The story featured two days ago in the Uxbridge Gazette:
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/07/377010.html
Since then, the scale of the injunction BAA is seeking has become clear. They have targeted not only groups related to the forthcoming Camp for Climate Action, but also several campaign groups composed of local people opposing the airport's expansion, and even mass membership organisations like The National Trust, FOE, RSPB, Greenpeace, as well as the Campaign to Protect Rural England and others!
The injunction hearing which could see millions of people liable for arrest if they approach heathrow, will be heard next wednesday.
The Independent newspaper put the story frontpage today, and it's now been featured by BBC, Guardian, and other news sources. More details below:
Heathrow puts up legal barricades to keep away protesters
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/article2809171.ece
If you're a member of the National Trust, the RSPB, the Woodland Trust or Friends of the Earth, then you could be banned from Britain's biggest airport. And the Piccadilly line. And parts of Paddington station. And sections of the M4. All because the authorities want to halt a protest against climate change...
By Martin Hickman, Consumer Affairs Correspondent
Published: 27 July 2007
Five million people in peaceful environmental organisations such as the National Trust and the RSPB have become the subject of an extraordinary legal attempt to limit their right to protest.
In legal documents seen by The Independent, the British Airports Authority has begun moves that would allow police to arrest members of 15 environmental groups to prevent them taking part in demonstrations against airport expansion.
While the threat of terrorism and consequent security checks have been dominating the headlines during the start of the summer holidays, BAA has been planning a pre-emptive strike against environmentalists.
Next week, in response to a demonstration due to be held outside Heathrow airport, BAA will go to the High Court to seek judicial approval for an anti-environmentalist injunction, the terms of which are so wide they have provoked astonishment among the green movement. Any one of five million people in groups such as the Campaign for the Protection of Rural England could be arrested for travelling on the London Underground or possessing a kite.
Anyone failing to give 24 hours' notice of a protest could be arrested for travelling on sections of the motorway or from standing on platforms 6 and 7 at Paddington station to catch the Heathrow Express. The terms of the injunction would cover: "All railway trains and carriages operating upon the Piccadilly line of the London Underground System ; the M4 and all service stations between and including junctions 3 and 6; and the M25 and all service stations between and including junctions 13 and 15..."
Civil rights campaigners claim the injunction, which will be heard on Wednesday, would put new limits on the right to peaceful protest. Liberty described the "massively wide ban" - which has no time limit - as ridiculously unenforceable. "The dangerous and undemocratic trend of large corporations seeking to trample the legal right to peaceful protest should be taken very seriously by the courts," the human rights group protested.
BAA insisted it had a duty to protect the travelling public from disruption during the holiday season and was not seeking to prevent legal protest. As part of the second annual Camp for Climate Action, up to 5,000 protesters were to pitch tents for a week at or near Heathrow from 14 August in protest at plans for a third runway that would increase flights by 50 per cent. A day of peaceful direct action, such as occupying an airline office, was planned but organisers have promised not to compromise safety or inconvenience passengers.
On Monday, BAA served an injunction on four protest leaders: Joss Garman from Camp for Climate Action and Plane Stupid; Leo Murray, of Plane Stupid; Geraldine Nicholson, of the Heathrow campaign group No Third Runway Action Group; and John Stewart, of Hacan and AirportWatch, an umbrella group of 10 environmental groups such as the RSPB, Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth and the National Trust, whose members total more than five million people. Members of all the groups would be banned from setting up a camp at or in the vicinity of Heathrow and from carrying items including spades, saws, ropes, cables, aerosol cans, balloons, whistles and loudhailers.
The protesters would be allowed to gather at three protest points on the outskirts of the airport providing they did not exceed an as yet unspecified number, and gave their names, car registration plates and advance notice. They would not be allowed to use any megaphones, klaxons or sirens or go within 100 metres of any airport operation.
BAA said in a statement: "During the summer holiday period up to 200,000 people pass through Heathrow daily... These people would suffer as a result of any unlawful or irresponsible behaviour aimed at disrupting the smooth operation of the airport."
Mr Garman said that he was "stunned" at the breadth of the injunction. "It seems that having totally lost the argument on climate change they are resorting to bullying tactics. It is by far the biggest crackdown on civil liberties we have seen in terms of peaceful protest.
