[Gipfelsoli Newsletter] Strasbourg/ Baden-Baden -- London

International Newsletter gipfelsoli-int at lists.nadir.org
Tue Apr 14 01:23:52 CEST 2009


- No peace with NATO!
- French court condemns anti-Nato rioters
- Police arrest 300 at Nato summit
- Sarkozy wants 'hooligans' punished over Nato protests
- State will pay for Strasbourg damage
- French policeman denounces superiors' NATO summit strategy
- london and strasbourg as starters of the great european rebellion vs financial
capitalism and the security state
- Video 'shows officer pushed G20 fatality Ian Tomlinson to the ground'

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No peace with NATO!

On the 4th of April in Strasbourg there was an uprising against the NATO-summit,
against its foreign wars and their homeland war on resistance. Anarchists had
already revolted last December after the murder in Athens and during the G20
protests in London. At these protests a man was beaten by the police resulting
in his death. In Strasbourg the riots were initiated by Autonomists and the
youths of the Banlieue. The authorities intentionally pushed the riots into the
poorer parts of the city, here the population demonstrated a large level of
support and solidarity with the violence towards the police force.

On the German side of the border over 20,000 police were mobilised. This was
accompanied by legal deception with many so-called “agitator-letters” being
sent (letters telling people to stay at home or face the consequences), terms
of obligation were declared and travel bans imposed. The French authorities
declared entry bans, so that many young people with European passports were
confronted with police subterfuge and closed borders. In Freiburg on the 30th
of March a anti-militarism demonstration, with more than 2,000 participants,
had already taken place. The deployment of thousands of police was there to try
and repress all forms of legitimate protest. The experience with the German
police force, the closed borders, the actions of the French police forces in
Strasbourg and the subsequent rapid court proceedings has resulted in the
politicising and radicalising of many of the discontented.

The French police deployed an array of weaponry in order to quash the
resistance. They fired tennis ball sized rubber bullets, causing extreme pain
and internal bleeding. They used a large quantity of shock grenades in order to
cause mass panic. Besides producing a bright flash and an ear busting ’bang’
(which can lead to long term hearing impairment), they also sprayed shrapnel
like slivers of aluminium. These aluminium fragments are difficult to remove as
they can’t be located using an x-ray. Added to this the grenades also cause burn
injuries, when material from the grenade, presumably due to explosives that did
not initially detonate, burrows in through the skin and clothing. Not to
forget, is the direct explosion, and its effects on human tissue, from the
grenade when it explodes.

The use of these military weapons against the population is to be condemned in
the same way as the widespread use of chemical weapons. From the start to the
end of the protest against the NATO-summit, protesters and their camp were
bombarded with gas. Sometimes the gas-munitions were shot from helicopters. At
the opening rally in the park Jardin des deux rives 20,000 people were gassed.
Despite being clearly marked the paramedics were attacked when attending to
injured people. This course of action was also followed for the press. As both
of these groups were easy to recognise it must be presumed that it was
deliberate. It is clear to see that in times of peace the Geneva protocol
(17/06/1925) does not come into force: “Whereas the use in war of asphyxiating,
poisonous or other gases, and of all analogous liquids, materials or devices,
has been justly condemned by the general opinion of the civilised world.”

There were also isolated examples of terror from the police. After the
’kettling’ in the Rue du Port du Rhin, plain clothed police dressed as
autonomist demonstrators selected people who were then to be beaten-up by
uniformed police. Prior to this a unit of CRS (the ill-famed French riot
police) threw stones at peaceful demonstrators. As visitors left the anti-NATO
camp money, laptops, cameras and mobile telephones were stolen by the police.
When asked for a written proof of confiscation the reply was given “Laptop?
What laptop? Go away!”

The youths from the Banlieue may have a different social reality to the
Autonomists, but one thing unites us: our hatred of the state and its police
force. The French state wanted to violently crush all forms of dissent in
Strasbourg, regardless of whether they were peaceful or militant. The cross
border co-operation which resulted in the celebrated border checkpoint torching
was a symbol of how their repression tactic failed. As was smashing the military
barracks windows a symbol of resistance against the martial-politics of NATO.
The burned out hotel will never harbour the police again, and the pillaged
gas-station was lived re-distribution of property. Only the damned church with
the Victor Hugo graffiti “Religion is nothing but the shadow cast by the
universe upon human intelligence” didn’t want to be burned.

