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==Early life==
==Early life==
Broughton's father is a former painter and decorator and his mother, Pauline, a care assistant in an old people's home. Both are committed animal rights advocates who work alongside Broughton on the SPEAK campaign.<ref name=Hall>Hall, Macalister. [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4159/is_20050410/ai_n13598418/pg_6?tag=artBody;col1 The Vivisectionist v The Animal Activist], ''The Independent on Sunday'', April 10, 2005, p. 5 ff.</ref> His mother, 70 years old at the time, was injured in September 2004 when a construction worker at Oxford University threw a white burning substance at her during an animal rights demonstration. {{cn}}
Broughton's father is a former painter and decorator and his mother, Pauline, a care assistant in an old people's home. Both are committed animal rights advocates who work alongside Broughton on the SPEAK campaign.<ref name=Hall>Hall, Macalister. [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4159/is_20050410/ai_n13598418/pg_6?tag=artBody;col1 The Vivisectionist v The Animal Activist], ''The Independent on Sunday'', April 10, 2005, p. 5 ff.</ref> His mother, 70 years old at the time, was injured in September 2004 when a construction worker at Oxford University threw a white burning substance at her during an animal rights demonstration.<ref>[http://archive.oxfordmail.net/2004/9/10/8803.html Protesters suffer burns], ''Oxford Mail'', September 10, 2004.</ref>


==Activism==
==Activism==

Revision as of 07:39, 12 November 2008

Mel Broughton (born July 5, circa 1960) is a British landscape gardener who has risen to public prominence as one of the UK's most notable animal rights advocates. He was the co-founder, with Robert Cogswell, of SPEAK, The Voice for the Animals, a campaign to stop animal testing in Britain, which is currently focused on opposition to a new animal laboratory at Oxford University.[1]

Early life

Broughton's father is a former painter and decorator and his mother, Pauline, a care assistant in an old people's home. Both are committed animal rights advocates who work alongside Broughton on the SPEAK campaign.[2] His mother, 70 years old at the time, was injured in September 2004 when a construction worker at Oxford University threw a white burning substance at her during an animal rights demonstration.[3]

Activism

Broughton has been involved in animal rights for over 30 years. He worked on Operation Osprey in Scotland when he was 15, living in a tent to guard osprey nests. He later worked in animal sanctuaries, and campaigned against zoos, circuses, factory farming, and live animal exports.[2]

He lives in Northampton with Bella, a rescue dog, devoting most of his time to SPEAK. He told The Independent on Sunday:

This was always my life, but now it takes up so much of my life that it's very difficult. In fact survival is very, very hard. My flat's nothing special — two rooms — and I live as frugally as I possibly can to make sure I can campaign. I'm not trying to make myself out to be a martyr because this is my choice.[2]

Rocky the dolphin

File:BarryHorne-with-Rocky1.jpg
File:BarryHorne-with-Rocky2.jpg
Barry Horne and his son play with Rocky during secret visits to the dolphinarium, just before Broughton and Horne tried to move Rocky to the sea.

Broughton was first arrested in 1988, when he and three other activists, including Barry Horne — who died in 2001 during an animal-rights hunger strike — tried to remove Rocky, a bottlenose dolphin, from a small concrete pool inside Marineland, in Morecambe, Lancashire. Rocky had been in the pool, mostly alone, for 17 years, after being captured off the coast of Florida in 1971.

Broughton and the others intended to move the dolphin, who weighed 650 lbs, 200 yards from the pool to the sea, using a ladder, a net, a home-made dolphin stretcher, and a hired Mini Metro.[4][5] On the night of the action, they realized the logistics of the operation were beyond them, and decided to abandon their plans, but were arrested when the police found them with the dolphin stretcher in the back of the car. Broughton, Horne, Jim O'Donnell, and Jim Buckner were fined £500, while Broughton and Horne were also given six-month suspended sentences.[6]

The management of Marineland eventually agreed to sell the dolphin for £120,000 in response to Broughton and others picketing the facility, money that the activists raised with the help of the Born Free Foundation and the Mail on Sunday. In 1991, Rocky was transferred to a lagoon reserve in the Turks and Caicos Islands, then released.[7] Peter Hughes of the University of Sunderland cites the campaign as an example of how promoting an animal rights perspective created a paradigm shift toward seeing dolphins as individuals, as a result of which, he writes, there are now no captive dolphins in the UK.[8]

1999 possession and conspiracy charges

Broughton was first jailed in 1999 after police found a bomb in the boot of his car.[9] He was convicted of conspiracy to cause an explosion likely to endanger life in connection with Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty (SHAC), an international animal rights campaign to close Huntingdon Life Sciences. He was sentenced to four years, and released in June 2002 after serving two years and eight months.[2]

Broughton told The Independent on Sunday that he took the chance to educate himself while in prison, studying philosophy and social sciences with the Open University. "I found a lot of sympathy inside," he told the newspaper, "but a lot of the general prisoners found it very difficult to understand that I was inside for something I'd done for no personal gain."[2]

