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Barry Horne has died.

respect | 05.11.2001 22:40

ANIMAL rights protester Barry Horne has died after being
on hunger strike since the summer, the Prison Service said.

scource the telegraph

Animal rights activist dies
(Filed: 05/11/2001)

ANIMAL rights protester Barry Horne has died after being
on hunger strike since the summer, the Prison Service
said.

Horne, 49, was probably Britain's best-known animal rights
extremist and was serving 18 years in jail after being
convicted of plotting a nationwide bombing campaign.

He had been at Long Lartin high security prison in
Worcestershire until last Thursday, when he was admitted
to hospital with liver problems.

The cause of death was liver failure, a Prison Service
spokeswoman said. Horne died at Ronkswood Hospital in
Worcester.


27 January 2000: Activist ends 174-day protest

respect

Comments

Hide the following 9 comments

R.I.P.

05.11.2001 23:21

Gone to a better place where life goes on, and is sacred.

Angel


Love & Respect

06.11.2001 01:09

You will never be forgotten.
Tonight I light a candle, tomorrow who knows what I will burn.
Forward the revolution.

Burn the labs
smash the cages

No more Mr Nice Guy
mail e-mail: New Labour = we lied


Comment

06.11.2001 04:42

I find it sad that when a Green Party volunteer in the US is stopped by security at an airport, it is the top story on Maine Indumedia, and a big story.

But when a wonderful dedicated direct actionists dies while on a hunger strike... few people even notice.

And we shouldn't write RIP, "resting in peace". He won't be until every last animal exploiter is shut down.

SMASH HLS !

mouse


He deserves peace

06.11.2001 11:23

While Barry was lanquishing in gaol, 800,000 animals were burned to death in the British countryside, to destroy small farmers, reclaim the land and create future food shortages (not that I want to eat them!)

But it's like pissing in the wind, still, we all need the conviction and determination of Mr Horne.

Love life


what a loss for us all

06.11.2001 12:28

i wonder if we all realise the commitment of this man who cared so much for the stuggle of those less fortunate and i ask myself could or would i do the same ? loki

loki
mail e-mail: laekkae@yahoo.com


My thoughts

06.11.2001 13:37

I just can't understand the animal liberation movement. I've been veggie for 10 years and believe strongly that meat consumption is unhealthy and livestock production is environmentally damaging and uses too much valuable farm land. I also think the livestock industry treats animals is a disgusting manner.
But I totally oppose those who would take human life for the sake of animals. Why should animal life be considered more important than human life, even if some humans do some outrageous things to animals? Why should a butcher or an abatoir worker face capital punishment? Horne wanted to kill and maim people who were involved in meat production and for that he should not be mourned.

Daniel Brett
mail e-mail: dan@danielbrett.co.uk


Reply to previous posting

06.11.2001 16:50

Barry Horne's efforts were not in opposition to the meat industry, nor had he the intention to harm any human life. Even the judge that sentenced him to 18 years recognised this.

We should mourn for Barry Horne as we mourned for Carlo Giuliano, the Turkish Hunger Strikers, Jill Philips and all the others who've given their lives or had them taken from them in the name of this barbaric system and its brutal repression.

At the same time, we should exact the appropriate actions to ensure that no more lives (of those who fight for life) will be lost in in the fight for justice.

Let's start by smashing HLS...

R
mail e-mail: info@cafteire.net
- Homepage: www.cafteire.net


come on Daniel

06.11.2001 18:15

The man spent years in Prison and died a horrible death.
let's not get polemical and as you say, you don't understand the animal rights movement the history of which is very interesting. if you look back to the 1950's and read what the people who were involved then have to say, I don't condone violence at all and besides the violence meted out on a vast scale to animals by human beings every single day is nothing other than horrific. after all only humans commit inhumane crimes.....

respect


some info

06.11.2001 18:42

 http://www.guardian.co.uk/ukresponse/story/0,11017,588838,00.html
Threat to avenge animal rights 'martyr'

Barry Horne's death highlights Britain's security problems, writes former Scotland Yard detective Charles Shoebridge

Tuesday November 6, 2001

Barry Horne's death on hunger strike yesterday could hardly have come at a worse time for the police and security services.

Under pressure from the demands of monitoring Islamic extremists in the wake of September 11, Friday's bomb in Birmingham had already shattered any hopes of these commitments being met by a relaxation of operations elsewhere.

Now, with one of the animal rights movement's best known figures having finally achieved "martyrdom", a new and highly unpredictable element enters the terror equation. Claims have been made that, as a consequence of
Horne's death, extremists will target 10 scientists or other 'animal abusers'.

Mindful of their past performance and current abilities, police will need to take these threats seriously.
Horne himself was a major burden on police budgets and manpower throughout the mid 1990s, when activists attacked almost any type of premises concerned with the perceived abuse of animals. These ranged from the burning of meat trucks, to the smashing of shop windows displaying, for
example, posters advertising circuses.

During this period police estimated that, excluding the City of London and Manchester bombs, the total cost of criminal damage carried out by animal rights supporters far exceeded that committed by the IRA.

Following his identification as a suspect for the burning down of a shopping centre on the Isle of Wight in 1994, Horne became the subject of one of the most intensive surveillance operations ever carried out on the UK mainland.

He was, in effect, under almost continuous police scrutiny until his arrest in 1996.

Horne was not an easy target for police officers carrying out this work. This was not because his anti-surveillance skills made tracking him particularly difficult.

It was simply that the sheer tedium of his lifestyle proved a serious challenge for those tasked to watch his every movement, 24 hours a day, days and weeks on end.

Horne was utterly committed to his cause. Even before his death, his entire life was devoted to animal rights issues.

He lived in austere conditions, sometimes a single room with no television or radio, often with no telephone contact with the outside world - due to a fear, a justifiable fear, that his conversations might be monitored.

The surveillance officers' life would often consist, for days, of simply watching a flat in a run down area, with no apparent activity.

Spice was added when their charge visited his local supermarket to buy food, but even then he did nothing in any way exciting. The dream of many an officer, to witness, or even better to photograph, Barry Horne secretly buying a burger or a steak, was never realised.

His social life seemed limited to manning the animal rights stall in the local shopping precinct on Saturday lunchtimes, or an occasional visit to a local pub. There, in case he was being watched, almost no conversation would
occur.

Only on rare trips to London or elsewhere would Horne reveal his capabilities. Suddenly metamorphosed from a life of apparent drudgery, he became Barry Horne the terrorist, teasing his tormentors with anti-surveillance techniques learned from books and weekend workshops.

He lived a life that assumed he was forever being followed. Despite this, nothing except prison could prevent him following his beliefs.

In time, it was inevitable that his drive to commit offences would result in him being caught in the act of doing so. Nothing else would have stopped him - a sentiment reflected by the severity of the sentence he eventually
received.

Horne's commitment to his cause was respected by some of the officers whose task it was, ultimately, to send him to prison. Indeed, some, as with the general public, had sympathy with much of the sentiment behind his beliefs.

The methods he chose to achieve his ends, however, alienated him from any mainstream opinion. To most, only in the detail was he different from almost
any other terrorist.

Luther blissett