where peace activist Cindy Sheehan…

US: The principle of neighbourliness is about to be stretched to its limits in Crawford, Texas, where peace activist Cindy Sheehan has bought a plot of land not far from the town's most famous resident, George Bush. Ms Sheehan, whose son Casey (24) was killed in Iraq two years ago, will use the two-hectare plot as a permanent home for Camp Casey, the roadside peace protest that dogged Mr Bush throughout last summer.

The president traditionally spends an August vacation at the ranch, but this year he is curtailing his holiday to a fortnight - ending it days before the advertised start of Ms Sheehan's protest.

"We are beginning to believe that he is frightened of us," she wrote in a message to supporters, adding that this year's campaign would begin two days earlier than scheduled, "so we can at least share part of the summer with Georgie".

So far, Mr Bush has opted for a policy of non-engagement with Ms Sheehan and her anti-war group, Gold Star Families for Peace, publicly endorsing her right to free speech but refusing to meet her. "It's . . . important for me to go on with my life, to keep a balanced life," he told reporters last year. "I think the people want the president to be in a position to make good, crisp decisions and to stay healthy."

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Other Crawford locals have been more open in their objections: Ms Sheehan says the protesters were threatened by shotgun blasts during the 2005 campaign.

Tensions have been further exacerbated by the revelation that Ms Sheehan used a fellow protester, Gerry Fonseca, as an agent to buy the land.

"If Cindy Sheehan came to town, I don't think anybody would have sold her any property," Mr Fonseca, who was displaced by Hurricane Katrina, told the Waco Tribune-Herald. The seller, Bobby Ramsey, said Mr Fonseca had "told me that Katrina wiped him out . . . it didn't even occur to me that he could use it for this".

County commissioner Ray Meadow said he was "ecstatic" - for a decidedly non-political reason: it would reduce protest traffic jams. "It will keep them off the road and keep traffic moving," he told the Tribune Herald. The protests would be "all just a part of summer now", he added.

Ms Sheehan said she had no grudge against the town. "Crawford is a beautiful place and Camp Casey has made it even lovelier," she wrote. "I think the people of Crawford are beginning to understand that we come in peace... and have an issue with just one resident." - (Guardian service)