Vive l’anarchie !

Autonome Antifa Freiburg
Communiqué from 09/04/2009

Source: Gipfelsoli Presseverteiler | Autonome Antifa Freiburg


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French court condemns anti-Nato rioters

A French court gave out sentences ranging from three to six months jail for
eleven people involved in an anti-Nato riot in Strasbourg on Saturday. At least
300 people were arrested and 49, among them 15 police officers, suffered minor
injuries.

AFP – A French court on Monday handed out sentences of up to six months in jail
to youths who took part in weekend riots that saw a hotel set on fire during
the NATO summit.

Seven French, three Germans and a Hungarian were sentenced at a rowdy hearing in
the eastern city of Strasbourg during which the judge cleared the courtroom
after protestors began chanting “fascists”.

Two of the Germans, Philipp G., 25, and Jan T., 23, denounced what they called a
“political trial” and said they would go on hunger strike in protest at the
six-month sentences they each got.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy called Sunday for “hooligans” who clashed with
police and destroyed property in Strasbourg during the 60th anniversary summit
of the transatlantic alliance to face severe punishment.

At least 300 people were arrested and 49, among them 15 police officers,
suffered minor injuries when violence broke out Saturday during a protest march
as US President Barack Obama and 27 other NATO leaders were in the city.

Thousands of protesters took to the streets — police said they numbered 10,000
but organisers put turnout at 30,000. Most demonstrated peacefully but radicals
set fire to a hotel, a pharmacy and a disused customs office.

About 2,000 masked demonstrators belonging to a hardcore anarchist group called
the Black Block, according to the police, hurled rocks and other objects at
police, smashed windows with metal bars and damaged offices.

Source:
http://www.france24.com/en/20090406-france-strasbourg-french-court-condemns-anti-nato-rioters


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Police arrest 300 at Nato summit

Paris - French police arrested 300 anti-Nato protesters during a summit in
Strasbourg marking the 60th anniversary of the alliance, Interior Minister
Michele Alliot-Marie said on Sunday.

Thousands of protesters took to the streets on Saturday - police said they
numbered 10 000 but organisers put turnout at 30 000 - with radicals setting
fire to a hotel, a pharmacy and a disused customs office.

Alliot-Marie said police had been tracking hardcore protesters for several days
and "prevented them from committing a certain number of acts of violence"
during the two-day summit attended by 28 leaders.

"We carried out 300 arrests," she told RTL radio. "We weren't able to catch all
of them because this is a type of urban guerrilla where they commit offenses
and then disappear."

Several protesters and eight police officers were injured during clashes, the
interior minister said.

The protests in Strasbourg came a few days after a man died during a
demonstration in London during the Group of 20 summit.

Masked demonstrators belonging to a hardcore anarchist group called Black Blocks
hurled rocks and other objects at police in Strasbourg, smashed windows with
metal bars and damages offices during the protests on Saturday.

Alliot-Marie said guests at a hotel had to be evacuated after they set fire to
the building.

President Nicolas Sarkozy's chief of staff praised the security operation in
Strasbourg and said police were confronted with radicals who "just had one
thing in mind: to fight and riot."

"Many came to Strasbourg not to express a dissenting opinion but carrying arms,
metal bars and sticks," Claude Gueant told French radio.

"These people go to all of the summits, the G8, the G20, to start riots, to
engage in raw violence," he added.

Leaders of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation agreed during their summit
that ended Saturday to provide 5 000 additional troops to Afghanistan to boost
security during elections in August and train Afghan security forces.

The interior ministry had said that 10 demonstrators were injured during
clashes, most of whom suffered from tear gas inhalation, but the minister
declined on Sunday to give a figure.

Several protesters were leaving hospitals in France and across the Rhine river
in Germany, saying they suffered injuries during the protest but police have no
record of the violence, an interior ministry official said.

