Guest guest Posted June 5, 2002 Report Share Posted June 5, 2002 http://news.ft.com/servlet/ContentServer?pagename=FT.com/StoryFT/FullStory & c=Sto\ ryFT & cid=1023101468384 & p=1012571727159 Animal testing protest extends to Asia By David Firn and Patrick Jenkins Published: June 5 2002 5:00 | Last Updated: June 5 2002 5:00 British animal rights activists have taken their campaigning to Asia, in a continued attempt to shut down the operations of Huntingdon Life Sciences, the drug testing company. Protesters at Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty (Shac) have infiltrated three Japanese research universities, accumulating video footage of experiments on dogs and primates. " The aim of this was to embarrass the Japanese research industry and government because of Japan's involvement with Huntingdon Life Sciences, " Shac said. Shac, set up to target HLS's locations in East Anglia, spawned a US division last year to target the shift of the company's shareholder base to the US. The protesters' Asia campaign is to be extended to Taiwan, Korea and India, where HLS also has operations. HLS delisted from the London Stock Exchange in January in a move designed to reduce the vulnerability of the company and its shareholders to attack. It reincorporated as Life Sciences Research, based in Maryland in the US, where shareholding rules allow the identities of investors with stakes of less than 5 per cent to remain secret. But only weeks before HLS was subsumed into its new parent, Stephens Inc, its main financial backer, dropped its equity and debt support following intensified animal rights activism that culminated in the New York home of the bank's president being vandalised. HLS has also so far failed to secure its planned US listing. The protesters' move into Asia comes as a full public inquiry into Cambridge University's proposals to build a controversial animal research centre has been ordered by the local council. The inquiry, ordered by South Cambridgeshire District Council, will begin in November. It follows an appeal by the university against the rejection of a planning application for the centre in February. News of the inquiry comes amid controversy about the university's animal research activities, ignited 10 days ago by video footage of its experiments. The British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection said an investigation had shown the university carried out invasive brain experiments on monkeys without the proper authorisation. Cambridgeshire police had opposed construction of the new site, in Girton on the outskirts of the city, saying it would become a focus for protests by animal rights campaigners. The county's resources have already been stretched by policing protests against HLS. The police said protecting researchers at a new centre could lead to cuts elsewhere unless extra resources were made available. Policing protests against the animal testing company cost the authority £2m in 2000, about 2 per cent of its annual budget. & copy; Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2002. - Official partner of 2002 FIFA World Cup http://fifaworldcup. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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