A SEA of flags and banners swept through Petersfield on Tuesday, as campaigners against nuclear weapons stopped off in the town. The scheduled Petersfield pitstop was part of an international peace walk from London to Geneva, which is expected to be completed in 84 days. Making their feelings known, and picking up people on route, the peaceful pack left London on April 26 and aim to reach the Swiss capital on July 16. Ann Jones, from Liss, joined the group for the day, picking up the trail in Liphook. A seasoned campaigner, Ann has been involved in the peace movement for more than 20 years and even served soup at Greenham Common, where the Women's Peace Camp protested against nuclear testing at the RAF site in the early 1980s. With the announcement that the renewal of Trident nuclear warheads ordered by the Government last year, Ann said: "We just do not agree with that, no way. This is not being done in our name." Other protesters in the group, whose numbers had reached 17 by the time they arrived in Petersfield, had issues with their own home nations' nuclear policies, with Australia, Sweden, France, America and the UK represented. The walkers, in solidarity for a nuclear free future, set out from London's Battersea Park on the 22nd anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in Ukraine in 1986. And they planned to take in many nuclear facilities on the way to Geneva, in an attempt to "raise awareness about the deadly effects of the whole nuclear cycle". For more details, visit http://www.footprintsforpeace.net">www.footprintsforpeace.net. The peace protestors are pictured make their feelings known in Petersfield on route to Geneva.