AFP

Source:
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?from=rss_Europe&set_id=1&click_id=24&art_id=nw20090405154835899C596807


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Sarkozy wants 'hooligans' punished over Nato protests

PARIS (AFP) - French President Nicolas Sarkozy called Sunday for protesters who
set fire to a hotel, smashed windows and clashed with police during the Nato
summit to face severe punishment.

At least 300 people were arrested and 49 suffered minor injuries when violence
broke out Saturday during a march in the eastern city of Strasbourg where US
President Barack Obama and 27 other leaders were holding their summit.

“It’s incredible to think that people choose to take part in a peace protest
armed with axes and metal bars and take out their anger on civil servants who
are merely doing their job,” Sarkozy told a French television interview.

“I really do want the hooligans to be punished with the greatest severity,” he
added.
Thousands of protesters took to the streets — police said they numbered 10,000
but organisers put turnout at 30,000 — with radicals setting fire to a hotel, a
pharmacy and a disused customs office. Masked demonstrators belonging to a
hardcore anarchist group called Black Blocks hurled rocks and other objects at
police, smashed windows with metal bars and damaged offices. Of the 49 injured,
15 were police officers, according to local authorities.
The protests in Strasbourg came a few days after a man died during a
demonstration in London during a Group of 20 summit. Sarkozy stressed there
were no fatalities during the Strasbourg summit.
Interior Minister Michele Alliot-Marie said police had been tracking hardcore
protesters for days and “prevented them from committing a certain number of
acts of violence” during the summit that ended Saturday.
“We carried out 300 arrests,” she told RTL radio. “We weren’t able to catch all
of them because this is a type of urban guerrilla where they commit offences
and then disappear.”
A rights group said anti-riot police had surrounded a “peace camp” set up by
protesters outside Strasbourg on Sunday and were carrying out arrests. An AFP
photographer at the scene said access to the site was blocked.
France and Germany had mobilised 25,000 police for the summit, one of the
biggest security operations in years.
Leaders of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation agreed during their summit to
provide some 5,000 additional troops to Afghanistan to boost security during
elections in August and train Afghan security forces.

Source:
http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/International/06-Apr-2009/Sarkozy-wants-hooligans-punished-over-Nato-protests



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State will pay for Strasbourg damage

STRASBOURG will receive compensation for the damage caused by rioters during a
Nato summit.

The Interior Minister Michèle Alliot-Marie has announced that the government
will foot the bill after questions were raised about the effectiveness of
policing during the summit.

The minister said the state would help all those who had suffered losses to
property or business as a result of the riots.

Ms Alliot-Marie defended the police and said they had “acted with
professionalism” against “the real threat of extremist violent gangs”.

Several protesters were given prison sentences of up to six months on Monday for
crimes including throwing stones at police and carrying offensive weapons.

Source: http://www.connexionfrance.com/news_articles.php?id=747


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French policeman denounces superiors' NATO summit strategy

France's police force has landed in hot water for its actions during the
Strasbourg NATO summit over the weekend. In an email to unions leaked to AFP, a
policeman blames his superiors for putting his life in danger.

A police officer who was trapped inside the Strasbourg hotel that was burnt by
protesters during the NATO summit last weekend has blamed his superiors for
putting his and his colleagues’ lives in danger.

In an email sent Tuesday to police unions, the cop accuses his bosses to have
been late in their rescue effort. “We were in the Ibis hotel when activists
from the ‘Black Block’ attacked with extreme violence,” he wrote. “I looked at
death in the eyes during a good half-hour.”

The French police strategy in the violent riots that unfolded as NATO heads of
states and governments discussed the future of the alliance has come under
severe criticism.

Source:
http://www.france24.com/en/20090408-policeman-denounces-french-police-strategy-during-nato-summit-strassbourg


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london and strasbourg as starters of the great european rebellion vs financial
capitalism and the security state

Alex Foti

dear girls and guys,

i don’t know how to put it adequately, but i was witness in London vs the G20
and in Strasbourg vs NATO of momentous developments in european radicalism
which cannot but be called historical. In London we fought the inequality and
immorality of financial capitalism that started the crisis (as the economist
titles: “get the rich!” is a slogan gaining momentum all over europe), and in
Strasbourg we went to urban war against the securitization of internal politics
and the militarization of external politics.