Martin Harper of the RSPB said: "It does seem extraordinary at a time when half of the country is knee deep in flood water and the Government is bringing forward legislation to tackle climate change that BAA is having to resort to bullying tactics to halt protests."
Why the airport has become a target
Activists are targeting Heathrow because of the threat posed to new climate-change targets by the planned expansion of airports nationwide. They believe the protests can influence aviation policy in the same way that the Newbury bypass protests in 1996 led to Labour calling a halt to the building of more roads.
At stake is the future of the world's busiest international airport. Heathrow currently has a limit of 480,000 flights a year. Allowing both existing runways to handle take-offs and landings and building a third runway could take that to 800,000 flights. Twelve local authorities in west London have formed the 2M group to oppose the plans which they say will leave a "constant rumble" over the homes of people in Kensington & Chelsea, Fulham, Richmond, Kingston and other areas. Members of the NoTRAG and Hacan Clearskies campaigning groups are also fighting the proposals.
The Government argues airport expansion is necessary to ensure continued economic growth. According to a study by Oxford Economic Forecasting last month, the planned airport expansion will increase GDP by £13bn by 2030, outweighing "climate change costs". A third runway would demolish the village of Sipson and part of Harmondsworth.
Bryan Sobey, 78, president of the Harmondsworth and Sipson Residents' Association, said: "It's a bit like ethnic cleansing without the guns. It will take an entire village and part of another village out of existence completely."
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BAA seeks Heathrow green demo ban
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6918565.stm
The owner of Heathrow Airport, BAA, is seeking an injunction to ban protests by environmental groups opposed to plans for a third runway.
The Independent newspaper reports that the injunction would mean members of 15 groups could be arrested at the airport or on road or rail routes to it.
Civil liberties groups say it would put new limits on peaceful protest.
BAA insists it is seeking the ruling "to protect the operation of the airport and the safety of passengers".
Direct action by 'green' groups under the banner Camp for Climate Change was planned between the 14 and 21 August.
Organisers hoped as many as 5,000 people would take part, spending a week in tents outside the airport
A spokesman for BAA said 200,000 people a day passed through the airport during the busy August period, adding: "It is these people who would suffer as a result of any unlawful or irresponsible behaviour.
"We respect people's right to protest within the bounds of the law and airport bylaws, and we would invite protesters to similarly respect the rights of passengers travelling through Heathrow."
Piccadilly line
The Independent says the injunction requests the right for police to arrest anyone who fails to give 24 hours' notice of a protest.
They could be detained, the paper says, on sections of the M4 and M25 motorways, including service stations, which lead to Heathrow, and platforms six and seven at Paddington Station which serve the Heathrow Express rail service.
The Piccadilly underground line which runs to Heathrow would also be covered by the injunction, it adds.
The injunction is reported to have been served on Monday on the leaders of four campaign groups.
Among them is Airport Watch, an umbrella group which includes The Woodland Trust, the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE) and Friends of the Earth.
Civil rights group Liberty said the injunction was an example of a "dangerous and undemocratic trend" by large companies to seek to limit the right to protest.
Leo Murray, from pressure group Plane Stupid, told BBC Radio Five Live he thought BAA was afraid of negative criticism.
"BAA are pretending that this is about protecting passengers or preventing some sort of security scare, " he said.
"But the reality is what they're really afraid of - and they should be worried - is thousands of people who are armed with peer-reviewed science which shows that their plans for expansion are totally incompatible with our plans for preventing climate change."
BAA said it had proposed several alternative sites at the airport "for the purposes of lawful and peaceful protest" which would be discussed at the injunction hearing.
The company, which owns seven UK airports, will go to the High Court next Wednesday.
GROUPS FACING THE BAN
Camp for Climate Action
HACAN Clearskies
Plane Stupid
No Third Runway Action Group
Airport Watch
Aviation Environment Federation
Friends of the Earth
Greenpeace
CPRE
Transport 2000
The Woodland Trust
World Development Movement
National Society for Clean Air and Environmental Protection
National Trust
RSPB
--------------------------------
Heathrow asks court to block protesters
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/07/26/nheathrow126.xml
By David Millward, Transport Correspondent
# Terrorist threat to airport passengers
Britain's largest airport operator is to ask the High Court to block a climate protest which threatens to wreck the travel plans of nearly 1.5 million Heathrow passengers.
