19th
April 2005
SMASH EDO IN THE HIGH COURT
Following an adjournment on April
14th anti-war activists from the Smash Edo campaign will return
to the High Court on Friday 22nd April.
The adjournment was granted by
Judge Gross because the defence had been given insufficient time
to prepare its case by Lawson-Cruttenden , the solicitors acting
for EDO/MBM.
EDO/MBM ltd, who manufacture
bomb release mechanisms used in the Iraq war, are seeking an injunction
to prevent campaigners from protesting outside their factory in
Brighton.
Campaigners are adamant that
the injunction represents a direct assault on their civil liberties
and those of anyone who wishes to protest.
Lorna Marcham (named in the injunction)
said “It is clear that this injunction is an attempt to
strangle our right to protest, EDO don’t want attention
drawn to their role in the death of civilians in the illegal war
in Iraq.”
Ceri Gibbons spokesman for SMASH
EDO “The definition of protestor in the proposed injunction
is so broad it covers anyone who disagrees with the arms trade
or the war in Iraq. It should come as no surprise that a company
that makes its profits through death and destruction abroad should
also have such contempt for human rights in this country.”
The campaign is appealing for
everyone in the wider peace movement as well as anyone who cares
about freedom of speech to join them on:
WEDNESDAY 20th April
Demonstration against the arms
trade and for freedom of speech and assembly.
Outside EDO/MBMs factory on Home
Farm Road, Brighton.
FRIDAY 22ND April
Press Conferences and Demonstrations
outside the Royal Courts of Justice.
9.30 am The Defendants will be
joined by Helen Steel and David Morris of Mclibel fame as well
as Bruce Kent, Vice President of CND.
4.30 pm The above will give a
press conference on their reaction to the Judges ruling.
Notes for Journalists
Brighton & Hove
is a UN Peace Messenger City
The injunction referred to was served under the
1997 Protection from Harassment Act (originally designed to protect
women from stalkers) and is the first of its kind directed at
activists outside of the animal rights movement. Crucially it
is a civil injunction but carries criminal penalties. It affects
anyone deemed to be a protestor. Initially EDO/MBM requested a
large "exclusion zone" comprising the whole of Home
Farm Industrial Estate.
They and Sussex police also wanted
to limit demonstrations to two and a half hours, with less thanten
people who had to be silent. Judge Gross refusedto impose these
conditions at the initial hearing of an interim injunction, which
was put in place in the period before the full trial to be heard
at the High court in London from November 21st. In his summing
up he said, "The right to freedom of _expression is jealously
guarded in English law" and consequently refused to impose
the requested limits on size, timing or noise made at demonstrations.
He also said that he doubted that protesters were 'stalking' employees
of EDO MBM.
EDO MBM Technologies Ltd are the sole UK subsidiary
of huge U.S arms conglomerate EDO Corp, which was recently named
No. 10 in the Forbes list of 100 fastest growing companies. They
supply bomb release mechanisms to the US and UK armed forces amongstothers.
They supply crucial components for Raytheon's Paveway guided bomb
system, widely used in the "Shock and Awe" campaign
in Iraq.
EDO also withdrew a threatened libel action against Indymedia
over being named as "warmongers".
Lawson-Cruttenden & Co
Solicitors firm working for EDO have been instrumental in developing
the Protection of Harassment Act 1997 from a measure designed
to safeguard individuals to a corporate charter to make inconvenient
protest illegal. Theyhave pioneered to use of injunctions to create
large "exclusion zones". They have secured numerous
injunctions against anti-vivisection and anti-GM protestors.
Campaign against EDO MBM
People involved in the anti-EDO campaign include, but are not
limited to: local residents, the Brighton Quakers, peace activists,
anti-capitalists, Palestine Solidarity groups, human rights groups,
trade unionists, academics and students. The campaign started
in August 2004 with a peace camp. It's avowed aim is to expose
EDO MBM and their complicity in war crimes and to remove them
from Brighton.
back to top
|