In terms of my soon-to-be-published chromatological baedeker to european
activist politics, Anarchy in the EU (Agenzia X), the London rebellion was
mostly pink and green, with brushstrokes of black, while the Strasbourg
insurgence was pitch black, with splashes of red and pink. After the suspension
of habeas corpus at the climate camp in kingsnorth last summer (people were
stripsearched in a detention center, while manacled arrested activists were
placed standing at the entrance) i had vowed to not return to england for a
long while. British-style schizopolicing (i chat with you amiably, while my
colleague files and beats you next) i can’t stand. It’s psychologically vicious
and it can turn violently nasty for relatively minor infractions, as the murder
of the newspaper seller by riot cop charges around threadneedle sadly proves.
In Italy and France you know who you are against and lines are drawn in the
sand. If you get caught, beatings are normal, but the crowd of the demo will
defend its members as one. It’s not as easy to get arrested. It’s two sides
clashing, and no snatch squads can usually penetrate demos. German policing is
instead a combination of the two: psychological aggression supplemented by
invariably muscular policing.

Anyway, Financial Fools Day (mixing climate and bank protests) was a stronger
draw than my lingering fear of the filth. I made it to London with belgian
co-conspirators of radical europe, euromayday, and rhythms of resistance. They
stayed at ramparts, but luckily went back to the continent before the raid thru
the roof made by special forces armed with taser guns on April 2. Others were
not so luckily. Although Rampart was behind the black horse of the apocalypse,
which had a great spokeswoman in Marina Pepper, its approach was ‘fluffy’
rather than ‘spiky’, pink rather than black; activists were in fact sporting
pillows on which they had written slogans and demands on housing and social
spaces. It was the silver horse which exhibited a black practice. The red horse
(vs war) was hegemonized by trotskysts and commies of all stripes, some frankly
embarrassing (pro-putin signs??), while the green horse attracted anarchogreens
and eccentrics of all sorts. From the start, they tried to ‘kettle’ us, an
english expression for the illiberal tactics of cordoning the protesting crowd
to sharply divide it from the rest of the multitude. So either you stayed out
of the kettle and lost your friend and loved one or had to get in and have your
freedom of mobility sequesterd by the cordon of bobbies surrounding you at every
step. But the people were so many, that in fact it was the rest of protesters
surrounding the cops, as it became evident when we turned the street and got at
the heart of the City, the Bank of England. The incredible spectacle of 10,000
activists filling the square and surrounding the institution that has bailed
out chronic swindlers like rbs and northern rock left soon room to anger at the
fact that we were completely surrounded by thousands of cops: we could not leave
the square. Drinking and peeing soon became very problematic. The four rivers of
activists had converged on the heart of financial capitalism, but Gordon Brown’s
government had put dams all around. After hours like that, patience grew thin
and the carnival mood turned sour. We pushed back the riot cops all the way
down threadneedle. RBS had sailed its flag high on its main building on the
other side of the square, and the haughtiness of its gloden-parachuted
management made it a target for all the rage against banks that is spreading
across the UK, in the middle as well as the working classes (viz. the
occupation of ford-related plants by fired workers). An rbs branch was left
exposed and activists broke 2 (two!) window glasses, sneaked in a tent, wrote
S-C-U-M in reverse for the bankers to read the next day. The 1000-strong block
behind them cheered. There was the first heavy charge. Then things quieted down
for a while.

