News
- Details
-
Created on Monday, 16 January 2012 22:25
-
Written by Damien Gillis
Salmon Activist Draws Outpouring of Public Cash for Legal Battle
If money talks, then the geyser of financial support that has sprung in
the past few days for salmon activist Don Staniford's legal defence
speaks volumes.
Staniford - who has been described by aquaculture trade
media as salmon farming's "public enemy number one" - is being sued by
the world's second largest farmed salmon producer, Oslo-based Cermaq
(operating as Mainstream in Canada), for defamation.
The trial, expected
to run 20 days, begins today at the BC Supreme Court in Vancouver.
The
company, whose biggest shareholder is the Norwegian Government, may
have been banking on Staniford submitting to its demands out of court
due to a lack of funds to pursue the case - but any chance of that
happening disappeared over the past weekend when the activist raised
over $20,000 in public donations for his legal battle.
Staniford has
been building his case, giving depositions and collecting evidence over
the last several months but only went to the public for funding this
past Friday, when he launched a page on the community fundraising site
gofundme.com.
Since then, as of this printing, over $11,000 have tumbled in - in
contributions that range from $10-500 a pop, most of them being in the
$30-50 region. The goal of the
gofundme.com campaign is to raise $50,000 in total.
On
top of those online donations, a Norwegian fishing group, The Wild
Salmon Warriors of Norway, announced this morning it was kicking in
60,000 Norwegian Krone ($10,000 CAD)
of its own. As the former director of the global Pure Salmon Campaign,
Staniford frequently traveled the world of the aquaculture industry,
drawing together an international alliance of over 30 groups and
coalitions battling the industry in Norway, Scotland, Ireland, Iceland,
Chile, the United States and Canada. (Full disclosure: I've worked with
Staniford on the Pure Salmon campaign - including my film
"Farmed Salmon Exposed" and other initiatives over the years).
Staniford
has already received $20,000 in legal funding from West Coast
Environmental Law - directed toward his lawyer David Sutherland, an
expert in defamation law. The injection of up to another $60,000 would
be an enormous boon to Stanford's case, which revolves around a recent
campaign of his targeting the open net pen salmon farming industry.
The
campaign employs a series of graphical representations resembling a
cigarette package - emblazoned with messages similar to surgeon
general's warnings, such as "Salmon Farming Kills" - to highlight
problems with the industry. Cermaq's defence is based on the notion that
statements like these, coupled with the cigarette iconography, give the
impression that farmed salmon is hazardous to human health. Staniford's
counsel will likely counter that the implication is salmon farms kill
things like seals and sea lions (often shot by salmon farmers to prevent
predation of their stocks) and wild salmon, through the incubation and
transference of sea lice and diseases by farmed to wild fish. Moreover,
it will make the case that the analogy to the tobacco industry derives
from comparable approaches to denying science that is critical of
industry.
According to
the Canadian Press, "The company's trial brief states it's seeking $100,000 in general damages, $25,000 in punitive damages and a
permanent injunction
to stop Staniford from writing, printing or broadcasting defamatory
words against Mainstream." (emphasis added) It's that last piece - the
concept of a lifetime ban from speaking out against the company - that
has Staniford determined to fight. In a recent Victoria
Times-Colonist story on the case, Staniford told reporter Sean Sullivan, "This is about justice for wild salmon and freedom of speech.”
Clearly,
this David-and-Goliath battle has captured the public's attention, as
the dollars roll in to support Staniford's case. But it's Cermaq that
sees itself, ironically, as the David in this battle. According to CP,
spokesperson for Cermaq subsidiary Mainstream Canada - the second
largest fish farm operator in BC - "[Laurie] Jensen said the company is
playing the role of David. 'I think we're on the righteous end of things
in that we have to defend ourselves,' she said. 'If we don't, we do a
disservice to our communities, our partners, our employees.'"
For
his part, Staniford appears ready for the duel. Further emboldened by
this outpouring of public support, he claims, "I am going to fight until
the bitter end and win."
Damien Gillis is a Vancouver-based documentary filmmaker with a focus on
environmental and social justice issues - especially relating to water,
energy, and saving Canada's wild salmon.