Train stops at Great Malvern then it is a 5 minute walk to Church Street.
JRF International (Jai Research Foundation) are a contract testing firm in India but they have a small office situated above an opticians in Malvern, they have recently taken there sign from the door!.........hmmm!
Then onto the Hillfields benefit gig at the Wagon and Horses in Birmingham.
Comments
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Benefit gig!
29.03.2009 13:32
Activist!
Only one World Day demo this year!
29.03.2009 17:47
Neither SPEAK or SHAC, or other groups such as the Wickham/Covance campaigns have organised anything this year, so that as many people as possible will get to London.
The London event is a chance for all groups, campaigns and individuals to join forces in a show of strength against the vivisection industry and the Labour governments continued support for scientifically fraudulent animal torture. It`s also a chance to highlight the governments ongoing crackdown on peaceful animal rights campaigners, including Sean Kirtley, SHAC and others. It is widely felt that numbers in London will be huge, on a scale not seen in the UK for many years.
There will be Midlands activists that can`t do both the Sequani demo and the London demo, so some will naturally decide to support the demo against their local lab.
By organising something the week before the march in London, you are taking numbers away from that event, when the whole idea is to get as many people there as possible!
Please won`t you re-think this demo and instead encourage as many Midlands people as possible to get to London???
Tony
Homepage: http://www.wdail.org
Can do both!
29.03.2009 18:03
Gemma
Some people will HAVE to choose!
29.03.2009 18:45
1. They can only afford to travel to one event or they can only afford to have one Saturday off work.
2. Their work will only let them have one Saturday off, so they`ll have to choose which.
3. Their wife/husband/partner is not into AR and it would be unfair on them to go to a demo 2 Saturday`s running.
There will be many other reasons why some campaigners are unable to do a demo 2 Saturday`s running. Over the years, there has often been World Day demos on 2 consecutive weekends. SHAC and Newchurch for instance. Many people that would have liked to attend both were unable to, so they had to choose.
Yes, you`ve only called a `regional` World Day demo, but that means that many Midlands people who would otherwise have gone to London, will not be able to.
This is precisely why other campaigns have decided not to organise their own event this year, but to all support the London event in order to get as many people there as possible and make it absolutely huge!!
Tony
Chill...
29.03.2009 19:05
And I agree it's great to pull together at one big demo to show strength etc! But I guarantee no one will choose Sequani over London, it's difficult to get numbers down there at the best of times!
Gemma
for gods sake
29.03.2009 20:48
animal
Great idea!
29.03.2009 21:47
independent thinker
Tony, your reasons aren't very convincing! ;-)
29.03.2009 22:04
If there is one thing the recent animal rights repression has told us it is that decentralisation would be a good tactic. The more regional World Day for Lab Animals demos there are, the better.
anon
I`m not involved with organising London event
29.03.2009 22:58
You mistakenly assume I am somehow involved with the organisation of the London event. This is not the case.
Whether or not it is more effective to have a huge World Day demo in London or several smaller World Day demos round the country is not the issue here. That decision has long since been made at National ARC Meetings. I would suggest that if you want to influence decisions like this in the future, that you attend these meetings. The next is in Bristol on Sunday 5 April, see http://www.veggies.org.uk/event.php?ref=1251
Tony
@ Tony
29.03.2009 23:41
ARUK
Fair point
30.03.2009 00:02
Tony
Local AND National support for animals in laboratories
30.03.2009 00:28
Campaigning organisations in the UK and across the globe, have for many years marked World Day for Laboratory Animals in many ways. It is a United Nations recognized day of international commemoration of the suffering and killing of millions of innocent sentient beings in laboratories throughout the world; an opportunity to reflect upon the pain and suffering caused in the name of a fraudulent scientific practice - a practice that is not only is so cruel to the animals so horribly abused and killed by vivisectors, but a practice that so cruelly gives false hope to those with illness and disease.
Yes, everyone should make every effort to get to the London Rally.
Part of that process may be to hold vigils to highlight local connections with the global vivisection industry, to publicise and mobilize for April 25th.
The week that surrounds April 24th every year sees street stalls, media events and protests at laboratories to stop testing and research on animals, with many opportunities for local campaigning across the UK.
For example, Loughborough Animal Rights have for many years held World Day vigils outside the gates of Hillcrest Ltd (formerly Harlan UK) - animal breeders for the vivisection industry at Dodgeford Lane, Belton, Leicestershire, this year on April 22nd (see http://www.veggies.org.uk/event.php?ref=1196) - as well as attending national rallies at both ends of World Week for Animals in Laboratories.
There will also be a vigil at Nottingham University's Medical School on Friday 17th April ( http://www.veggies.org.uk/event.php?ref=53).
We believe that local people will be motivated to support the national rally when they hear about the cruelty inflicted at Nottingham University;
"In a collaborative behaviour study with the University of Ireland, male rats were injected with formalin - a toxic chemical that causes considerable and lasting pain. They were then put inside a perspex chamber that administered repeated electric shocks to their feet. A microphone was placed above the chamber to record the rats' cries of pain, communicated in ultrasound."
A vigil like this would usually involve about a dozen people. A similar number sometimes make it to 'national' demos away from Nottingham. However it is confidently expected to bring 50 or more people to the London Rally. Intense locally campaigning will be an important part of that process.
Gosh has it really been 5 hours since I began drafting this comment! Since then there have been many other comments, and a posting at http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2009/03/425589.html confirming the Sequani event, which I hope will also motivate event more people to get to London.
This also gives an opportunity to remind readers about the Animal Rights Coalition Meeting in Bristol on April 5th. See details at http://www.veggies.org.uk/event.php?ref=1251 and read the Indymedia feature from the January meeting at http://publish.indymedia.org.uk/en/2009/01/420462.html
Whilst the strength of the movement is the autonomous actions of many groups and individuals throughout the UK, ARC meetings are a great opportunity to meet up with other activists from all over the country, to catch up on the latest news about the current campaigns, and to swap ideas, tactics, skills and information, providing an forum to discuss movement-wide issues and to plan events such as the World Day Rally.
I look forward to seeing you on April 5th, 17nd, 22nd AND 25th, but sorry I won't get to Sequani on the 18th!
Animal Rights Calendar
Homepage: http://www.veggies.org.uk/arc.php