Ex-oil exec’s luxury home burned down by molotovs

Edmon­ton, Cana­da — The lux­u­ry home of for­mer Syn­crude pres­i­dent and CEO Jim Carter was burned down by an arson­ist Sat­ur­day night. Inves­ti­ga­tors believe that envi­ron­men­tal con­cerns may have been the motive.

Ex-oil exec's luxury home burned down by molotovsEdmon­ton, Cana­da — The lux­u­ry home of for­mer Syn­crude pres­i­dent and CEO Jim Carter was burned down by an arson­ist Sat­ur­day night. Inves­ti­ga­tors believe that envi­ron­men­tal con­cerns may have been the motive. The build­ing was struck by two molo­tov cock­tails and was quick­ly con­sumed by flames, before fire­fight­ers had a chance to con­trol the blaze. Dam­ages were esti­mat­ed at $850,000. Carter who has ties to the oil and gas indus­try was out, as were his fam­i­ly mem­bers, at the time of the inci­dent which took place at approx­i­mate­ly 8:15 PM. No one was injured fight­ing the fire.

Manchester & Heathrow Climate Rush picnics

North­ern Cli­mate Rush at Man­ches­ter Air­port

While 500 pro­test­ers occu­pied the domes­tic depar­ture lounge at Heathrow air­port at 7pm on Mon­day 12th Jan, oth­ers tried a simul­ta­ne­ous occu­pa­tion at Man­ches­ter air­port.…

Climate Rush Manchester
North­ern Cli­mate Rush at Man­ches­ter Air­port

While 500 pro­test­ers occu­pied the domes­tic depar­ture lounge at Heathrow air­port at 7pm on Mon­day 12th Jan, oth­ers tried a simul­ta­ne­ous occu­pa­tion at Man­ches­ter air­port.…

At the North­ern Cli­mate Rush at Man­ches­ter air­port between 50 and 100 peo­ple attempt­ed to occu­py the domes­tic depar­tures lounge but found large num­bers of police screen­ing entry at the doors. The police cor­doned off pro­test­ers in an area away from pas­sen­gers.

The group spelled out ‘fly­ing kills’ in coats, scarves and an umbrel­la on the floor. A man with a cel­lo and a woman with a vio­lin played music by the com­pos­er Han­del while oth­ers ate food from a pic­nic ham­per. How­ev­er, frus­trat­ed at being moved out of pas­sen­gers sight one of the pro­test­ers attempt­ed to breech police lines and was arrest­ed.

Supt Dave Hull said: “Despite repeat­ed attempts to con­tact the organ­is­ers, they failed to engage with us. There­fore, offi­cers did not know how many pro­tes­tors would attend so we had to pre­pare for a range of con­tin­gen­cies. One man was arrest­ed on sus­pi­cion of a pub­lic order offence.”

For VIDEO footage see
http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid1586371503/bctid6995110001

Around 50 cli­mate change activists gath­ered in Ter­mi­nal 3 of Man­ches­ter Air­port last night to protest against air­port expan­sion and domes­tic flights. The demo mir­rored the Cli­mate Rush ‘Din­ner at Depar­tures’ protest at Heathrow’s Ter­mi­nal 1 at the same time. ( http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/manchester/2009/01/418105.html)

There are around 32 flights a day between Man­ches­ter and the Lon­don hubs, despite the high speed rail con­nec­tion. ( http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/s/1026945_plea_to_scrap_london_air_link)

The pro­test­ers dressed in Edwar­dian peri­od arrived to find Ter­mi­nal 3 locked down with around 70 police offi­cers, includ­ing For­ward Intel­li­gence Teams from the Met­ro­pol­i­tan police. They were read parts of the Riot Act before enter­ing a ‘des­ig­nat­ed protest area’.

For­mer Man­ches­ter City Coun­cil­lor, Vanes­sa Hall, who attend­ed the North­ern Cli­mate Rush said:

“ With the speed of inter­ci­ty trains there is no longer any just or sen­si­ble rea­son to take domes­tic flights. All expan­sion plans, includ­ing those at Man­ches­ter and Heathrow should be shelved. Pas­sen­ger num­bers at Man­ches­ter Air­port have been falling for at least the last 6 months.”

She added, “In a time of reces­sion and cli­mate cri­sis, gov­ern­ment mon­ey should be spent on improve­ments to rail, trams, and bus­es, not on sub­si­dies and infra­struc­ture for the avi­a­tion indus­try.”

Avi­a­tion accounts for 13% of UK glob­al warm­ing emis­sions and is the fastest-grow­ing source of green­house gas­es. Air­lines pay no tax on avi­a­tion fuel, cost­ing the pub­lic purse an esti­mat­ed £10 bil­lion.

Man­ches­ter Air­port claims it intends to go car­bon neu­tral by 2015 — but this will not include the emis­sions from the aero­planes.

www.stopmanchesterairport.org.uk

————–
Climate Rush HeathrowHeathrow Ter­mi­nal One Cli­mate Rush Pic­nic a suc­cess!

I arrived at Heathrow ter­mi­nal one with alot of trep­i­da­tion and cau­tion. Not know­ing what to expect, I dressed in a suit and tie to avoid attract­ing inter­est. It did not work.