Up to 2,000 environmentalists are planning a day of direct action “aiming to disrupt the activities of the airport and aviation industry” next month.
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It will take place during a week-long camp somewhere on the periphery of the airport which is due to start on August 14.
It will be the fourth August in a row that the airport has faced major problems.
Last year Heathrow was thrown into disarray by the thwarting of an alleged terror plot to down a transatlantic airline and two years ago British Airways operation came close to meltdown the year before because of an industrial dispute involving its caterers, Gate Gourmet and in 2004 holidaymakers faced lengthy delays because of a shortage of BA check-in staff.
The environmentalists’ decision to hold a protest has alarmed BAA, the owners of Heathrow, at a time when the airport is on a heightened state of terrorist alert.
It is feared that any disruption could add to the delays at the airport.
The all-party Transport Select Committee voiced fears that long queues of passengers could themselves be the target of a bomb attack.
Supporters of the protest include the campaign group “Plane Stupid”, which last year staged a demonstration on the runway at Nottingham East Midlands Airport.
The organizers of the Heathrow protest have pledged not to invade the runway on safety grounds, but refused to give any other information about the tactics they will adopt.
A spokesman for Plane Stupid said: “We can’t rule out disrupting the plans of holidaymakers.”
The protest is taking place during the height of the holiday season when around 200,000 people a day use Heathrow.
Even if there are only plans for one day of mass action, the week-long presence of a sizeable number of protesters is certain to cause disruption throughout.
BAA, which owns Heathrow, will seek a High Court injunction next week, in which the organizers of the protest will be banned from orchestrating demonstrations at a number of key areas at the airport.
Even if the protesters stay clear of the runways, they could still seek to block entrances to the terminals as well as disrupting road and rail traffic to Heathrow.
The demonstrators will decide on their course of action “democratically” after they have assembled in their ecological camp at an as yet unspecified location.
There are also fears that the demonstration could put an additional strain on police resources with an estimated 800 officers understood to be on standby to deal with the protest. BAA has contingency plans in place including erecting a series of marquees to accommodate any overspill, if access to Heathrow’s four terminals is impeded.
A spokesman for BAA said: “During the summer holiday period up to 200,000 people pass through Heathrow daily including many families and children.
“It is these people who would suffer as a result of any unlawful or irresponsible behaviour aimed at disrupting the smooth operation of the airport.
“We respect people’s right to protest within the bounds of the law and the airport bye-laws and would invite protesters to similarly respect the rights of passengers travelling through Heathrow.”
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Airport campaigners face injunctions
http://www.ealingtimes.co.uk/mostpopular.var.1574958.mostviewed.airport_campaigners_face_injunctions.php
By Manisha Mistry
CAMPAIGNERS opposing the expansion of Heathrow Airport are facing legal action to stop their planned week of protest.
Heathrow Airport Ltd has sent injunction documents to the chairman of HACAN, John Stewart and chairwoman of No Third Runway Action Group (NoTRAG), Geraldine Nicholson.
The company intends to ban the two leaders and everyone in the organisations they represent from attending the Climate Camp for Action and also hold them responsible for anyone from the campaign groups who gets involved in the event which is due to start on August 14.
Mr Stewart said: "I can't believe they have done this, it is stupid. The number of people involved in Climate Camp it affects is huge and we are going to fight this all the way."
A spokesman for BAA, said: "Heathrow Airport Ltd has applied for an injunction to protect the operation of the airport and the safety of passengers and staff against the planned direct action by environmental activists, between 14-21 August.
"During the summer holiday period up to 200,000 people pass through Heathrow daily including many families and children. It is these people who would suffer as a result of any unlawful or irresponsible behaviour aimed at disrupting the smooth operation of the airport.
"We respect people's right to protest within the bounds of the law and the airport byelaws and would invite protestors to similarly respect the right of passengers travelling through Heathrow."
Mr Stewart and Mrs Nicholson, along with Leo Murray and Joss Garman of Plane Stupid, are to appear at the High Court where the injunction will be heard.
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