23 february 2005
press release
friends of the earth international
greenpeace
sierra club
rainforest action network
International environmental groups unite
against Australian corporate assault on free
speech
Joint Statement:
Friends of the Earth International,
Greenpeace International, the Rainforest
Action Network and the Sierra Club
unreservedly condemn the decision by the
Australian woodchip company, Gunns, to sue
environmentalists and politicians in
Australia who have opposed its role in the
logging of old growth forests in
Tasmania.
On 13th December 2004 Gunns, the world's
biggest exporter of hardwood woodchips,
served a writ against 20 organizations and
individuals, including The Wilderness Society
of Australia and Senator Bob Brown, the
leader of the Australian Green Party. Gunns
is accusing them of interfering in its
business interests and is seeking A$6.3
million in damages.
The future of Tasmania's old growth
forests was at the centre of the election
battle in Australia in 2004 when both the
Coalition Government and Labor Opposition
made election pledges to protect more of
Tasmania's threatened old growth forests from
the woodchip industry. These iconic forests
contain some of the tallest hardwood trees in
the world and are home to many endangered
species. Public opinion polls show that 80%
of the Australian public want all of
Tasmania's old growth forests fully
protected.
Gunns is by far the biggest exporter of
woodchips sourced from old growth forests in
Tasmania and its actions are massively
environmentally damaging. Having lost the
public debate in Australia on old growth
forest protection, Gunns is now using its
wealth and power in an attempt to crush
dissent and silence its critics through the
courts. It is a classic example of a
corporation deliberately attempting to
intimidate members of civil society engaged
in peaceful opposition to environmental
abuse. As such, this law suit represents
nothing less than a direct assault on
democracy and free speech which is of great
concern to civil society movements
worldwide.
We stand shoulder to shoulder with our
Australian NGO colleagues to oppose this
shameful writ and we demand that Gunns
withdraws it. We believe that responsible
companies who respect the role of civil
society in protecting the environment will
firmly oppose this law suit. We therefore
call on Gunns major shareholders and Japanese
customers to condemn it and make it clear
that they fully support the democratic right
of communities, NGO's and politicians to
peacefully oppose environmentally and
socially destructive activity.
Contacts:
Friends of the Earth: Cam Walker +61
394198700
Leonie van der Maesen:
Greenpeace: Danny Kennedy +61
487775356
Sierra Club: Stephen Mills +1 202 675
6691
Rainforest Action Network: Paul West +1
415 3984404
Images available at
http://photos.greenpeace.org.au
or contact: Michelle Thomas +61 404 096
556
Notes:
-
Friends of the Earth
International
is a federation of
autonomous environmental organizations from
71 countries that represent the world's
biggest grassroots environmental campaign
network.
-
Greenpeace
is an
independent campaigning organization with a
presence in 40 countries that uses
non-violent, creative confrontation to
expose global environmental problems and
force solutions that are essential to a
green and peaceful future.
-
Sierra Club
is
America's oldest, largest and most
influential grassroots environmental
organization.
-
Rainforest Action
Network
campaigns for the forests,
their inhabitants and the natural systems
that sustain life by transforming the
global marketplace through grassroots
organizing, education and non-violent
direct action.
-
The Wilderness Society
is the lead Australian national campaign
group working to protect the Australian
wilderness and forests. For more
information see
www.wilderness.org.au
-
Gunns sells the majority of its
woodchips to the Japanese pulp and paper
industry. The main Japanese paper
manufacturer customers of Gunns woodchips
are
Nippon Paper
Industries
and
Oji Paper
Co. Mitsubishi Paper Mills, Daio Paper Co.
and Chuetsu Pulp & Paper Co
are also customers. The key Japanese
trading companies importing the Tasmanian
woodchips are:
Sumitomo
Corporation
,
Itochu
Corporation,
Mitsui
Co
. and
Mitsubishi
Corporation
. Mitsubishi
Corporation and Mitsubishi Paper Mills
announced in 2004 that they will stop
buying woodchips from Tasmanian old growth
and high conservation value forests
'as
soon as possible'
.
-
Gunns biggest shareholders are
Perpetual Trustees, Concord,
AMP
and
Deutsche
Bank.
-
Following the Australian Federal
election in October 2004, the Coalition
Government was returned and promised to
protect an additional 170,000 hectares of
public and private old growth forest in
Tasmania. This still leaves at least
100,000 hectares of old growth and high
conservation value forest in Tasmania that
remains unprotected.
|