Wednesday, March 05, 2008

"Green Thuggery" on the Increase

Unfortunately, the "Street of Dreams" firebombs set by eco-terrorists in a Seattle suburb that I posted about in yesterday's Vital Signs Blog, is not an aberration. The movement of "green thuggery" undertaken by environmental and animal rights radicals is growing.

And that means a greater endangerment to our economy, to scientific progress...and to human lives.

Here's a report on how eco-terrorism, facing increased opposition by Britain's law enforcement officials, is beginning to "export" its campaign of intimidation, vandalism and violence to the continent.

A rash of vandalism, intimidation and arson across continental Europe in 2008 is evidence of a worrying new wave of animal-rights extremism being exported from Britain, according to experts contacted by Nature.

In early January, threats led to a Dutch developer withdrawing from a new, $89 million biomedical research park in the Netherlands. A month later, Hasselt University’s Biomedical Research Institute in Belgium was set on fire. And in Barcelona in Spain, vandals targeted Novartis offices.


The pattern “is quite clear-cut”, according to Simon Festing, director of the Research Defence Society, a London-based group representing medical researchers. Festing tells Nature that he believes new, more stringent enforcement in the UK has led many extremists to move their activities overseas. “Activists are not finding it easy here,” he tells the mag. “So they’re just going across to Europe...”


“It’s been going on for years, but it’s become worse,” says Robert Janssen, managing director of the Netherlands’ biotech association NIABA. He estimates Dutch researchers and institutions have received more than 200 threats in the past year.


Andrew Jackson, deputy head of security at Novartis in Basel, Switzerland, says there has been an overall increase in both legal demonstrations and illegal acts. “We’ve had to increase the security of some of our facilities in Europe,” he tells Nature. Novartis says that incidents outside the US and the UK rose by nearly 50 percent last year to 97. There have been 15 events so far this year...