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Massive police operation at G8 summit in Genoa
By Stefan Steinberg
20 July 2001
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Those protesting at the G8 conference in Genoa confront a massive
police and army presence.
The conference, which opens today and concludes July 22, brings
together the heads of the seven leading industrial countries plus
Russia. It is expected that US President George W. Bush will use
the meeting in an attempt to secure support for the proposed American
missile defence system.
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and the Italian authorities
have approved an enormous security operation with up to 16,000
police and 3,000 soldiers being mobilised to clamp down on all
protests.
At the June European Union (EU) summit in Gothenburg, Sweden,
two demonstrators were shot and wounded by police. Pitched battles
took place in the city between the police and a small number of
the estimated 30,000 protestors. British premier Tony Blair and
German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer warned against the possibility
of violent demonstrations in Genoa, with Blair criticising small
groups of anarchists and hooligans for using legitimate
protest as a vehicle for causing chaos and mayhem.
On the pretext of clamping down on hooligans, the
Italian and European police have made a frontal assault on the
democratic right to protest and the right to free speech. The
mobilisation of state forces is aimed at preventing the free movement
of those deemed by the authorities to be undesirable or dangerous,
setting yet another precedent in the erosion of fundamental democratic
rights.
Last weekend, in order to vet those entering the country, the
Italian government suspended the Schengen Treaty, which allows
free passage between those EU countries that have signed the pact.
Police and customs officials worked with a list of 3,000 names
of potentially violent anti-capitalist protestors,
who are to be prevented at all costs from entering Italy. The
police are paying particular attention to protestors from France
and Germany. At the start of the week, delays and harassment by
police at the French-Italian crossing point of Ventimiglia lead
to protests in favour of the right of free passage by those affected.
The French national railway, SNCF, cancelled a train chartered
by British anti-capitalist activists organised within Globalise
Resistance to transport them to the G8 summit. Flights to the
city have also been cancelled. Genoas motorway junctions
and the port itself will be sealed this evening. The airport and
the citys two main railway stations (Principe and Brignoli)
have been closed.
Inside Italy, police and intelligence forces have been conducting
raids and house searches since the start of the month. Raids have
been carried out as far afield as Milan, Florence and Naples.
In the course of the searches, police have confiscated such mundane
household objects as hammers, screwdrivers and bricks. A journalist
employed by the il manifesto newspaper and Luca Casarini,
spokesman of the Centri Sociali Autogestiti in North-eastern
Italy, were both victims of such house searches.
Despite these measures, thousands of anti-G8 protesters poured
into Genoa yesterday in order to beat the closure of the city.
Around 800 organisations have constituted the so-called Genoa
Social Forum and are planning to conduct a series of alternative
meetings, conferences and protests in the city against the consequences
of capitalist globalisation. Estimates of the number of protesters
planning to attend meetings and take part in demonstrations in
Genoa vary between 50,000 and 150,000. The Italian rank-and-file
organisation Comitati Unita di Base has called for a national
general strike on Friday, but it is unlikely that many of Italys
main trade unions will actually take part in anti-G8 demonstrations.
Those who have made it to Genoa will find a city that resembles
a fortress. The summit is planned to open Friday in Genoas
splendid Palazzo Ducale. For security reasons, however, some G8
delegates will stay on the luxury liner European Vision
berthed in the harbour and which will provide the venue for many
of the conference meetings. It is anticipated that American delegates
will be accommodated on their own ship. According to Italian Defence
Minister Antonio Martini, 2,700 soldiers will be employed to protect
and secure the docks and airport. Minesweepers will patrol the
adjacent waters and two Spada-type rocket launchers have been
stationed to deter any possible air attack on the conference.
Experts in bio-chemical weapons will also be in attendance to
assist in security operations.
A three metre high wall has been erected in the historic centre
of the city. Police patrolling the city are determined that no
demonstrations take place within this walled area, the so-called
red zone. Inside the city as a whole there is a ban
on the distribution of printed material and leaflets. Some newspapers
have reported that the authorities are planning to deactivate
the telecommunications network in and around the city to prevent
cell phone calls between the demonstrators. Police and plain-clothes
intelligence officers have the power to stop and search every
inhabitant and visitor to the city.
Parts of the city have been sealed off during the past week,
following two bomb explosions and a much higher number of false
alarms. Organisers of the Social Forum expressed their concern
that state intelligence forces could be involved in such provocations,
intent on a strategy of tension to justify using severely
repressive measures against demonstrators. After two bombs went
off in Genoa, Social Forum spokesman Vittorio Agnoletto declared
on Tuesday: It is unbelievable that two bombs could go off
in one day in a city where one cannot proceed more than five paces
without being controlled by the combined secret police of seven
states. The human rights organisation Amnesty International
felt it necessary to warn the Italian authorities to respect international
standards of law.
See Also:
Three demonstrators shot,
hundreds arrested at Gothenburg EU summit
European leaders demand harsher police action
[18 June 2001]
Rubber bullets, tear gas and
mass arrests at the Summit of the Americas in Quebec City
[2 May 2001]
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