Earlier
this year, firebombs that exploded minutes apart destroyed a car parked outside
the campus home of a researcher at the University of California, Santa Cruz,
and burned the front door of another’s house. He and his family escaped
the smoke-filled house using a ladder lowered from a second-story window.
A third researcher received a threatening telephone message around the same
time.
These examples of domestic terrorism are part of a vicious pattern of terrorist
acts against university researchers who are involved with experiments that
use animals. They follow other similar incidents of threats and vandalism
earlier this year at two other University of California campuses.
There has been virtually unanimous condemnation of these terrorist acts. UCLA
Chancellor Gene Block staunchly defended the academic freedom of university
faculty, branding the flooding of a researcher’s home by vandals a “deplorable
and illegal act of extreme vandalism.” Even prominent advocates for
animal rights condemned the recent bombings; a statement from the national
Humane Society said the bombing tactics are “reviled by mainstream advocates
of animal protection.”
Similar responses have come from British universities and other institutions
after animal-rights activists terrorized researchers there in recent years.
Such reactions would seem to be a foregone conclusion for anyone with a functioning
moral compass, but recent events in Germany belie that notion.
Widespread and repeated vandalism in several European countries—focused
there on field trials of gene-spliced, or genetically modified (GM) plants—has
been exceedingly damaging to agricultural research, including critical risk-assessment
studies. The latest incident occurred in June when experimental wheat plants
were destroyed at a research station near Zurich. The field trial was intended
to assess the interactions of gene-spliced wheat with other plants, soil microorganisms,
and insects.
Vandalism toward GM plants
In France and Germany, small-scale field trials of gene-spliced plants conducted
by researchers at universities and research institutes have been regularly
vandalized by activists, even though most of these investigations were studying
the environmental safety of growing gene-spliced plants in normal agricultural
environments. One German postdoctoral fellow was attacked with stones while
trying to protect his virus-resistant sugar beets from vandals.
A few scientists have continued to pursue their research in the face of such
violence—which, unlike similar attacks in the U.K. and U.S., has been
virtually ignored by the criminal-justice system. The coup de grâce,
however, may now have been administered by the recent decision of two German
universities to prohibit field trials of gene-spliced crops.
In April, the rector and external advisory board of Nürtingen-Geislingen
University in Baden-Württemberg “urgently recommended” that
a faculty member terminate his field trials that had begun in 1996—on
insect-resistant and fungus-resistant gene-spliced corn. “We have always
been very critical of this kind of research,” said economist Werner
Ziegler, the university’s rector. “Lately, things got out of control.
There were e-mail attacks, vandalism, intimidation, and personal threats.”
Also in April, the Justus Liebig University in Giessen, Hesse, announced that
it would stop its planned initiation of two small field trials of insect-resistant
gene-spliced corn after protests by activists and local politicians. Both
trials had been approved by the national consumer protection and food safety
agency and were to be conducted on behalf of the national authority for agriculture
variety and seed affairs.
“I am not happy at all with this decision,” said Stefan Hormuth,
the university’s president. “Unfortunately, we were no longer
able to deal with the massive opposition from politicians and the general
public. The university has a reputation in the region that we cannot risk
losing.”
To ban or not to ban research?
Let me get this straight. German universities think they maintain their reputations
by curtailing the academic freedom of their faculty and students in the face
of demands and threats from fascist thugs?
Germany is the only country in which the universities—which are normally
refuge dedicated to the advancement of knowledge and to the freedom to perform
legitimate research—have capitulated to the hoodlums. One might expect
such deplorable, dastardly behaviour in backward authoritarian countries,
but in a major Western democracy it is inexcusable.
Along with France, Germany has experienced frequent violent vandalism of field
trial sites, but the appropriate response is not to ban the research. Would
a British, Canadian, or American university even consider banning research
using animals in response to the threats, intimidation, and violence by animal
rights activists?
This capitulation to the vilest sort of behaviour is grotesque and has dire
implications: Violent, anti-technology, antisocial sharks of all kinds will
now smell blood in the water.
Herr Hormuth, the president of Justus Liebig University, offers a dubious
defence of his actions, “if we look at history then we should have also
learned that we have to act responsibly with the results and possibilities
of scientific research and are accountable to society.” A quite extraordinary
statement.
Given the existing achievements of gene-spliced plants—huge economic
benefits to farmers, less use of chemical pesticides, and more environment-friendly
farming practices—he appears to have a peculiar view of what constitutes
acting responsibly with the results and possibilities of scientific research
and accountability to society. Could anyone argue seriously that delaying
or abandoning a demonstrably safe technology that is environment-friendly
and enhances food (and potentially biofuel) production is beneficial to society?
Aggressive societal responses
Antisocial behaviour demands aggressive, unequivocal societal responses, not
cowardly capitulation. Vigorous prosecution and punishment of criminal actions
should be accompanied by university administrators’ resolve to resist
intimidation.
There are important lessons here: (1) You should not conciliate thugs by capitulating
to them, and (2) When universities permit intimidation to compromise academic
freedom and the safety of their faculty and students, they become part of
the problem.
Source:
Henry I. Miller (15.9.08). Thwarting domestic terrorism. Vandalism and
violent acts that sabotage experiments are a threat to all researchers.
Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News, vol. 28(16) (http://www.genengnews.com/articles/chitem.aspx?aid=2597)
This article is reproduced with the permission of the author.
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