Antivivisection
campaigners from around Aotearoa/New Zealand gathered in the capital, Wellington,
to protest a two-day vivisectors' conference in November. The conference was organized
by ANZCCART
(The Australia and New Zealand Council for the Care of Animals in Research and
Teaching), which is an animal research industry front group set up to promote
and defend the use of animals in experiments. 170 vivisectors attended this year's
ANZCCART conference at the convention center in the Te Papa National Museum.
The
day before the conference was due to open, a group of activists charged into the
Royal Society building where ANZCCART is based. There was a brief but noisy occupation
of the building. The activists left before police arrived, taking a box of ANZCCART
documents with them. On the morning of November 18th, more then forty protesters
gathered to welcome the vivisectors as the conference opened. A huge amount of
noise continued for an hour and a half, and was audible clearly inside the conference. Later
that day, a group of activists made a surprise visit to the Wellington
School of Medicine where thousands of animals are tortured in cancer research
experiments. Activists armed with drums and other noise-making devices blockaded
the foyer of the building and occupied it. The police forced them out 25 minutes
later. The protest continued outside the building. While the police were dealing
with that protest, another smaller group armed with cameras attempted to make
a surprise inspection of the lab animal-breeding unit at Victoria University across
town. Unfortunately they were spotted by security guards before they could gain
entry and had to make a quick getaway. That night, the vivisectors hid behind
tight security at their conference dinner in the Skyline restaurant on a hill
above the city. Some activists used an unknown device to create very loud explosion
noises. The dinner was disrupted by a bomb threat phone call, followed by two
loud bangs. After midnight several loud bangs were set off around the house of
Mike Berridge, a well-known local vivisector who hopefully had no sleep that night. On
Friday at noon there was another big noisy protest outside Te Papa Museum. Just
before activists arrived, some naughty person set off the fire alarms and the
building was evacuated. Several fire engines arrived and about 500 people (including
the vivisectors) poured onto the forecourt of the museum where the protest was
about to begin. Unfortunately the vivisectors had been told to remove their conference
badges so we couldn't identify them. Some protesters mingled with the crowd handing
out leaflets, while the rest of us kept up the drumming and chanting. Later on,
when the police had re-admitted people into the museum, a group of protesters
split off from the main group and marched around to the back of the museum, closer
to where the vivisectors were having their lunch. Detectives from the national
Threat Assessment Unit were seen across the road from the protest observing everyone
present. The protest ended with only a few minor confrontations. A few hours later
there was a final protest as the vivisectors left the building. A dozen protesters
were surrounded and heavily outnumbered by police at this final protest so were
unable to do anything but shout at the vivisectors as they left. The Animal
Liberation Front was also active during the week. Several Wellington vivisectors
were visited at their homes in the middle of the night just before the conference
was about to begin. Two vivisectors from the Malaghan Institute, who live together,
had their house sloganized and the front window smashed. John
Miller, vivisector and head of the Victoria University animal ethics committee
(which oversees and approves experiments at the university) had his house covered
in ALF slogans, a brick through the front window and his car covered in paint
stripper. And the Royal Society building (where ANZCCART is based) was covered
in anti-vivisection slogans. The morning after the conference, a huge "vivisection
is scientific fraud" slogan had appeared on the walls of the Museum. Reports
from within the conference said the vivisectors felt under siege for the whole
two days. The atmosphere inside the building was one of paranoia as dozens of
police and security guards patrolled the conference center. Security guards prevented
the vivisectors from standing too close to the windows in case protesters threw
rocks at them! Word had spread that Wellington vivisectors were having their homes
trashed and every vivisection lab in Wellington had increased security for the
week. The protests were the first time in two years that activists from
the length of the country gathered in one place and the grassroots animal liberation
movement in Aotearoa is hopefully stronger following the protests against the
conference. A relatively small group of activists from around the country managed
to cause chaos and stress for the vivisection community without suffering any
arrests themselves. They also started on plans for more coordination of local
anti-vivisection campaigns around the country. Next year in May, factory farmers
from around the world will be in Auckland for the World Pork Expo. We have started
preparing for another national gathering of animal activists to make sure the
Expo is another disaster for the animal abusers. |