I entered the ter­mi­nal and when up to domes­tic depar­tures to see what was hap­pen­ing. I found a place to sit and enjoy a cof­fee whilst wait­ing. Being near the place where alot of BAA secu­ri­ty guards were gath­er­ing, I over­heard them try­ing to guess who was a pro­test­er and who was a passenger…it was very fun­ny know­ing I sat yards away and they had did not realise.…

The air­port was in a state of some con­sid­er­able alert. It seems that Cli­mate Rush and a dev­il­ish­ly crim­i­nal plan to have a mil­i­tant pic­nic (by most­ly women) in depar­tures had BAA on the run.

The cops were anoth­er mat­ter. FIT crews were on the upper gang­ways and over 100 police occu­pied the depar­tures lounge when i arrived about an hour before. Even more arrived as I sipped my cof­fee and read the Guardian.

After twen­ty min­utes, two cops saun­tered over to me and ask whether they could search me. I asked why. they said there is a protest planned and they were look­ing for cli­mate chaos extrem­ists. I said I was wait­ing for a friend. After find­ing noth­ing and believ­ing my sto­ry, they let me go. I decid­ed to move to Cafe Rouge where every­body was gathering…safety in num­bers I thought. soon as I got up there, there was anoth­er 30 cops watch­ing absolute­ly every­one…

As the min­utes count­ed down, I moved with under­cur­rents down into the depar­ture check in area and was joined by about 50 or 60 peo­ple who start­ed to lay out a ban­ner and a well stocked organ­ic and home cooked pic­nic. Ten min­utes lat­er, the bulk of pro­test­ers arrived and the depar­tures check in filled up fast. Real pas­sen­gers moved aside and the police moved in to encir­cle the pic­nic. By this stage close to 500 cli­mate rush pro­test­ers were spread­ing them­selves out in a ever widen­ing cir­cle. The strings Quar­tet began play­ing and a few peo­ple start­ed play­ing with a big ball which looked like the plan­et.

The BAA cor­po­rate media descend­ed and so did lots of TV cam­er­a’s hop­ing for an inter­view. at one such so many inter­views were being giv­en, it became dif­fi­cult to move around. Speak­ing with some of the orga­niz­ers, they claimed an enor­mous suc­cess in sus­pend­ing the oper­a­tion of ter­mi­nal 1. It cer­tain­ly looked like a suc­cess to me.

A while lat­er and after most of the food had been eat­en (flushed down with a lit­tle wine), every­one rose to their feet and start­ed chant­i­ng. After Stanstead, the gov­ern­ment, media and police were say­ing that every­one was an extrem­ist and pos­si­bly eco-ter­ror­ists. So the pro­test­ers, most­ly women (some in the 50 and 60’s) start­ed chant­i­ng ” do we look like ter­ror­ists?” and ‘down with BAA’

After one hour, the cops were clos­ing the cir­cle fear­ing a block­ade or a long-term occu­pa­tion. I feared we were all going to be hemmed in and arrest­ed so I decid­ed to retreat with my video cam­era intact and get back home.

Wor­ried about what I had walked away from, I rang a friend who said that every­thing was alright. the demo had fin­ished 15 min­utes after I left and there had been no arrests. In fact the cops relaxed and got quite bored as cli­mate-rush activists offered them food!

http://www.climaterush.co.uk/

Walk of proposed opencast site, NE, 18th Jan

The good folks from the NO OPENCAST TODAY OR TOMORROW cam­paign have invit­ed us along to walk the site that U:K coal are plan­ning to destroy with a sur­face min­ing ‘devel­op­ment’.

Stobswood opencastRed KiteThe good folks from the NO OPENCAST TODAY OR TOMORROW cam­paign have invit­ed us along to walk the site that U:K coal are plan­ning to destroy with a sur­face min­ing ‘devel­op­ment’. This walk will out­line the site that U:K coal plan to mine and we should hope­ful­ly see some of the wildlife that is under threat. Lunch will be pro­vid­ed in the com­mu­ni­ty cen­tre after the walk.

When: Sun­day 18th Jan
Where: 9.45am Dip­ton com­mu­ni­ty cen­tre http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?hl=en&tab=wl
Why: why not?
The n.o.t.t cam­paign has fought a long bat­tle with U:K coal to stop the open cast­ing of the Der­went val­ley. The polit­i­cal cli­mate is cur­rent­ly in favour of coal extrac­tion at any cost com­mu­ni­ty, ecology,climate. The appli­ca­tion is due to be heard around April by Durham/Derwentside coun­ty coun­cil.

Please help stop the need­less destruc­tion of the Pont val­ley sign the on-line peti­tion at www.pontvalley.net or even bet­ter write to coun­ty hall but best of all get out on the walk this com­ing Sun­day. Please for­ward this mail to pub­li­cise this

13 TASMANIAN FOREST DEFENDERS SUED BY LOGGING COMPANY

Jan­u­ary 7th 2009

Tas­man­ian based log­ging com­pa­ny Gunns Ltd has issued a law suit on thir­teen for­est defend­ers claim­ing dam­ages for tres­pass, and seek­ing an injunc­tion that will pre­vent the defen­dants from enter­ing its prop­er­ty and land hold­ings.

Jan­u­ary 7th 2009

Tas­man­ian based log­ging com­pa­ny Gunns Ltd has issued a law suit on thir­teen for­est defend­ers claim­ing dam­ages for tres­pass, and seek­ing an injunc­tion that will pre­vent the defen­dants from enter­ing its prop­er­ty and land hold­ings.

The for­est cam­paign­ers halt­ed work at the Tri­abun­na wood­chip mill in an act of civ­il dis­obe­di­ence to draw atten­tion to the impact of old growth log­ging on cli­mate change.