Around 3:30 we finally found a way outside the square and made it to the Climate
Camp, which had squatted the 200-meter stretch of asphalt in front of the Carbon
Trading Exchange and covered it with hundreds of tents, food stalls,
renewable-energy power systems, etc. Beyond the banner “Nature doesn’t to
bailouts” a world of joyous solidarity and pragmatic ecoactivism awaited. If
the atmosphere in the City was decidedly anticapitalist, here it was markedly
postcapitalist, to use the word that John Jordan employs to describe the second
wave of the movement that has taken off in late 00s and is apparent for all to
see in the last few days. Same-name green, black, pink-dotted pins were
distributed around, the sun was shining and there was a festival mood. It was
great! But as darkness fell (and I went to UEL for the conference of the left
vs G20; the university, frightened, had shut down the whole complex to students
for three days; half-a-kilometer fron the ExCel center were the summit was held,
for three days) things turned ugly in the City: charges got very violent, and
several banks were smashed in response. It is then when Ian Tomlinson was
killed. Another victim of the european police state and its draconian
securitization of public politics, after Carlo, Rachel, Alexis, and many
others. Around the ame time, cops started to kettle the camp. The voice had
spread that an ecohacktive party was taking place at Bishopsgate and hundreds
of youngsters were coming with beers in their hands from liverpool street. They
found they couldn’t get in and got pissed. So legions of riot cops, some
mounting horses, starting kettling protesters, layer after layer, in a police
tactics my belgian buddy calls “pasticcio” (like pasta in the oven: a layer of
activists, a layer of cops, a layer of journalists, and so on).

In comparison to what happened in Strasbourg on April 2, 3, 4, London’s
protesters were incredibly good-natured. In the city on the Rhine associated in
the public mind with the European Parliament (altho now most of its works take
place in Brussels) and Franco-German postwar entente, a soldily binational
contingent of thousands antifas, anarchists, autonomists, and radicals of other
allegiances (including clown army, die linke, revolutionary socialists, kurdish
revolutionaries etc) set up camp at the no nato village near the proletarian
neighborhood of neuhof, determined to raise hell for the summit marking the
60th anniversary of atlantic militarism and the return of once-gaullist france
in the american fold. After the news that the yet-to-be-identified corpse of
the protester (the muzzling of the uk media on that event has been as
unprecedented as disconcerting) had been found near the bank of england reached
the camp, at least two thousands people started rioting in ganzau. They were
joined by arab kids living in the hood’s projects. The police was overwhelmed.
Rioters also attacked the police barracks (left unattended) and managed to
seize back many scooters that had been earlier sequestered by cops. In the next
days the roar of those scooters could always be heard. On the 3rd, barricades
were erected (and the first set ablaze) while a rain of projectiles fell on the
police who had brutally charged a peaceful contingent of clowns trying to reach
the city center. The blacks were determined to exact vengeance for the
aggression suffered by the pinks. The police had to back off from the camp. It
is then that i arrived at the camp organized by dissent.fr, the libertarian
network which came into being at Gleaneagles in 2005. It was great. Altho more
chaotic than Rostock, it was more beautiful. It was set in a very large area
and was supplemented by a smaller are filled with stands, bars, concerts, djs
one kilometer down the road. Getting there thru the night was beautiful and
magic. The place was part rave part country fair and had the wildly free
effervescence that all events organized by free4all usually have.
Congratulations! I stood there rummaging thru antinazi tshirts waiting for
Paolo to arrive from London, where just the day before had been manhandled by
special forces at rampart. Around midnight we can hug again after we last saw
each other at threadneedle two days before. It’s great to be free together
again! I have two bottles of meteor beer and enough to smoke ourselves silly
into sleep.