SPEAC and SPEAK campaigns

In July 2003, Broughton and Robert Cogswell set up a campaign to halt construction of a new non-human primate research facility at Cambridge University, the plans for which suggested it would be Europe's largest primate vivisection centre. The Stop Primate Experiments at Cambridge (SPEAC) campaign succeeded in persuading the university to abandon its plans in January 2004.[10]

Shortly thereafter, SPEAC learned that Oxford University planned to build a new animal research laboratory, including a non-human primate lab, in the university's science area. The activists said that talks between Oxford and Cambridge had resulted in Oxford agreeing to conduct the brain experiments that were lost with the abandonment of Cambridge's plans.[11] SPEAC became SPEAK, The Voice for the Animals, relaunching itself as a campaign to halt all animal testing in the UK, with its second target the new Oxford lab, which opened in November 2008.[12]

2007 possession and conspiracy charges

In connection with his role in the SPEAK campaign, Broughton was charged in December 2007 with conspiracy to blackmail and possession of incendiary devices after fire broke out inside a sports pavilion belonging to Queen's College, Oxford in November 2006, and two petrol bombs were found inside the university's Templeton College in February 2007.[13][14] The Animal Liberation Front claimed responsibility for the attacks.[15][16]

Transcripts were submitted to the court during Broughton's trial of a recording in which Oxford police discussed a "dirty war" against Broughton, and how they were going to "get him." Broughton told the court that he was under constant police surveillance.[17]

The jury was discharged in November 2008 after clearing Broughton of keeping an explosive substance with intent, but failing to reach verdicts on the other charges. Broughton was remanded in custody and is expected to face a retrial in 2009.[18]

Veganism

Broughton has been a vegan for nearly 30 years. While in prison in 2001, he wrote:

Being a vegan to me means the only logical choice to backing up my views on freeing non-human animals from the living hell we’ve inflicted on them. It is a statement about who I am, a person who rejects the way that we humans have come to see animals as only here to serve our own selfish purpose. It is also on a practical level a way of demonstrating to others that you can lead a happy and healthy life which does not require the suffering and death of animals. When breaking from vegetarianism to veganism nearly 22 years ago I remember thinking that I’d finally broken the chains that tied me to the exploitation of non-human animals.

I am a practical person who has always believed that words of sympathy are not enough when it comes to fighting for change. Veganism is practical animal liberation ... I’m very proud of being a vegan — not in a pious or self-righteous sense but because in a very real way I’m part of the most far-reaching revolution for change in human evolution.[19]

Notes

  1. ^ Dear, Paula. Anatomy of an animal rights protest, BBC News, October 5 2004.
  2. ^ a b c d e Hall, Macalister. The Vivisectionist v The Animal Activist, The Independent on Sunday, April 10, 2005, p. 5 ff.
  3. ^ Protesters suffer burns, Oxford Mail, September 10, 2004.
  4. ^ "Animal rights man dies on hunger strike", Lancashire Evening Telegraph, November 8, 2001.
  5. ^ "Barry's life", Arkangel, undated.
  6. ^ Mann, Keith. From Dusk 'til Dawn: An insider's view of the growth of the Animal Liberation Movement, Puppy Pincher Press, 2007, p. 165.
  7. ^ Mann, Keith. From Dusk 'til Dawn: An insider's view of the growth of the Animal Liberation Movement, Puppy Pincher Press, 2007, p. 167.
  8. ^ Hughes, Peter. "Animals, values and tourism — structural shifts in UK dolphin tourism provision," Tourism Management, Volume 22, Issue 4, August 2001, pp. 321-329.
  9. ^ Animal activist 'behind bombings', BBC News, 28 October 2008, retrieved November 11, 2008
  10. ^ Primate Research Facility at 307 Huntingdon Road: Notice, Cambridge University Reporter, January 28, 2004.
  11. ^ The New Primate Laboratory, SPEAK, retrieved July 21, 2006.
  12. ^ Sample, Ian. Oxford University opens controversial animal research laboratory, The Guardian, November 11, 2008.
  13. ^ Wilkinson, Matt. SPEAK campaigner charged with arson, Oxford Mail, December 14, 2007.
  14. ^ Animal rights activist charged in connection with attacks on Oxford University, NETCU, December 14, 2007.
  15. ^ Wilkinson, Matt. Mel Broughton Faces Charges, Oxford Mail, reproduced on the ALF website.
  16. ^ Bowcott, Owen. Animal rights activist cleared of possessing explosive substance, The Guardian, November 6, 2008.
  17. ^ Police "war" against bomb accused, BBC News, November 4, 2008.
  18. ^ Jury discharged in fire bomb case, BBC News, November 6, 2008.
  19. ^ Vaughan, Claudette. Mel Broughton: Unedited, Abolitionist Online, June 2005.