The pro­posed Gunns Ltd Pulp Mill and recent announce­ments that con­struc­tion may begin in 2009 will ensure that Tas­man­ian for­est pro­tec­tion will remain a cen­tral issue in the lead up to the next fed­er­al elec­tion.

This law­suit comes four years after Gunns Ltd issued the now infa­mous Gunns 20 law­suit in 2004 against twen­ty indi­vid­u­als and organ­i­sa­tions in response their efforts to pro­tect Tasmania’s native forests. It is clear the desire to pro­tect Tasmania’s forests has not dimin­ished.

ELF Sabotage RBS Bank

“Self-pro­mot­ed as ‘The Oil & Gas Bank’ RBS fanat­i­cal­ly finance dan­ger­ous oil and gas projects, accel­er­at­ing cli­mate change, forc­ing species into pover­ty, migra­tion and wars as mur­der­ers con­tin­ue to burn and exploit the plan­ets nat­ur­al ‘resources’.

“Self-pro­mot­ed as ‘The Oil & Gas Bank’ RBS fanat­i­cal­ly finance dan­ger­ous oil and gas projects, accel­er­at­ing cli­mate change, forc­ing species into pover­ty, migra­tion and wars as mur­der­ers con­tin­ue to burn and exploit the plan­ets nat­ur­al ‘resources’.

In 2006 alone the greedy bankers pumped $10 bil­lion into fos­sil fuels fund­ing cor­po­ra­tions demand­ing drilling rigs, pipelines, oil tankers and oth­er tools destroy­ing the Earth and its pop­u­la­tion.

It should come as no sur­prise that Elves sab­o­taged a RBS bank in the south west, glu­ing the doors closed in resis­tance to anthro­pocen­tric poli­cies. This action was inspired by the eco­teur who shut down Kingsnorth pow­er sta­tion, reduc­ing UK cli­mate change emis­sions by 2% and the eco-anar­chist cell for direct attack.

For the col­lapse of civ­i­liza­tion, the sab­o­tage will con­tin­ue.
— Earth Lib­er­a­tion Front”

received anony­mous­ly by http://directaction.info

Animal Rights Case Concern to Environmentalists & call out for 19th January — updated with CW analysis

While the case of 4 ani­mal rights cam­paign­ers found guilty on “con­spir­a­cy to black­mail” charges in rela­tion to con­tract test­ing com­pa­ny Hunt­ing­don Life Sci­ences (HLS) that tests on ani­mals may seem unre­lat­ed to the envi­ron­men­tal move­ment the case has direct rel­e­vance to all rad­i­cal envi­ron­men­tal­ists.

While the case of 4 ani­mal rights cam­paign­ers found guilty on “con­spir­a­cy to black­mail” charges in rela­tion to con­tract test­ing com­pa­ny Hunt­ing­don Life Sci­ences (HLS) that tests on ani­mals may seem unre­lat­ed to the envi­ron­men­tal move­ment the case has direct rel­e­vance to all rad­i­cal envi­ron­men­tal­ists. The activists were con­vict­ed for their part in the now famous SHAC (Stop Hunt­ing­don Ani­mal Cru­el­ty) cam­paign that’s stat­ed aim is to close down the com­pa­ny.

Fol­low­ing their con­vic­tions the media lam­bast­ed the activists for numer­ous unlaw­ful and intim­i­dat­ing actions tak­en against Hunt­ing­don and asso­ci­at­ed com­pa­nies. Many of these actions will be dis­taste­ful to some and there are many dif­fer­ing views on ani­mal research in the envi­ron­men­tal move­ment how­ev­er this case has wider impli­ca­tions for activists across the board.

After a recent nation­al media arti­cle claim­ing a lone extrem­ist might be plan­ning an attack aimed at pop­u­la­tion reduc­tion was pub­lished, which NETCU appear to have had a hand in, some feel that NETCU (Nation­al Extrem­ism Tac­ti­cal Co-ordi­na­tion Unit) could be turn­ing their spot­light on the envi­ron­men­tal move­ment. Addi­tion­al­ly the polic­ing tac­tics expe­ri­enced at Cli­mate Camp indi­cate that ani­mal rights cam­paign­ers aren’t the sole focus of NETCU. If the envi­ron­men­tal move­ment is the new tar­get of NETCU this judge­ment should be tak­en seri­ous­ly by all envi­ron­men­tal­ists.

This case seems to imply that the “organ­is­ers” of rad­i­cal cam­paigns are ful­ly respon­si­ble for every­one that tar­gets the com­pa­ny that they are cam­paign­ing against. Indeed it is the case some cam­paign­ers act­ing against HLS and asso­ci­at­ed com­pa­nies used direct action and it’s true that the defen­dants did not nec­es­sar­i­ly con­demn this type of action either. How­ev­er what is being said is there is no evi­dence that the defen­dants were involved in or even incit­ed the actions list­ed in the media and which it seems they have been held liable for in court.

So what is to be under­stood by this case is that a rad­i­cal cam­paign, such as SHAC, Earth First or Cli­mate Camp is ful­ly respon­si­ble for the actions of all its sup­port­ers. It seems that a cam­paign is expect­ed to ‘con­trol’ activists and speak out against every ille­gal action they make or be faced with respon­si­bil­i­ty for the oth­er activist’s actions.