The next day i have breakfast with Markus of euromayday helsinki. The black bloc
starts to move out of the camp. We follow it. About 2000 people, circa half of
the camp. It’s opened by the french who have a great banner that says: “Pas de
guerre entre les peuples, pas de paix entre les classes”. CNT flags abound. A
slightly larger german block follows, which has many bilingual banners. Then
it’s sympathetic creative activists. A block of red flags follows. We take a
turn on a boulevard. Karcher barrier-trucks are in store for us on the left. On
the right, the Pont de l’Europe to Germany. In between, loads of trucks packed
with CRS in riot gear. The crowd grows and grows. We gotta pass that bridge.
The black head of the demo tries to smash thru. It wavers back and forth.
Injured protesters are ferried in the back lines. A deluge of tear gases and
stunt grenades are thrown. Protesters respond with flings and stones. A pyre is
set alight. We hear the subbass echo of a series of fireworks bombs: boom, boom,
boom. The police line opens retreats behind a gated field on the side of the
bridge. We conquered the bridge! The black bloc could surround the cops and
beat’em up, if it wanted to, but it doesn’t, because its job is to smash and
burn things, not hurt and humiliated people. They say we’re hooligans, if not
terrorists, but we have never killed anyone, unlike the police that faces us
down. A graffiti went as far as to say something like “we’ve got more in common
with you cops than with the élites you protect”. Walking across the liberated
bridge makes us giddy with euphoria (or europhoria). We get to the island that
separates Strasbourg from Kehl. We want to make it either to the other side of
the Rhine or into the city center. They won’t let us. And the more they try to
wall us in the rowdier the riot becomes. The first thing we see is the
franco-german customs post. It’s soon spraypanted “no border, no nation”. Then
its glasses are broken. Soon a fire engulfs it. It’s visible from the other
bridge where berlusconi is taking a phone call. Then we pass a vast expanse
with a stage. The trotskyites try to detour the whole demo in their chicken
pen, but anybody under30 refuses to do so and keep going forward. Problem is
there’s a huge block of german riot cops blocking access to the other side,
with armored vehicles and wotnot. What do we do now? For a while we hang out in
the island in a surreal mood. CCTV cameras as smashed by activists. The ibis
hotel gets smashed by local kids. Accor has a history of exploitation of poor
immigrants, would tells us later that night a local who gave us a ride back to
the camp.

They also set a barricade on fire too close to the hotel. Some german black
blocs would like to set off the fire with extinguishers, problem is a teenager
has just thrown another extinguisher in the fire, and it might explode at any
time, so nobody can get too close. A pharmacy also gets smashed, and later
burned. But the two churches in the vicinity are completely spared. Somebody
chalks an anarchist heart followed by the slogan “2000 years of lies” on its
gates, but that’s about it. Then the official demo start. The french keufs have
fucked it up. They block the road with 12 vans, but the demo (around 20,000
people) has to go past them, and fire trucks are trying to get thru in the
opposite direction. We follow the developments from the first of two railroad
bridges. Markus predict that the cops will be surrounded by the black blocsters
who are now the tail of the demo, since we have switched direction and are going
back to strasbourg. The peace vans and all the demonstrators squeeze on the
rightside of the street to let les pompiers thru. After this, the vans full of
cops find themselves surrounded by a stream of black hoods. Nothing really
happens. A few windows get smashed. But that’s it. We move on. The black block
has a sense of honor. Only in battle, fighting is commendable. We walk for a
short while but then we find an impassable wall of karcher trucks that target
my group with shock grenades (two of my friends get minor bleeds; one uses his
sense of hearing from his left ear for a while). It is then that it starts to
get really ugly. Pursued by the wall of police caterpillars, we managed to get
two feedstock train wagons in their way (pretty incredible feat; we’re in an
industrial zone and train tracks crisscross streets). The bastards lob tear gas
grenades like crazy past them. They sting a lot more than before. Then a scene
that seems taken from Grapes of Wrath or Roma città aperta occurs before our
eyes. A beautiful dark-haired woman with a toddler in one arm, hands out
hundreds refilled bottles of water to the street rebels. I’ll never forget that
poignant image. French cops start closing in from the opposite side. The last
battle is on the second railway bridge, with antifas defending it as
non-violent protesters try to find refuge in the industrial port. Rioters get
on it and pelt the CRS with stones taken from the tracks. If they take that
bridge it’s over for us. For half an hour the battle rages. But we’re tired. A
small contingent of cops manages to climb the bridge. They are caught in the
crossfire of raining stones. But altho scared they resist and finally manage to
get at the top. The french anarchist soundtruck puts himself sideways to protect
protesters who now put their hands in the air to signal their will for a
ceasefire. The bastards make us choke with gas in response. I make my way into
an expanse where tv crews are assembled and a turkish bar is incredibly open.
We eat, drink beer, and watch euronews. An amused black-clad old lady claps
when completely unwillingly i drop a can of beer that sprays the face of a cop
sitting in a riot van with his window open. Everybody laughs so hard and vans
behind him are honking that he has to move and can’t do shit about it. The day
of the largest urban rebellion in recent european history comes is unwinding.
Before the sun goes down we walk past the burned skeletal remains of douane and
ibis back to the camp. The day after we will be searched on the way out by
taunting cops, one of whom wears a peace flag as mantle (“do you thing it fits
me?” he asks, “no”, i reply). These are some of the slogans that struck me in
strasbourg: “smash nato” (color graffiti, with the social center symbol with
feminist crossed circle), “monde de peur, monde qui meurt”, “Legal, Illegal,
Scheisslegal”, “contre le kapital, intifada mondiale” (k in the original).

