AR-News: (UK) New ban for animal rights protestors
WeArPetitions at aol.com
WeArPetitions at aol.com
Mon Oct 13 22:20:01 EDT 2003
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/legal/story.jsp?story=453152
By Stephen Howard
14 October 2003
A ban preventing animal rights activists from demonstrating at Huntingdon
Life Sciences, a company that tests drugs on live animals, has been extended to
include the company's suppliers.
Activists say they will challenge the ban, which uses a law designed to
protect the victims of stalkers.
Mr Justice Owen confirmed yesterday at the High Court that temporary
exclusion orders under the Protection from Harassment Act would continue, to protect
the customers of Huntingdon Life Sciences, which is based in Cambridgeshire.
The companies became targets after Huntingdon won exclusion zones around its
offices. Protesters from Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty, the Animal Liberation
Front and the Animal Rights Militia have been banned.
A spokesperson for Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty [Shac] said judges at the
Court of Appeal would be asked to include yesterday's orders in a challenge to
the Huntingdon Life Sciences injunctions later this year.
Mr Justice Owen, who made the orders, said Shac's objective was to secure the
closure of laboratories that are run by Huntingdon.
The judge said that since Huntingdon won exclusion zones, Shac had harassed
the British branches of the Japanese companies, Daiichi UK, Asahi Glass, Eisai,
Yamanouchi Pharma and Sankyo Pharma.
The campaign took the form of threatening letters and phone calls, malicious
letters alleging directors were criminals, posting offensive material,
criminal damage, firebombing and hoax calls. Directors and employees had been
subjected to harassment "of a very serious nature intended to intimidate and
terrify", the judge said.
He was satisfied the action of Shac and others warranted making exclusion
zones to protect the companies from any further harassment.
The judge's orders mean protesters will not be able to go within 100 yards of
the offices of the companies except for peaceful protests of no more than 12
activists once a week.
Huntingdon won similar orders in June, which banned members of Shac from
approaching the drugs-testing company's headquarters and the homes of employees.
13 October 2003 21:16
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