This will be a prob­lem for net­works and groups like Earth First and Cli­mate Camp the police need only arrest the group organ­is­ing the EF! gath­er­ing, the peo­ple who pro­mote Cli­mate Camp etc. and then hold them respon­si­ble for the actions of any­one cam­paign­ing on the same issue or using the cam­paign name, any­one tak­ing action against GMOs or who attacked the pow­er sta­tion dur­ing Cli­mate Camp.

The police no longer need to find and arrest the per­son who com­mit­ted the rel­e­vant action but can sim­ply imply that the cam­paign is respon­si­ble espe­cial­ly if the cam­paign sup­ports direct action or car­ries reports on such actions on their web­site.

On Mon­day 19th Jan­u­ary there has been a call out for a Nation­al Anti-Vivi­sec­tion Day of Action/Freedom to Protest Day of Action in sup­port of the SHAC activists that are being sen­tenced on that day. Because of the direct rel­e­vance of this case to envi­ron­men­tal­ists I ask that regard­less of your indi­vid­ual view­point on the SHAC cam­paign or ani­mal test­ing you do some­thing to sup­port the free­dom to cam­paign. This could be as sim­ple as ded­i­cat­ing an already planned envi­ron­men­tal action to the cam­paign­ers or hold­ing a small protest.

FREEDOM TO PROTEST NOW!

————–

State repres­sion of Anti-Cor­po­rate Dis­sent: Ani­mal right activists con­vict­ed of ‘con­spir­a­cy to black­mail’

On Decem­ber 23rd, 4 out of 5 activists on tri­al at Win­ches­ter Crown Court were found guilty of ‘Con­spir­a­cy to Black­mail’ at Win­ches­ter Crown Court after a 3 and a half month long show tri­al. The world’s media, prompt­ed by police press offi­cers, were quick to con­demn activists by point­ing to harass­ment against the employ­ees of Hunt­ing­don Life Sci­ences (HLS) and their cus­tomers, share­hold­ers and investors. Actions against HLS, not linked to those con­vict­ed, such as hoax bombs, let­ters alleg­ing pae­dophil­ia, and threats were point­ed to as evi­dence of the defen­dants’ extrem­ism. Police spokes­men and the Nation­al Extrem­ist Coor­di­na­tion Unit (NETCU), the branch of the police set up to deal with the AR move­ment and oth­er expres­sions of the pub­lic’s dis­sent, hailed the con­vic­tions as a vic­to­ry. (For more infor­ma­tion on NETCU see here and here.

What was not exam­ined in the media was the wor­ry­ing devel­op­ment of the repres­sive use of the law which lead to the con­vic­tion of the four defen­dants.

Cor­po­rate Watch has fol­lowed the progress of the tri­al at Win­ches­ter since the begin­ning. The rea­son we were con­cerned about the tri­al is that we see it as part of a larg­er attack on the ani­mal rights move­ment moti­vat­ed by the state’s desire to pro­tect pri­vate cor­po­ra­tions against dis­sent. Since the ani­mal rights move­ment began to effec­tive­ly chal­lenge the prof­its of those involved in vivi­sec­tion and the phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal indus­try the state has repeat­ed­ly respond­ed with new repres­sive mea­sures. In May this year Sean Kirt­ley, an activist involved with Stop Sequani Ani­mal Tor­ture (SSAT), was sen­tenced to four and a half years in prison for updat­ing a web­site with news about a legal, non­vi­o­lent cam­paign to close down Sequani lab­o­ra­to­ries in Led­bury. Kirt­ley was con­vict­ed of ‘Con­spir­a­cy to inter­fere with the con­trac­tu­al rela­tions of an ani­mal research facil­i­ty under sec­tion 145 of the Seri­ous Organ­ised Crime and Police Act’ (SOCPA 145) . His only crime was to protest law­ful­ly against the lab and to update a web­site.

NETCU, how­ev­er, was not sat­is­fied with see­ing ani­mal rights activists banged up for four and a half years and chose to charge cam­paign­ers asso­ci­at­ed with Stop Hunt­ing­don Ani­mal Cru­el­ty (SHAC) with ‘con­spir­a­cy to black­mail’, an offence car­ry­ing up to 14 years in prison. In May 2007, police arrest­ed 32 peo­ple in raids dubbed ‘Oper­a­tion Achilles’. Since then, 15 peo­ple have been charged with ‘con­spir­a­cy’ and are being tried in two sep­a­rate tri­als, of which this was the first.

The charges relate to over four years of con­cert­ed cam­paign­ing against HLS, the largest con­tract test­ing lab­o­ra­to­ry in Europe. The defen­dants includ­ed peo­ple who had been involved in SHAC from the out­set. How­ev­er, two of the defen­dants, Ger­rah Sel­by and Dan Wad­ham, had been in their ear­ly teens at the begin­ning of the peri­od con­cerned and had only been involved for a short time. Wad­ham was only 17 when his part of the alleged con­spir­a­cy alleged­ly occurred.

SHAC, an inter­na­tion­al cam­paign group call­ing for the clo­sure of HLS, has been paint­ed by the police and the press as a ‘crim­i­nal organ­i­sa­tion’ dup­ing mem­bers of the pub­lic con­cerned with ani­mal abuse into donat­ing their mon­ey to fur­ther ‘a cam­paign of black­mail’. SHAC’s activ­i­ties, how­ev­er, have been over­whelm­ing­ly law­ful: the cam­paign pub­lish­es infor­ma­tion about ani­mal abuse inside HLS labs, reports cam­paign­ing activ­i­ties and issues action alerts call­ing on sup­port­ers to write polite let­ters to com­pa­nies work­ing with HLS and ask them to desist. If those com­pa­nies con­tin­ue to do busi­ness with HLS, protests would usu­al­ly fol­low. All mate­r­i­al on the SHAC web­site is checked by a bar­ris­ter and police are giv­en pri­or notice of their demon­stra­tions.