To close this long chronicle, I’d like to point out that the franco-german sink
nato network managed to build cohesion and efficacy and must be defended from
criminalization by all leftists in europe. The London repression is directly
linked to the Strasbourg insurgence, which makes the days between april 1 and
april 4 probably the first paneuropean social rebellion. If protesters had been
allowed to reach the two city centers without being oppressed by tens of
thousands of cops, the rioting would have been very limited. Like in Genoa,
maximum police security leads to total insecurity, both for the city and the
demonstrators. London-Strasbourg was a protest full of rage against the two
decades of neoliberal lies and monetarist arrogance that have caused inequality
and depression, disjointing society and broinging immense social suffering.
Especially strasbourg has seen arab kids (also headscarved young girls could be
seen at the demo) joining forces with anarchoautonomists, as we have first seen
in malmoe last fall. An insurgent, precarious/immigrant youth is emerging as
the european revolutionary subject, while the black bloc could (ok, this is an
enormous stretch, but i surmise it as tendential hyphothesis) potentially
emerge as a european liberation army of sorts, the shock forces we need to
dislodge, if not completely overthrow, the current élites in Strasbourg,
Brussels, Frankfurt, Paris, Berlin, Rome that are responsible for the crisis.
The Great Rebellion vs the Great Recession. This is wot we must accomplish in
europe. The process has been ignited.

Source: http://mail.kein.org/pipermail/nettime-l/2009-April/001379.html


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Video 'shows officer pushed G20 fatality Ian Tomlinson to the ground'

Watch the video:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/video/2009/apr/07/g20-police-assault-video

Video footage has emerged which appears to show a police officer attacking a man
who later died during the G20 protests.

In the film Ian Tomlinson is approached from behind and thrown to the ground.

Mr Tomlinson, a newspaper seller who had been on his way home from work, went on
to suffer a heart attack and die near the Bank of England in the City of London.

The video, obtained by The Guardian, comes after several witnesses came forward
with claims that Mr Tomlinson had been hit.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission is already examining press
photographs and is now expected to include the video in its investigation.
A police post-mortem examination found that Mr Tomlinson, 47, who was not taking
part in the protest, died of natural causes.

Anna Branthwaite, a photographer, gave a detailed statement to City of London
Police in which she described how Mr Tomlinson was rushed from behind and hit
with a police baton. She told The Times: “I saw a riot police officer rushing
towards him from behind and grabbing hold of him from behind and charging with
him. He [the officer] grabbed him by the scruff of the neck and used his own
body to propel him forward.”

She insisted that her evidence was solely related to the incident involving Mr
Tomlinson and one particular riot police officer.

A statement by another witness, who did not wish to be named, says that Mr
Tomlinson was pushed from behind and fell forward on his head.

The film appears to show that Mr Tomlinson was walking with his hands in his
pockets when a group of officers, some with dogs and some in riot gear, come up
behind him.

One officer appears to knock him with a baton, hitting him from behind on his
upper thigh, as he is urged forward.

Shortly afterwards, the same policeman appears to push Mr Tomlinson in the back
and he falls to the ground.

The man who shot the footage, a fund manager from New York who was in London on
business, told The Guardian: “The primary reason for me coming forward is that
it was clear the family were not getting any answers.”

Source: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/crime/article6054713.ece


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