ELF Continue Telmex Sabotage in Mexico

“January 7:

5 phone booths of the biocidal company Telmex have been burned.
Now no one will stop us.
FLT/ELF- Mexico”

anonymous report from http://directaction.info

—-

“January 8:

More than 15 Telmex phones have been covered with spray paint, and their buttons, screens, the phone booths and the handsets sabotaged.

“January 7:

5 phone booths of the biocidal company Telmex have been burned.
Now no one will stop us.
FLT/ELF- Mexico”

anonymous report from http://directaction.info

—-

“January 8:

More than 15 Telmex phones have been covered with spray paint, and their buttons, screens, the phone booths and the handsets sabotaged.

These actions are in support of animal and earth liberation since the Telmex company, in addition to sponsoring bullfights and other acts of animal humiliation and torture, is one of those responsible for the destruction of the earth in Mexico.

Their offenses against the earth will not be left unpunished!

ELF/FLT”

received anonymously by http://directaction.info
previous ELF/ALF actions against Telmex:
http://www.earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/sabotage

no borders gathering 21st-22nd feb bristol

Hi everyone, it’s time to get out your diaries and book your travel….

The Bristol No Borders group are hosting the next network-wide No Borders
Gathering, on Saturday 21st and Sunday 22nd February at St. Werburgh’s
Community Centre here in Bristol.

The Gathering will be a chance to discuss, network and plan, and to build

Hi everyone, it’s time to get out your diaries and book your travel….

The Bristol No Borders group are hosting the next network-wide No Borders
Gathering, on Saturday 21st and Sunday 22nd February at St. Werburgh’s
Community Centre here in Bristol.

The Gathering will be a chance to discuss, network and plan, and to build
on the discussions held at the last network-wide gathering earlier this
year in Newcastle. It’s is a collectively organised event with shared
responsibility for content and organisation, being co ordinated this time
by people in Bristol with help from our friends over in South Wales.
Although you don’t have to be active in an existing group to attend and
the gathering is open, it is a working meeting rather than a place to
necessarily find out more about the network in general. For this we
suggest contacting a local group see noborders.org.uk for a list of
contacts.

Programme looks like this so far:
Friday 20th evening, Agenda planning meeting, accomodation sorting and
hopefully dinner. Venue Kebele Social Centre, 14 Robertson Road, Easton,
Bristol.
Saturday 21st 9am breakfast at St Werburgh’s Community Centre, meeting
starts 10am. Ends by 6pm, followed by dinner elsewhere (tbc).
Sunday, 9am breakfast, meeting starts at 10am, Ends by 4pm. Dinner at
Kebele Cafe for those that want it.

Accomodaton will be available in people’s houses.
Please email bristolnoborders@riseup.net with your email subject as
GATHERING asap with details of how many people need accomodation for which
nights, Friday to Sunday.
If anyone has friends or contacts in the area they can stay with, and
possible room for anyone else, this would be very much appreciated.

Agenda
To suggest items for discussion please write to noborderswales@riseup.net
as they will be preparing draft agenda.

Anyone who is willing to help with faciliation please also let us know.

Cost will be kept as low as possible (donation of between £10 and £15 tbc
to cover venue and vegan food) and free to asylum seekers.

Travel: nearest rail station to both Easton and St Werburgh’s is Stapleton
Road. Connections from Temple Meads station.
nearest coach stop Eastville Tescos on Mega Bus. More detailed travel info
will be provided nearer the time and maps will be available.

A PDF version of the invite will be sent soon.

Hope to see you all then

Cheers,
Bristol No Borders

No Borders is a network of groups struggling for the freedom of movement
for all and an end to all migration controls. We call for a radical
movement against the system of control, dividing us into citizens and
non-citizens. We demand the end of the border regime for everyone,
including ourselves, to enable us to live another way, without fear,
racism and nationalism.

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

ELF Torch Telmex Phone Booth, Mexico

“On January 1st we set fire to a phone booth of the disgusting Telmex company; the fire filled the booth and left it unusable.