Cus­tomers, sup­pli­ers and share­hold­ers in HLS have also been the sub­ject of some direct action. Slo­gans have been daubed at com­pa­ny premis­es and employ­ees homes; cars have been painstrip­pered; hoax bombs have been sent and employ­ees have been accused of being pae­dophiles. How­ev­er, these actions are not direct­ly linked to the SHAC cam­paign and have only ten­u­ous links to the defen­dants, whose faces were spashed across many tabloid front pages after their con­vic­tions at Win­ches­ter.

Dur­ing the sum­mer, three defen­dants, com­mit­ted cam­paign­ers against HLS, plead guilty to charges of ‘con­spir­a­cy to black­mail’. Dur­ing the tri­al, evi­dence recov­ered from the cam­paign PCs and activists’ per­son­al com­put­ers was pre­sent­ed. Police had found many doc­u­ments believed to have been per­ma­nent­ly delet­ed or shred­ded by their authors. This includ­ed a spread­sheet detail­ing names and address­es of peo­ple work­ing for com­pa­nies linked to HLS, details of direct actions car­ried out against them and a doc­u­ment con­tain­ing a pri­vate chat between activists appar­ent­ly talk­ing about direct action. This evi­dence may sug­gest that some activists had decid­ed to take direct action against com­pa­nies linked to HLS, but the evi­dence link­ing the defen­dants found guilty on 23rd Decem­ber to these doc­u­ments was cir­cum­stan­tial and, in some cas­es, non-exis­tent. Even if some activists linked to SHAC did decide to take direct action, this does not make every­body asso­ci­at­ed with the cam­paign guilty by asso­ci­a­tion. The pros­e­cu­tion case was that that the entire SHAC cam­paign was aimed at clos­ing down HLS, which is true, and that SHAC cam­paign­ers attempt­ed to per­suade com­pa­nies not to work with HLS, which is also true. The pros­e­cu­tion argu­ment, how­ev­er, went on to imply that, when com­pa­nies did not agree to cease trad­ing with HLS, they were the sub­ject of direct action. Often direct action did occur but this was not under the ban­ner of SHAC. More­over, SHAC did not pub­lish any infor­ma­tion about com­pa­nies that was not already in the pub­lic domain. But because some activists, some­times under the ban­ner of the Ani­mal Lib­er­a­tion Front (ALF), did take direct action, the pros­e­cu­tion argued that the SHAC cam­paign was facil­i­tat­ing direct action and giv­ing it its tac­it appo­val. The police went one step fur­ther and said SHAC and the ALF were one and the same thing!

Much of the evi­dence in the three-month tri­al was in rela­tion to law­ful demon­stra­tions against com­pa­nies linked to HLS. This was par­tic­u­lar­ly impor­tant in the instances of defen­dants who could not be linked to the uncov­ered com­put­er evi­dence. In sev­er­al cas­es, the only evi­dence was what they had said at demon­stra­tions. Com­ments made by defen­dants dur­ing protests in earshot of the police were por­trayed as link­ing them to the ‘con­spir­a­cy’. Com­ments, such as “we know where you live”, were tak­en as proof that defen­dants were par­ty to the con­spir­a­cy. In any oth­er con­text, such spur-of-the-moment com­ments would have, at most, lead to minor charges in the Mag­is­trate’s Court. Equal­ly impor­tant was the fact that some of those con­vict­ed were linked per­son­al­ly to the defen­dants who plead­ed guilty. Heather Nichol­son and Ger­rah Sel­by had both shared hous­es with them. This was obvi­ous­ly a fac­tor in find­ing them guilty by asso­ci­a­tion.

So what does this mean for free speech and anti-cor­po­rate dis­sent in the UK? By the same log­ic, an anti-war cam­paign that pub­lish­es infor­ma­tion on the where­abouts of a mil­i­tary base or arms fac­to­ry and calls for its clo­sure could be put in the frame for the same crime if that base was then the sub­ject of an arson attack. All it would take would be for the police to imply that the peo­ple run­ning the pub­lic cam­paign are linked to those involved in direct action. Con­se­quent­ly, cam­paign­ers might feel com­pelled to pub­licly dis­tance them­selves from acts of direct action lest they find that, unbe­known to them, those respon­si­ble for the covert actions are involved in pub­lic action too and the whole move­ment is charged with ‘con­spir­a­cy’. In fact, the use of such charges is a clas­sic police tac­tic aimed at spread­ing para­noia and con­vict­ing as many activists as pos­si­ble for acts car­ried out by only a few. The aim is also to min­imise pub­lic sup­port for ille­gal actions by har­rass­ing and crim­i­nal­is­ing those who speak up in sol­i­dar­i­ty.

NETCU have already inti­mat­ed, for exam­ple in the recent Mark Townsend arti­cle on ‘eco-ter­ror­ists’, that envi­ron­men­tal or anti-gm pro­test­ers might be their next tar­get.

