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Australia needs strong environment laws that protect our environment and laws that allow people to act for the protection of the environment. We also need laws that don’t allow you to be sued and tied up in court for years for taking action to protect the environment. The law matters for the protection of our […]

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Australia needs strong environment laws that protect our environment and laws that allow people to act for the protection of the environment. We also need laws that don’t allow you to be sued and tied up in court for years for taking action to protect the environment. The law matters for the protection of our forests, oceans, woodlands and great arid wilderness. The law matters if we are to stop climate change.

Gunns Law Suit Against the Wilderness Society & Others

In December 2004, forestry giant Gunns Ltd sued the Wilderness Society, five of its staff, and 14 other conservation groups and individuals (including Green Members of Parliament, Bob Brown and Peg Putt) in relation to the campaign to protect Tasmania’s forests. This is the so-called Gunns 20 case.
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Protecting Public Participation

The oceans, forests, woodlands and arid areas, and the non-human species which inhabit them, can not speak for themselves. Environmental protection requires a civil society which supports environmental activity, and which fully supports public participation in the political debate and decision making processes.
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Legal updates

Brown Mountain to stay green after court win – August 11, 2010

In a landmark decision the Victorian Supreme Court ruled that the state government has a responsibility to look for and protect endangered wildlife before logging.
End of the Gunns20 legal saga – February 02, 2010

More than five years after writs were first issued, the Gunns lawsuit saga has come to an end for all 20 defendants with the decision by Gunns to drop its remaining claims against four defenders of a small valley on the edge of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area.
Gunns20 trial date set – August 06, 2009

Gunns20 is going to trial in February 2010 – more than five years and millions of dollars in legal costs since the first writ was issued. The 20 original defendants have been whittled down to seven as Gunns’ various writs were successively thrown out.

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Legal Media Releases

Desperate Gunns settles for anything – November 26, 2009

Gunns Ltd today withdrew their case against two of the remaining six defendants in the infamous Gunns20 case.
Louise Morris and Neal Funnell will not be paying any costs or damages to Gunns after being sued for a combined $489,000 in 2004.
Federal Court dismisses lawyers’ challenge to pulp mill – April 09, 2009

Late on Easter Thursday (9 April 2009), Justice Tracey dismissed Lawyers for Forests application to overturn the Federal government approval of Gunns’ pulp mill. The decision is disappointing, but not unsurprising as it further highlights the fundamental flaws in the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act (EPBC) – Australia’s primary environment legislation.
Law discharged from Gunns case – November 07, 2008

Wilderness Society Tasmania Campaign Manager, and Gunns 20 ex-defendant, Geoff Law calls for state and national law reform to prevent large companies from pursuing community groups or individuals in court cases that cost many times more than the likely damages to be awarded.

Note: This descriptive text was copied from the Campaign's website. Some website links may no longer be active.


Campaign Details

Group Leading this Campaign: Wilderness Society

Main Issue of the Campaign:

Campaign Ran From: 2009 to 2010

Geographic Range of Activity:


Weblinks

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