The high court judge (who has a history of granting injunctions, for example responsible for a recent injunction preventing a tabloid news paper publish some poxy royal dirt story), will give his ruling on Friday 13th.
The interim injuntion, which was granted late last December, will remain effective until the ruling is given on friday.
The injuntion effectively makes previously lawful activities into criminal offences and it seems quite clear that the judge will rule in favor of bayer...
[ http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/profiles/bayer/bayer1.html]
The court order uses the Protection From Harassment Act, which was orginally introduced as being needed to protect women from stalkers (needless to say, the new powers were first used by companies in an attempt to stop demonstrations). In the court, both the judge and the bayer representative talked about the 'balancing act' required to ensure that the freedom from harassment did not effect people rights to protest, or protest effects people right to not be harassed.
When talking about resent demonstrations against bayer, the bayer representative said that they had no problem with people shouting, but making a noise was unacceptable apparently. He explained how protestest had made a terrible racket at Bayers Newbury HQ a few months ago and gave evidence that the noise was intended to distrupt workers.
The judge also heard that protesters were planing a 'virtual sit-in' of bayers website (coincidently happening on this very day while they sat in court discussing the injunction that they apparently hope will end the campaign against them). Ask what effect this would have, the bayer representative explained that it would shut down all of the companies electronic communications system and prevent staff from sending emails.
One might wonder what email blockades have to do with a court order alledgedly intended to protect staff from intimidation and harassment.
The named individuals were being represented by a barraster but the named 'organisations' were not represented. Most of those names are not membership organisations in anyway - infact two of the so-called organisations are websites (one of which no longer available as the domain name has lapsed).
After the court I spoke to the baraster acting on behalf of the six named individuals.
He talked about how difficult it was trying to represent people who had taken part in accountable actions while the opposition was talking about the actions of unrelated people who had also targeted bayer.
He also said that some protesters played right into Bayers hands with the language used on some of the websites and reports.
The wider implications
Reading the injuction (available in full from the Bayer AG website), it is clear that the court order will effect not only those named.
There is a sections about reporting actions which might have implications for Indymedia. While Indymedia is an open publishing site, it could potentially be held responsible for posts by people that breach the injunction. Certainly Bayer are reading Indymedia [hiya guys] and have presented many articles from Indy as evidence in court.
Of course taking on Indymedia might be opening a can of worms that would backfire on Bayer. Time will tell.
Further info
Injunction www.bayer.co.uk
Bayer profile www.corporatewatch.org.uk
Bayer Watch www.cbgnetwork.org
Stop Bayer GM Crops www.stopbayergm.org
Comments
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Reporting actions
12.02.2004 19:10
As an example, he talked about reporting the recent pieing of Dr Paul Rylott [BSc Agriculture (University of Newcastle), PhD Plant Physiology (University of Edinburgh) - Head of Bayer CropScience's UK BioScience Team, and Chair of the Agriculture Biotechnology Council (ABC)].
Apparently, it would be a breach of the injunction if you were to actually name Paul Rylott as having been the person pied but would be okay if you simply reported that protesters had pied the head of Bayer CropScience's UK BioScience Team. (no pun intended)
Now this is all very well but the existing court order that is currently inforce (until Friday 13th) suggests that NO reporting is of actions is allowed.
"(8) Publishing and delivering by website, e-mail or in any form whatsoever any material, whether defamatory or otherwise, identifying the Protected persons OR CONCERNING OR DESCRIBING any activities perpetrated by any Protestors against any of the Protected persons." [my emphasis]
So, unless the Judge changes the wording before granting a permanent injunction, then any any reporting of actions against Bayer could be considered contempt of court.
Now if that doesn't make you feel contemptuous... ;-)
time
Publication of names and private addresses
12.02.2004 22:13
After all, the information is already out there for everyone to find. If you want to know the names of the directors of a company, you ask companies house. Further more, the directors are legally required to have their usual home address registered and this is all public record, anyone can walk off the street and look it up.
(In practise quite a few company directors put their company address down instead of their home address, this is not lawful. Mark Thomas did some work on this issue I seem to remember.)
If you want to find out about somebody, there is plenty of info out there on the net already. Just look at the information that you could find on Bayer's own website, it's a lot more revealing than naming Paul Rylott as the victim of a pie in the face. After all, by the time he was pied, protesters clearer knew a lot more about him than just his name. The info on the Bayer site I am sure would be of interest to anyone wanting to target those key figures in Bayers GM research for example. http://www.bayercropscience.com/bayer/cropscience/cscms.nsf/id/SF_SpeakersCV
The Bayer website also includes information about their management, but it seems that Bayer arn't happy with that information appearing on another website even though it is all public information available from companies house.
http://www.bayercropscience.com/bayer/cropscience/cscms.nsf/id/Management
So what's with the nonsense about names? Is it just a cynical way to make it seem that the names and addresses will be used by gm protesters to personally harm these people? Is it a snide attempt to discredit the anti-GM movement. But we already know that this info is all on public record and has always been available to whoever wants it. Perhaps the Bayer lawyer was deliberatly misleding the judge and distracting him away from the real issues.
l
Hey London Bod!!
13.02.2004 21:55
questions questions questions