The con­vict­ed activists are now long peri­ods in jail, they will be sen­tenced on Jan­u­ary 19th. Heather Nichol­son, who was remand­ed after her arrest in May 2007, has already spent over 19 months in jail, longer than some con­vict­ed of seri­ous assaults or sex crimes would spend in prison. In May this year, Sean Kirt­ley, who was impris­oned for his role in anoth­er ani­mal rights cam­paign, was sen­tenced to four and a half years in prison on the same day that men who beat a man until he was blind received two years. Since ‘Oper­a­tion Achilles’, the police have been pat­ting them­selves on the back for putting the ani­mal rights move­ment into ‘dis­ar­ray’. A NETCU source told the Observ­er in Novem­ber 2008 that the ani­mal rights move­men­t’s ‘ring­lead­ers’ had ‘either been pros­e­cut­ed or were await­ing pros­e­cu­tion.’ One may sus­pect that com­ments like these are more to do with main­tain­ing NETCU’s fund­ing than real­i­ty (see this Cor­po­rate Watch com­men­tary for more details).

In fact the attack on ani­mal rights cam­paign­ers does not seem to have lim­it­ed their capac­i­ty to take action. Reg­u­lar demon­stra­tions are still tak­ing place against com­pa­nies linked to HLS, with one planned for 29th Decem­ber.The ALF, which does not seem to be in need of ‘lead­ers’, has recent­ly freed 70 turkeys from a UK farm. If any­thing, the glob­al ani­mal rights move­ment seems to be grow­ing steadi­ly.

The deci­sion to try these cam­paign­ers for ‘con­spir­a­cy to black­mail’ was evi­dent­ly a polit­i­cal one. Huge amounts of police resources have been poured into this pros­e­cu­tion, and oth­ers like it, at the behest of the Labour gov­ern­ment. This is due to the effec­tive­ness of the ani­mal rights move­ment in con­fronting and chal­leng­ing the pow­er of cor­po­ra­tions involved in ani­mal abuse. The demon­i­sa­tion of ani­mal rights cam­paign­ers in the media, facil­i­tat­ed by NETCU press releas­es, only makes it eas­i­er for the state to repress them with­out pub­lic out­cry. The con­vic­tion of the defen­dants at Win­ches­ter is yet anoth­er nail in the cof­fin of the pub­lic’s right to voice their anger and dis­sent against cor­po­rate crime.

For more info see Stop Hunt­ing­don Ani­mal Cru­el­ty — www.shac.net

NETCU Watch — http://netcu.wordpress.com/

SCHnews — www.schnews.org.uk

Attacks against cars & luxury developments in Germany

Unknown per­sons set on fire two lux­u­ry cars
Berlin, Decem­ber 19th 2008

Burning carBurnt carUnknown per­sons set on fire two lux­u­ry cars
Berlin, Decem­ber 19th 2008

In the night to Fri­day two upper­class cars were put on fire in Berlin. About 1.20 a.m. two peo­ple walk­ing by Elde­naer Strasse saw fire com­ing out of the engine com­part­ment of a mer­cedes. It was severe­ly dam­aged by the flames.

About 20 min­utes lat­er an inhab­i­tant of Horn­strasse reaslized a Chrysler burn­ing. A Golf stand­ing next to was also dam­aged by the heat. In both cas­es the Berlin Fire Brigades extin­guished the flames.

The polit­i­cal police Staatss­chutz took over inves­ti­ga­tions, as a polit­i­cal motive for the arsons can not be exclud­ed. This year already more than 60 cars had been burned in the cap­i­tal, pre­sum­ably for polit­i­cal rea­sons.

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Lux­u­ry Con­do-project attacked

Berlin, Decem­ber 19th 2008

In the night to Fri­day a lux­u­ry con­do­mini­um project was attacks with stones and colour bags in Kreuzberg. Some win­dows were smashed, the attack­ers got away unrec­og­nized.

About 20 per­son dressed in dark clothes attacked a lux­u­ry con­do build­ing under con­struc­tion in Kreuzberg withn stones and colour bags in the night to Fri­day. Accord­ing to the police 12 win­dows were bro­ken in the build­ing in Lieg­nitzer Strasse. Then the unknown per­sons ran away to Gör­l­itzer Park. The polit­i­cal police took over inves­ti­ga­tions.

In the Paul-Linke-Yards socalled Carlofts are being build, said the own­er. This means that the flats have their park­ing lot right in front of their door. The cars will be brought to the respec­tive floor by a lift. The con­dos in the scene dis­trict will cost up to 1.6 mil­lion Euro. A demon­stra­tion against increas­ing rents was banned from walk­ing past the object by the police.

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A car and a Dig­ger set on fire
Berlin 16 Dezem­ber 2008

Unknown per­sons have under­tak­en two arson attacks in the ear­ly morn­ing of Tues­day in the dis­trict of Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg. A taxi dri­ver noticed a car, a lux­u­ri­ous mer­cedes, burn­ing in the Wiener­strasse and called the cops.

Mean­while a Dig­ger got torched in the Kreutziger­strasse in Friedrichshain.

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“Land Rover” set on fire
Berlin 14 Decem­ber 2008

Unknown indi­vid­u­als put a „Land Rover“ on fire today ear­ly in the morn­ing in the dis­trict of Mitte. A taxi dri­ver noticed the car burn­ing on the cor­ner Choriner strassae/Fehrberliner strasse and called the cops. The State secu­ri­ty inves­ti­gates.

