Smash EDO: Protest Is Not Harrassment
Smash EDO | 30.04.2005 13:55 | Anti-militarism | London | South Coast
30 TH APRIL 2005
PROTESTING IS NOT HARRASSMENT!
Anti war campaigners won a major victory in the High Court yesterday
(Friday 29th April). Arms manufacturer EDO MBM had applied for an
injunction, under anti-stalking laws, to restrict protest outside their
Brighton factory. The order sought by the corporation would have
created
an exclusion zone, where protests would only be allowed on Thursday
afternoons for two hours, with a maximum of 10 silent protestors.
The defendants refused to negotiate the terms of the injunction, in
order
to avoid lending legitimacy to the proceedings. In stark contrast to
the
demands of EDO, Judge Gross ruled that in the run up to the trial an
“interim” injunction would not restrict the timing, frequency, or
numbers,
allowed on demonstrations. He threw out 11 of 15 draconian terms,
describing them at one point as 'using a sledgehammer to crack a nut.'
In
explaining his refusal to impose most of the conditions Judge Gross
said,
“Freedom of expression is a right jealously guarded in English law”.
However campaigners continue to insist that any use of the Protection
from
Harassment Act 1997, (originally introduced to protect people from
stalking), is a gross violation of their civil liberties.
One of the defendants said afterwards, “EDO have made a great mistake
in
bringing this action to court. Their contempt for human rights has been
exposed to the general public, and even at this stage of the trial, the
judge has effectively demolished their proposed exclusion zone. EDO are
proud of their role as spear carriers for an illegal war, but where is
the
injunctive relief for the people of Iraq?”
Campaigners are looking forward to a swift trial, where they will
expose
EDO's complicity in war crimes and Sussex Police’s attack on the right
to
protest.
ANNOUNCEMENT
MASS DEMONSTRATION AGAINST EDO
WEDNESDAY 4th MAY 2005 at 4PM
(Entrance to Wild Park, Lewes Road, Brighton)
Smash EDO
Comments
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guardian article
01.05.2005 05:47
What are these journalists on?
Is anyone going to write to the Press Complaints Commission?
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Stalking law used against protesters
Laura Smith
Saturday April 30, 2005
The Guardian
A law designed to deter stalkers can be used to prevent anti-war activists from protesting outside a defence company, the high court ruled yesterday.
Mr Justice Gross granted a temporary injunction against a group of campaigners who are alleged to have targeted a Brighton-based company which manufactured weapons used in the Iraq war.
Nearly 160 employees at Edo MBM Technology claim they have been the victims of a hate campaign waged by the group and subjected to assault, intimidation and insults.
The injunction prevents the activists, who face legal action for their alleged campaign of unlawful harassment, from protesting within an exclusion zone around the plant in until the end of legal action against them.
David Jones, the managing director of the company, which specialises in designing weapons-carrying systems for military aircraft, ships and submarines, launched the legal action on behalf of his staff.
Mr Justice Gross said though the primary intention of the Protection from Harassment Act was to tackle the "phenomenon of stalking", it had been used in cases involving protesters. He said he could not accept the protesters' argument that there should be strict limits set on the use of the act.
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