Cambridge restaurant Midsummer House was sprayed with graffiti by animal rights protesters opposed to it serving foie gras.
"Stop Selling Foie Gras" and "Ban Foie Gras" were among slogans spray-painted on the Michelin-starred restaurant. Door locks were glued, glass-etching fluid was used to damage the windows and paint stripper used on window frames and the front door.
Staff spent most of Sunday removing the graffiti.
The restaurant was closed to diners yesterday (Monday, 18 February) but owner Daniel Clifford said: "The business is open as usual."
Responsibility for the attack was claimed by the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) in an email to the News.
It said the restaurant "made itself a target for direct action by continuing to support and profit from the horrific animal abuse involved in the production of foie gras".
The message warned that the attack may not be the last on the exclusive eatery, which is on Midsummer Common alongside the river.
The email said: "Because of the continued support by Midsummer House of such a vile industry, direct action had to be taken.
"We hope this is the only action needed to persuade the restaurant to stop selling foie gras.
"It's a simple thing to do. If not, the direct action will continue."
Midsummer House was also the subject of a peaceful protest by Animal Rights Cambridge about serving foie gras last week.
On Valentine's Day, protesters carried placards saying "Foie gras = diseased liver" and "Don't buy into cruelty".
one of the protesters, said: "We have nothing to do with the ALF. We are continuing with peaceful and law-abiding demonstrations until foie gras is removed from menus in Cambridge".
Alongside foie gras on the restaurant's menu are dishes such as maple caramelised sweetbreads, oysters, seared hand-dived scallops and Bourbon smoked pigeon.
Police confirmed they were investigating the criminal damage caused in the attack.
Source: http://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/cn_news_home/DisplayArticle.asp?ID=257435
Comments
Hide the following 16 comments
Spot on
19.02.2008 16:56
>> http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/02/391007.html
It'll be interesting to see if they try the same tactic again! My first impression is that they will be more agressive (after scrubbing paint all day!), but then again, they probably realised that the ALF was motivated by the Midsummer's heavy handed approach to the situation initially.
They'll hopefully be softies and give in because of it, or just dive back into the - cause more damage - expect more damage ideology.
ARA
Ray
20.02.2008 21:32
Ray
Victory: Midsummer House Goes Foie Gras Free!
20.02.2008 22:19
http://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/cn_news_home/DisplayArticle.asp?ID=257755
The news comes after an action by the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) that head chef Daniel Clifford has estimated will cost the business over £3,000.
Mr. Clifford stated that he would of spoke to protesters but was not approached, he made no mention of the letters sent by a national campaigning groups and polite phone calls made by local campaigners before the protests even started and during the campaign.
ARA
Homepage: http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/02/391888.html
Ray...
20.02.2008 22:38
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Ray
20.02.2008 23:32
Well I have not much heard publicity about that so far and I consider this to be a much bigger problem. We're talking about a much larger number of animals but also a bigger potential impact: instead of few wealthy annoyed customers, a majority of junk food eaters and other beef addicts.
"If your ‘pet’ were the victim would you feel that peaceful (no human or animal harmed) direct action was unacceptable? "
Not sure I get your point... peaceful action is acceptable. Terrorism is not.
Ray
He is pointing out...
21.02.2008 01:42
Although we all know violence can only be directed towards living creatures, thus this is not violence, or terrorism. To say throwing a brick through the window is the same as flying a plane into a bulding and causing thousands of people to die - IS SICK.
It further degrades the thousands of families who have lost lives on September 11th. Next thing they know their lost ones are being compared to the suffering an owner of a car recieves when it is being paintsripped, or when a wall is painted "love animals" - again a SICK comparison.
Quite simply, the fact that you said the ALF should target battery farms, means that you are endorsing your own definition of the term "terrorist tactics", which you claim to be so wrong.
Why is it that all vandalism is called violent terrorism, and murder is just called violence, even serial rapists and murderers. Any reasons...? Media manipulation perhaps? Same old story...
Why do you think that the thousands of battery farms raided don't get an word in edge ways?Because if the media covered the action, then less people would be consuming battery eggs - and that would be more economic damage the ALF actions cause on their own!!
Makes you wonder why animal abuse isn't talked about right? Like the millions suffering in Iraq and the countless number of people in poverty, its all about protecting the profits.
ARA
To ARA
21.02.2008 08:22
Instead of comparing the victims (a chef with few broken windows vs. thousands of death) you should compare the process: use of fear and violence to impose an ideology (whether Koran’s or Tom Regan’s). Denying the tactic is the same IS BLIND.
What would ALF have done if this chef had continued? Probably increase the violence and threat.
By the way, forceful destruction of property is also violence! It’s not only intentional injury to persons. Also, I did not say ALF “should” target battery farms. I said that IF they really wanted to make an impact they WOULD target these farms. This does not mean I endorse the tactic; I despise it. Just like I despise the treatment received by so many innocent animals.