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„Hum­mer“ burned down

Berlin 8 of Decem­ber

A car got burned ear­ly in the morn­ing in Friedrichshain. Around 0.45 a police patrol noticed the burning“Hummer“ in the Frank­furter Allee.

Since a polit­i­cal moti­va­tion can not be exclud­ed, state secu­ri­ty inves­ti­gates.

More burn­ing of lux­u­ry cars through­out this autumn in Ger­many, at http://directactionde.blogspot.com/search/label/English, plus anti-mil­i­tarist, anti-fas­cist and Greek sol­i­dar­i­ty actions

Invitation to the Northern Climate Rush — January 12th

On Mon­day 12th Jan­u­ary 2009 at 7pm the North­ern Cli­mate Rush will hit Man­ches­ter Air­port Ter­mi­nal 3 (Domes­tic Depar­tures).

Climate suffragette small groupOn Mon­day 12th Jan­u­ary 2009 at 7pm the North­ern Cli­mate Rush will hit Man­ches­ter Air­port Ter­mi­nal 3 (Domes­tic Depar­tures).

Every­one is wel­come to join us. Come in Edwar­dian dress if you can (think long skirts, coats and tails, and sil­ly hats, all hid­den under a big coat!) with ham­pers of food to have our ‘Din­ner at Domes­tic Depar­tures’, to the strains of our very own string quar­tet! It will take place on the day that the MPs return from their win­ter hol­i­day, and at exact­ly the same time as the main Cli­mate Rush, at Heathrow.

Our protest will be against air­port expan­sion and domes­tic flights. In a time of reces­sion and cli­mate cri­sis, gov­ern­ment mon­ey should be spent on improve­ments to rail, trams, and bus­es, not on sub­si­dies and infra­struc­ture for the avi­a­tion indus­try.

For an acces­si­ble report on the lat­est cli­mate sci­ence, check out http://climatesafety.org/

We have wait­ed too long and been mis­led too many times. It is time for us to take con­trol and to lead social change.

northernclimaterush@googlemail.com

COAL CARAVAN — route & dates update

The fab­u­lous cli­mate car­a­van lives on.

This time we will be the COAL CARAVAN, walk­ing and cycling between the sites for pro­posed open cast mines and new pow­er sta­tions in the Mid­lands, York­shire and North East.

The fab­u­lous cli­mate car­a­van lives on.

This time we will be the COAL CARAVAN, walk­ing and cycling between the sites for pro­posed open cast mines and new pow­er sta­tions in the Mid­lands, York­shire and North East.

On our route we’ll be talk­ing to local peo­ple, organ­is­ing bicy­cled pow­er films and events, hold­ing pub­lic dis­cus­sions and dis­plays, and link­ing groups from dif­fer­ent areas to help strength­en iso­lat­ed cam­paigns.

24 April 2009 Co2al Car­a­van launch par­ty, Sumac Cen­tre Not­ting­ham
25 April – set off to Ship­ley Glen
27/28 April – cycle to York­shire
29 April – Fair­bairn Ings
30 April — 2 May – cycle to North East
3 May – Anti-open­cast work­shops
4 May (Bank Hol­i­day Mon­day) – Grand Finale

The car­a­van itself will not involve direct action (although we may offer train­ing, if local groups so request). It will be open­ly organ­ised and if you would like to go on the list please email caravan@climatecamp.org.uk.

Stop the Weymouth Relief Road Update & Videos — wish list & overhanging branch tactic!

Lat­est news: a tech­ni­cal­i­ty has meant a tree top protest against a new £87m relief road scheme in Dorset has con­tin­ued despite a legal rul­ing.

The gov­ern­ment has giv­en the go-ahead for the Wey­mouth relief road and Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil secured a land pos­ses­sion order to evict pro­tes­tors.

2 Mile Coppice in summer timeLat­est news: a tech­ni­cal­i­ty has meant a tree top protest against a new £87m relief road scheme in Dorset has con­tin­ued despite a legal rul­ing.

The gov­ern­ment has giv­en the go-ahead for the Wey­mouth relief road and Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil secured a land pos­ses­sion order to evict pro­tes­tors.

But the demon­stra­tion, which began last Thurs­day, was con­tin­u­ing on Fri­day and has delayed work at Two Mile Cop­pice.

Pro­tes­tors have now occu­pied a tree branch over­hang­ing neigh­bour­ing land.

In the morn­ing, Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil served a com­pul­so­ry pur­chase order on the land which meant the pro­tes­tors were legal­ly required to leave.

While the oak tree they are in is on land cov­ered by the notice, the branch they occu­py over­hangs adja­cent Wood­land Trust land.

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Tat list — What we need

And lat­est update (Sat­ur­day 20th Decem­ber):-

www.greenvoice.com — short­ly to be a web space for us

PLEASE CIRCULATE

update– we have an address of sorts, and dona­tions and xmas gifts would be great !”!!

Cash is ok to send as it is a secure post box, but phonecards for Orange are bet­ter than cash.
Also need AAA and AA bat­ter­ies — Dura­cell and Ener­gis­er or alka­line ONLY.
Rope — Green or blue polypro­pe­lene — 6mm or 10mm thick­ness.
Rope — Sta­t­ic climb­ing line — 10mm or larg­er.
Rope — Dynam­ic climb­ing line — any thick­ness
Rope — arborist lines — we have 2 tree sur­geons liv­ing with us and this rope is use­ful.

sec­ond hand rope is nor­mal­ly FREE from climb­ing cen­tres ‑indoor cen­tres often throw their ropes out every 6 ‑9 months — just call in and ask for it.

