GM Fowl Are Revolting

Six days before Xmas, 20 peo­ple dressed as turkeys and equipped with D‑locks and arm tubes, halt­ed two lor­ries in the entrance of one of Asda’s UK dis­tri­b­u­tion cen­tres.

With their ‘just in time’ restock­ing and one truck arriv­ing every few min­utes, the two-hour block­ade at Dart­ford was deemed to have been pret­ty cost­ly to Asda. Clear­ing the back­log would have tak­en some time.

A ban­ner told Asda to stuff its GM turkeys and head office was informed that there would be more block­ades of their dis­tri­b­u­tion cen­tres around the coun­try if they ignored pub­lic opin­ion.

Asda was cho­sen because of its con­nec­tion with the giant US buy­er, Wal­mart, to whom Amer­i­can farm­ers would be look­ing to sell their crops in 2001.

Sim­i­lar actions occurred in New Zealand two days lat­er. Ten peo­ple dressed as chick­ens block­ad­ed a feed­mill, and a few days lat­er oth­ers chained them­selves to a boat bring­ing in ani­mal feed.

In Britain, con­cerned chick­ens roost­ed on Cargill’s Liv­er­pool plant and blocked the weigh­sta­tion with a truck. Two weeks before, dis­chuffed per­sons locked onto lor­ries and climbed silos at an Exeter ani­mal feed mill owned by BOMC Pauls, the main pro­duc­er of GM ani­mal feed in the UK.

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