Without violence, a number of small improvements have been made recently regarding the production of eggs...
Ray
To Ray
21.02.2008 12:56
The war against animal abuse is fought on all fronts, the breeders, the suppliers, and the sellers.
UK ALF
So Ray...the big question!
21.02.2008 15:34
I like the way we're not concentrating on those issues and are looking into the future - to total animal liberation. I'm also glad that movements are not stupid enough to waste time with politicians and the like, similar to the suffrajets. We've got so far in the last 200 years, there's only a bit left to go !!
We've given out nearly all rights now; white men, all men, women, children, homosexuals and now animals are getting closer and closer everyday. Do we really wish we were living in the 1850s because some people didn't break some shit - that now in the 21st century is defined as "terrorism"??
To denounce history, is to denounce the struggles we have fought and won. It is in effect to denounce the present rights we all have, knowing that without the methods employed it could have been very different.
So....in todays society.
Would it be wrong to break a window to liberate a slave?
Would it be wrong to burn mailboxes in support of womens rights?
I think we all know, if it was our children, our mother, our friends in those cages, we'd do everything possibly to liberate those lives.
Until Every Cage Is Empty - Until All Are Free
Your opinion is yours
...
21.02.2008 19:33
Unbiased education of consumers based on (if possible) scientific facts, might seem slower, but would pay more in the long run.
Also, I disagree with comparing the liberation of slaves and animals but that's another discussion about the actual goal. My point was just about the tactic.
Ray
Well done ALF
21.02.2008 22:22
The ends justify the means, so long as no one got hurt - and in this case (as always with the ALF) no one did get hurt.
The result was that the place dropped foie gras - and that saved 100's of ducks each year from the torture and agony of force fed liver disease. The campaign against foie gras is gaining momentum all over the country, and you can bet several places will quietly drop foie gras after reading about this in the papers meaning that the total number of ducks saved from this one night of action could run in to many thousands.
ALF's little brother
Slippery slope...
21.02.2008 23:28
Others like Staline and Hitler also believed the ends justify the means. It’s a slippery slope...
Ray
Get real
22.02.2008 09:38
Get real, a restaurant dropped foie gras - if you seriously think that this will lead to a Hitler/Stalin type world wide conflict then you are seriously out of touch with reality and I suggest that you take some time out until you can understand context.
ALF's little brother
Hum
22.02.2008 15:47
Anyway, I think I previously made the point I wanted to make so I'm not going to argue any further.
Ray
result
22.02.2008 17:01
Well done Alfie - it worked - wish they had a number I could call, cos there are some places I know of that need the same treatment
I know it dont work like that though - pity.
Donald Duck
Or
26.02.2008 22:35
Ummm....I best tell you this, because I think it's only honest! If you go to Bite Back you'll notice the number of arsons have been steadily increasing across Europe and the US. There have been 4 or 5 in the past few weeks even.
In regards to the comparison between liberating humans and liberating non-humans, I find it odd that you would not compare the two as they both come under the category of "animal liberation", one is non-human liberation and the other is human liberation. Hense the quote "One struggle, one fight. Human freedom, animal rights"
Why you would not be able to look into the comparisons I don't know....they both include un-selfish action, liberating another that is imprisoned for no logical reason, other than the mainframe of discrimination that keeps them there for the dominant side of society to benefit from. Obviously I undertsand if you don't want to rebute those claims, because you consider them offensive.
You'll probably find this contraversial too...
Jewish author Isaac Bashevis Singer, who received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1978 and who was himself a vegetarian, made this comparison in several of his stories including Enemies, A Love Story, The Penitent, and The Letter Writer. In The Letter Writer the protagonist says: "In relation to [animals], all people are Nazis; for the animals, it is an eternal Treblinka." In The Penitent the protagonist says "when it comes to animals, every man is a Nazi."
J.M. Coetzee, who received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2003, wrote: "... in the 20th century, a group of powerful and bloody-minded men in Germany hit on the idea of adapting the methods of the industrial stockyard, as pioneered and perfected in Chicago, to the slaughter - or what they preferred to call the processing - of human beings."
As for tactics, the controversial tactics are shown to work. They raise a large amount of awareness on the issue, regardless of the fact it's mainly negative. Who actually trusts the maintstream press these days anyway? The argument that people aren't going to look into the issues because of the "fringe" groups that support it, was pretty much proven wrong by the black panthers/black nationalists and the extremist suffrajets. It brings these issues to light so people over time will look into the issues from another perspective, if not immediately.
It's like the argument that if you've been punched by somebody who has pink hair, that you hate everyone with pink hair, etc etc. People who still continue to discriminate against humans will never agree with animal liberation, just like Nazis don't agree with rights for non-whites, gay people and everything else that has progressed in society. There will be a significant number that also disagree, usually not even a majority to agree in the first place, but very shortly over time things change. Within weeks, even months, the people who are against rights end up being the "fringe" that secured it.
If it's undemocratic, then so was the majority of social history.
The holocaust?