Tarps, plas­tic sheet­ing.

Tools — ham­mers, nails, saws, prun­ing saws, bill hooks.

2 way radios, nightvi­sion gog­gles, cat­a­pults (to get rope up), grap­pling hooks. Head torch­es — LED are best.

The Wood­land Trust still own the land that the road is being built on, but have waived their 14 days notice peri­od and told Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil that it is ok to get on with cut­ting down the Ancient wood­land — basi­cal­ly they have thrown in the tow­el with­out even stand­ing up to argue or delay the destruc­tion on their land. The fact that the Wood­land Trust still own the land was record­ed in the Court case of the 18th decem­ber 2008 of Dorset
Coun­ty Coun­cil ’ v ’ Per­sons Unknown in Wey­mouth Coun­ty Court. Her Majesty’s Land Reg­istry in Ply­mouth also con­firmed it.

The peo­ple of Wey­mouth brought Two Mile Copse through pub­lic sub­scrip­tion. Local peo­ple dug deeply into their pock­ets and put their mon­ey into con­serv­ing the land for per­pe­tu­ri­ty, for us and all future gen­er­a­tions.

Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil have so far not giv­en one pen­ny in com­pen­sa­tion, either to the Wood­land Trust, nor local peo­ple who raised the pub­lic mon­ey to pre­serve the wood in the first place.

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More update:-

Hi Ho!, HO!, Ho!

Liv­ing up 6 trees at wey­mouth — Two Mile Copse / Ted­dy Bear Woods. I helped fight against
this road back in 1996, and 2004 and we won it then.

BUT now they gone and done it and cut 70% of the trees.….

We have a 400 year old Oak in Ancient Wood­land that’s are pro­tect­ing and 4 Ash trees reach­ing 90 feet up into the sky. Also a tall and healthy young elm.

We have a tree house, a net, lots of walk­ways in the sky and an off route vis­i­tors site on the ground.

GET HELP + MEDIA now if u can.

regards

2 Mile Copse Protest Camp
c/o Lor­ton Barn
Lor­ton Lane
Lit­tle­Moor
Wey­mouth
DT3 5QH

Sor­ry we cur­rent­ly are in the process of arrang­ing a site mobile phone — num­ber to fol­low
short­ly

Links/more below & in pre­vi­ous sto­ry.

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Fol­low­ing from the Stop the Wey­mouth Relief Road bul­letin. Appar­ent­ly there is a chain­saw gang now oper­at­ing 1.5 miles fur­ther North from Lit­tle­moor, between Lit­tle­moor and Ridge­way. There are 3 pro­test­ers down there but they need more back up. I have been in con­tact with the pro­test­ers occu­py­ing the sight at Lit­tle­moor. They are in urgent need of more sup­port from locals to help on the ground and oth­ers to help build tree hous­es along the route, all help would be great­ly appre­ci­at­ed.

On site mobiles are 07792717821 / 07807952822

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Videos: 1 | 2

COUNCIL chiefs will go to court tomor­row in a bid to remove a grow­ing num­ber of pro­test­ers from the route of Weymouth’s planned relief road.

It comes as the stand-off inten­si­fied in Two Mile Cop­pice as eco-war­riors began mov­ing a fence and telling secu­ri­ty staff it encroached too far into the ancient wood­land.

But today Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil is hop­ing to be grant­ed pos­ses­sion of the land by Wey­mouth Coun­ty Court.

The coun­cil is ask­ing the court to rule that the pro­test­ers must leave the prop­er­ty, and if they agree to that request, when they must leave.

The num­ber of pro­test­ers reached sev­en as a camp was set up beneath an oak tree that stands alone in the fenced off area of the woods.

Four pro­test­ers set up camp and roped off their own area below three more based up inside the tree.

One new arrival, known only as Andy, said: “We are here to stop the road as there are many rea­sons why the wood­land should not be chopped down.

“The oak tree we are in and beneath is hun­dreds of years old.

“We heard about the peo­ple here and want­ed to come to sup­port the action.

“We can help pro­vide food and what­ev­er else they need in the tree.

“If you let the coun­cil go ahead with the road it won’t be long before they want to chop more of this beau­ti­ful wood­land down for devel­op­ment.

“The road won’t actu­al­ly help pre­vent traf­fic con­ges­tion in the end any­way.”

A coun­cil spokesman con­firmed clear­ance work is con­tin­u­ing in the west­ern edge strip of Two Mile Cop­pice and said it is hoped this will be fin­ished before Christ­mas.

She said: “There is a coun­ty court hear­ing today where the coun­ty coun­cil will be ask­ing for an order for the tres­passers to hand over the land to the pos­ses­sion of the coun­cil.”

Nick Pep­per, 41, has camped in the woods since he came down from a tree which has now been chopped down.

Mr Pep­per, who pre­vi­ous­ly lived in Wey­mouth but now lives in Bris­tol, said: “As soon as we received the legal papers to evict the tree we thought we’d bet­ter have a legal­ly legit­i­mate sup­port camp.

“We are pro­tect­ed under the 1977 Crim­i­nal Law Act which stops us from being legal­ly evict­ed or ille­gal­ly assault­ed.

“We’ve actu­al­ly squat­ted in an area of land so we can pro­tect the peo­ple up the tree from intim­i­da­tion or ille­gal activ­i­ty.

“There needs to be open access so we can mon­i­tor what’s going on.”