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[Indymedia UK]
Let's be clear about this judgement: the SHAC 7 have been handed absurdly long jail sentences because they mounted a successful campaign to dent the profits of an industry they believe to be unjust. What NETCU, judge Butterfield et al have sought to do is vilify a legal and peaceful campaign and to 'round up' its assumed leaders in order to break the back of a successful movement. They have failed!
SHAC ATTACKED BUT NOT DEFEATED
On Wednesday 21st January 2009, seven activists from SHAC (Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty), including Heather Nicholson from Swansea and Daniel Wadham from Aberdare, were sentenced to prison terms totalling 50 years. Individual sentences ranged from four to eleven years for 'conspiracy to blackmail with persons unknown'. The implications of this judgement go far beyond the animal rights movement.
SHAC, set up to close down Huntingdon Life Sciences (HLS) in late 1999, has long been the target of government oppression and it seems our elected 'leaders' will stop at nothing to clamp down on legitimate protest in order to protect big business.
HLS claim their tests are performed to strict criteria, provide reliable results that can be reproduced and use leading standards of animal care and welfare. However, in recent years, HLS has been exposed on seven separate occasions for falsifying data, staff incompetence and animal cruelty, including workers punching beagle puppies in the face .
Far from being the pioneers of life-saving medical research depicted by the mainstream media, HLS is a commercial contract testing company which tests artificial colourings, flavourings and sweeteners, herbicides, GM food, plastics, industrial chemicals, 'health foods', dietary supplements and a small amount of drugs for other commercial companies. It is the largest company of its kind in Europe with approximately 70,000 animals on site at anytime including rabbits, cats, hamsters, dogs, guinea-pigs, birds and monkeys. HLS kill 500 animals every day.
As SHAC's campaign against HLS took hold, more and more investors (including the Labour party) sold their shares, causing the value of the company to plunge. The situation became so desperate that the government stepped in to provide both banking facilities and insurance.
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full story:
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2009/01/420435.html
Activism Labeled "Blackmail" - SHAC UK
Sentenced
Green Is
The New Red | 22.01.2009
Activism
Labeled �Blackmail,� UK Animal Activists Sentenced to 4-11 Years in Prison
From the
Times Online (UK).
Seven animal rights activists in the U.K. were sentenced to up to 11 years in
prison Wednesday for �conspiracy to blackmail� in their campaign to shut down
the notorious animal testing laboratory Huntingdon Life Sciences.
The judge in the case called the grassroots campaign �urban terrorism� run with
�almost military precision.� [1]
The UK prosecution is quite similar to charges brought against seven animal
rights activists in the United States, dubbed the SHAC 7. [2] The US activists
were sentenced to between one and six years for conspiracy to violate the Animal
Enterprise Protection Act, [3] conspiracy to stalk, stalking and conspiracy to
harass using a telecommunications device. Their cases were recently argued
before an appeals courts in Philadelphia (here�s a closer look at the hearing).
[4]
In both sets of cases, the government linked the defendants to a controversial
campaign website that published all news related to the movement to shut down
HLS, both legal and illegal. Neither the U.S. nor the U.K. government argued
that the defendants committed the illegal acts in the news accounts published on
their websites, but that, through their vocal support for those tactics and
publication of communiqu�s, they �conspired� to do so.
The U.S. and U.K. governments argued that, by publishing the addresses, email
addresses and phone numbers of corporations tied to HLS, and executives with
those corporations, that the defendants were part of a conspiracy (in the U.S.,
the conspiracy was to commit �terrorism� and �stalk,� in the UK it was a
conspiracy to �blackmail.�)
That distinction�between underground activists, and aboveground activists who
vocally support them�has been entirely lost on the mainstream press. Breaking a
window is not the same as writing about breaking a window, or posting someone
else�s account of their window breaking. I�d hope that reporters, of all people,
would be able to understand this distinction.
Yet the BBC report makes claims like, �They also sent hoax bomb parcels and made
threatening telephone calls to firms telling them to cut links with HLS.� [5]
It�s never noted that the defendants were never accused of doing that: they were
acts by other activists, outside of SHAC, who supported the mission of the
campaign. Even worse, The Guardian recklessly claims that the activists were
�considered key figures in the Animal Liberation Front.� [6]
I�ve written at length on this site on the U.S. SHAC 7 case, and want to take a
closer look at the U.K. case. Particularly, the fact that these activists, who
have been demonized in the press from day one as �terrorists,� were convicted of
�conspiracy to blackmail.�
First, setting aside the �conspiracy,� element, let�s look at that term,
�blackmail.� To most people, it means making threats (usually threatening to
reveal embarrassing or criminal information) in order to get something in
return. For instance: blackmailing a CEO that you�ll send the press photos of
his debaucherous weekend in Miami unless he pays you ten thousand dollars. Check
out this legal definition from West�s Encyclopedia of American Law: [7]
The crime involving a threat for purposes of compelling a person to do an act
against his or her will, or for purposes of taking the person�s money or
property.
These animal activists weren�t trying to take anyone�s money or property. They
were, however, saying that unless HLS stopped these business practices, the
activists would do everything they could to shut them down. And unless these
corporations that did business with HLS cut their ties, the activists would
target them as well.
Unlike other cases that most people would consider �blackmail,� with these
activists, the money didn�t matter. All that mattered was the animals.
Calling a political case like this �blackmail� is like, to use a U.S. example,
calling the lunch counter civil disobedience of the civil rights movement
�blackmail.� The threat of that movement was explicit: continue discriminating
against black people, and we�ll continue disrupting your business. Stop
discriminating, and we�ll stop protesting. Hasn�t every social movement operated
at that basic level of �blackmail�?
Second, even if you disagree with that quick-and-dirty explanation, these
activists aren�t even convicted of �blackmail.� They�re convicted of conspiracy
to blackmail. Conspiracy charges have been used throughout history against
social movements when nothing else sticks. Those kinds of cases have been
brought against antiwar activists, civil rights activists, environmental
activists and many, many others with the sole purpose of silencing dissent.
Conspiracy charges aren�t about bringing criminals to justice, they�re about
singling out people perceived as �leaders� in order to set an example and
instill fear.
This case, and its U.S. counterpart, are precedent-setting power grabs. They
should be a wakeup call for activists in all social movements. If running a
controversial website and vocally supporting illegal conduct, through words not
actions, can lead to 11 years in prison, what�s next? The National Extremist
Coordination Unit, the agency in the UK set up to crack down on activist
�terrorists,� is already setting its sights on environmentalists. [8] These
government and corporate tactics are fluid. They can flow between countries and
between movements. And they�re becoming more and more brazen.
[1]
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/crime/article5558700.ece
[2]
http://www.greenisthenewred.com/blog/newred
[3]
http://www.greenisthenewred.com/blog/aepa
[4]
http://www.greenisthenewred.com/blog/2009/01/13/recap-of-the-stop-huntingdon-animal-cruelty-terrorism-appeal-in-philadelphia/
[5]
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/7837064.stm
[6]
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/jan/21/huntingdon-animal-rights
[7]
http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/blackmail
[8]
http://www.ecoearth.info/shared/reader/welcome.aspx?linkid=110122&keybold=coal
AND protesters
Green Is
The New Red
Homepage:
http://greenisthenewred.com
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