This is a new year message to Telmex: We are going to burn you!

Frente de Liberación de la Tierra de México (FLTM)”

anonymous report from http://directaction.info

“On January 1st we set fire to a phone booth of the disgusting Telmex company; the fire filled the booth and left it unusable.

This is a new year message to Telmex: We are going to burn you!

Frente de Liberación de la Tierra de México (FLTM)”

anonymous report from http://directaction.info

Social Justice Centre, Birmingham

The Justice not Crisis, Social Justice Centre is preparing a programe of activities for the New Year including a Bingo Night, a Freeshop, Coffee Morning, and drop in Advice service where people will be on hand to give advice on Housing Applications, benefits, and much more…. Come along and get involved…..

The LibraryThe Justice not Crisis, Social Justice Centre is preparing a programe of activities for the New Year including a Bingo Night, a Freeshop, Coffee Morning, and drop in Advice service where people will be on hand to give advice on Housing Applications, benefits, and much more…. Come along and get involved…..

Information can be found on our website www.justicenotcrisis@wordpress.com (diary of Activities)

Our new videos highlighting our campaign to build more socially rented & Council Homes can be found on our website
follow link above.

They are also posted on youtube : Justice not Crisis The Movie http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=EoCb_tlAKu0 The setting up our our Land Squat with some humour!!

Justice Not Crisis The Movie Part 2 http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=TUKb337Yrt8 Shows the Setting upm of The Social Justice Centre in The derelict Firebird Pub again with some humour !!Social Justice Centre, Birmingham some of the activities...

French unemployed carry out a “self reduction” in Parisian supermarket

On 31 December, 2008 over 50 unemployed and precarious workers blocked the checkout of a Monoprix supermarket in the suburbs of Paris with 13 trolleys full of food.

On 31 December, 2008 over 50 unemployed and precarious workers blocked the checkout of a Monoprix supermarket in the suburbs of Paris with 13 trolleys full of food.

After distributing a leaflet, demanding a “self-reduction [autoreduction] appropriate to this time of crisis, which will allow for the precarious to celebrate New Year’s with dignity”, negotiations with the supermarket management resulted in them leaving without paying. A portion of the food was distributed to the undocumented immigrants who have occupied the Parisian labor hall.

Leaflet here (in French):
http://www.cip-idf.org/article.php3?id_article=4180

ELF Sabotage Bullfight Sponsor in Colombia

“In solidarity with the recent antiauthoritarian actions and to show a strengthening commitment to the liberation of the earth and all animals, the Autonomous Anarchic Cell of the FLT in Bogota does not stop!

ELF ColombiaELF Colombia“In solidarity with the recent antiauthoritarian actions and to show a strengthening commitment to the liberation of the earth and all animals, the Autonomous Anarchic Cell of the FLT in Bogota does not stop! Sabotaged 9 more phones of ETB, a sponsor of the suffering of innocents, on the night of December 10; leaving anticivilization messages and threats, the handsets were ripped out and the phone booths were rendered unusable.

ANARCHIST ACTION TODAY AND FOREVER!
VIVA ANARCHIC GREECE!!!!!!!!!”

reported on Liberación Total: http://liberaciontotal.entodaspartes.net
translated by Bite Back: http://directaction.info
previous action: http://www.earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/21875

ELF Mexico Sabotage Machines

“December 30:

“December 30:

The exploiters with their big machines lap up the earth leaving deforestation and environmental destruction, replacing the little nature that is left with pavement and monstrous constructions, but the resistance still exists, we have not stopped the wild ones from existing and while the abusers don’t stop wanting to dominate the earth and its inhabitats, we the Frente de Liberación de la Tierra will continue hitting hard.

This time an urban construction machine was sabotaged with most of the cables cut, leaving it unusable and blocking the street until they moved it by other means.

Green anarchists for total liberation!

Wild and radical sabotage!

FLT – Mexico”

anonymous report from 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