Miscellaneous tax resisters → individual war tax resisters → Chris Coverdale

Some bits and pieces from here and there:


Some international tax resistance news that has flashed across my browser in recent days:


Here are a few more details about war tax resister Chris Coverdale, who is currently imprisoned in the U.K. for his refusal to pay tax on the grounds that he would be thereby supporting the terrorist activities of the government:

Coverdale started serving a 42-day sentence on . You can write to him at the following prison address:

Christopher Coverdale, #A1279DP
HMP Lewes
1 Brigton Road
Lewes, East Sussex BN7 1EA

I’m not entirely confident about my understanding of how the legal system works across the pond, but some of what I read suggests that Coverdale is effectively burning off his tax debt by serving prison time, so that when he is released he will no longer owe the amount.

A U.K. correspondent informs me that this suggestion is not correct, and that Coverdale will still be considered liable for the tax upon his release.


There’s a new NWTRCC newsletter out, with content including:


Hannnelore Morgenstern, of the German “peace tax” group Netzwerk Friedenssteuer, sent me a recap of the Conscience and Peace Tax International conference that was held in London . (I have made some edits for clarity, as English is not Morgenstern’s best language):

Fourteen participants from six countries met to make the necessary decisions. Now the work of the Board has been strengthened and the assignments for our Geneva delegate have been appointed. Board members are Jan Birk, Derek Brett, Robin Brookes, Dietmar Czemy (chairman), and Milena Romero. If necessary, Chris Coverdale and Cathy Deppy want to support the board. And it needs support.

Since the transformation of the association, only a few countries have reregistered themselves. In order for us to continue our work, we must levy a membership fee from now on. The modest balance in our account only allows for three assignments to the CPTI delegate, Christophe Barbey, in Geneva. New ways of funding must be found.

It was agreed that the website should be updated and maybe even redesigned. An expert, and the money, remain to be found.

No announcement was made regarding the next international conference.

For some context, one of the things CPTI members seem to value most about the organization is that it has “special consultative status” at the United Nations. Christophe Barbey is the representative at the UN who carries out whatever privileges this allows CPTI.

CPTI dissolved at its meeting in with the intention of reforming in another host nation under the same name. That, and the deaths of two board members, disrupted the already fraught group, and they’ve been struggling to find their footing ever since.

The group has only a tangential relationship with war tax resistance, though some of its members are war tax resisters. The group is mostly composed of representatives of various national “peace tax”-promoting groups, and it hopes to somehow convince some authority in the United Nations to declare that this form of conscientious objection to military taxation is a universal human right.