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SOCIAL FORUM: PISANU CONCERNED ABOUT FOREIGN PARTICIPANTS

category national | miscellaneous | news report author Tuesday November 05, 2002 18:29author by ESFer - Irish to ESF Report this post to the editors

Media beat up in Italy- a taster

(AGI) - Rome, Oct. 29 - "Foreigners are the biggest concern and perhaps the greater risk we will have to face in Florence", according to Home Office Minister Giuseppe Pisanu.

he minister spoke during a parliamentary address with reference to the Social Forum meeting scheduled from November 6th to the 10th, in Florence. According to Home Office sources approximately 1,000 members of the German based Attac, the Federal Co-ordinators of European Marchers and the German Communist Party are expected in Florence. UK participants are likely amount to 1500/2000 from among groups such as Globalise Resistence, Stop the War, Socialist Workers Party and labour unions. French participants are deemed to range between 1000 and 2000 and are mostly members of Attac, left wing parties, the Revolutionary Communist League and dozens of members of Apprentis Agitateurs Pour un Reseau de Resistance Globale. Greece has 1500 participants which are in favour of the creation of a movement containing all other movements. Hungarian citizens are likely to belong to the pacifist organisations that took part in the meeting in Vienna. Slovenians are likely to belong to militant members of the Ac Molotov antagonist formation. Spain, Croatia, Macedonia, Yugoslavia, Turkey, Cyprus, Estonia, Czech Republic, Austria, Belgium, Switzerland, Ireland, Holland and Portugal will all be represented in one way or another.
"A number of these associations - Pisanu said - are well known and are not the cause of the least concern. Others instead worry us and are being observed carefully: further information seems to indicate that a number of foreigners taking part in the movement are involved with anarchists and radical antagonists, who use violence their prime method of communication". (AGI)

Related Link: http://www.agenziaitalia.it/english/news.pl?doc=200210291400-0119-RT1-POL-0-NF82&page=0
author by SHAN ROSS - Glasgow Heraldpublication date Tue Nov 05, 2002 18:32author address author phone Report this post to the editors

UP to 150,000 anti-war activists are expected in Florence this week for an anti-globalisation meeting culminating in a massive demonstration against a possible US-led attack on Iraq.

After last year's G8 summit in Genoa, Italian security forces received wide condemnation for beating hundreds of protesters and killing one.

Tens of thousands of anti-globalisation and anti-war campaigners are expected to gather in the Renaissance city for the European Social Forum. The anti-war march on November 9 is expected to attract 100,000 to 150,000 people, and will be the biggest security headache. However, protests begin tomorrow, when anti-war demonstrators will stage a sit-in at a US military base outside Florence.

Silvio Berlusconi, the prime minister, who last week considered moving the event to protect Florence's treasures, has said the 6000 police on patrol will not stand back in the face of violent protests.

Two Scottish anti-globalisation protesters wanting to attend the forum were told yesterday that they faced deportation from Italy unless they appealed against deportation orders issued against them last year after the G8 protests.

John Harper, 31, who was deported from Bologna at the weekend, said he was in effect banned from entering Italy.

He and Brian Quail, 64, secretary of CND Scotland, were told by the Italian consulate that the onus was on them to launch an appeal.

-Nov 5th


Related Link: http://www.theherald.co.uk/news/archive/5-11-19102-23-44-8.html
author by BY JEFF ISRAELY/FLORENCE - TIME magazinepublication date Tue Nov 05, 2002 18:35author address author phone Report this post to the editors


As the antiglobalization movement comes to town this week, so does worry that the violence that wracked Genoa could happen again


Related: Like Son, Like Father

TIMEeurope.com: Death in Genoa

To some, the 36-hour burst of street violence at last July's Group of Eight meeting in Genoa seemed likely to define the decade. The scenic Italian port city became a war zone as antiglobalization protesters clashed with police. More than 200 were injured, dozens arrested, and the police shot to death Carlo Giuliani, a 23-year-old Italian demonstrator. It was the worst antiglobalization violence since the makeshift movement's birth in Seattle in 1999, and it even led some cloistered world leaders to consider rethinking those lavish international summits.

Just seven weeks later, Sept. 11 made the Genoa G-8 meeting seem almost beside the point. But while much of the rest of the world has been caught up in the war on terrorism, the globalization debate has raged on in Italy. As the country sorts out the debris left behind in Genoa — including investigations into alleged police brutality — another date with the "popolo di Seattle" is looming. From Wednesday through Sunday, Florence will host the inaugural meeting of the European Social Forum, a version of the worldwide gathering of opponents of unbridled free-market capitalism held each of the last two years in Porto Alegre, Brazil. Two weeks ago, Italian police sounded an alarm similar to the one heard before Genoa. Self-styled anarchists from across Europe will descend on a city too fragile to manage their bad intentions. "The information we have now counts 12,000 coming from abroad, those same groups from France, Austria, Germany, Spain and Greece that disrupted Genoa," says Filippo Ascierto, a former Carabinieri paramilitary police officer and current Member of Parliament who followed much of last summer's G-8 from a police command bunker. After debating whether to move or postpone the event, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's cabinet decided that the meeting would go on as scheduled, largely because a cancellation might provoke even greater trouble. The no-global movement has always been a grab bag of different, sometimes conflicting, interest groups, and now it is morphing into and merging with the European antiwar movement that's rising in opposition to the threatened U.S. assault against Iraq. So authorities are focusing on an antiwar protest planned for Saturday that could draw 200,000 people. But there are also reports that some demonstrators may try to enter a nearby U.S. military base earlier in the week.

Already ambivalent about the city's decision last April to host the event, Florentines have been sent into a panic. Of particular concern are the city's cultural treasures — and yet no plans have been made to close museums or shield monuments from potential vandals. Still, there is a new urgency to the debate over the past 16 months about how to manage the volatile protest movement. Like most other downtown merchants, Roberto Maiani, who owns a leather shoe-and-accessory store near the Tuscan capital's historic Ponte Vecchio, has decided to close for the four days of the summit. "The movement has the right to demonstrate and I have the right to work, but I can't work," he says. "Where is the freedom in that?"

But there is reason to believe that Florence won't be another Genoa. Above all, supporters of the Social Forum note that the gathering — unlike the G-8 in Genoa or the World Trade Organization that drew protesters to Seattle — is the antiglobalization forces' own affair. The summiteers and protesters are on the same side. "At the G8, there was something to challenge," says Florence mayor Leonardo Domenici, who is getting heat for giving the green light for the summit. "I don't see what there is to challenge here." His critics say the anarchists are sure to find something. Brushing off such talk, as well as the alarmism" of the national government, the center-left city leader says he's more concerned about infringement of the right to protest and other civil liberties in the aftermath of Sept. 11. "These rights are what make our democracy superior," Domenici says. "We must not fall into the trap of our enemies."

The organizers of the Social Forum acknowledge that Sept. 11 has changed the dynamic of the movement, but say their priorities are the same. "We reject the idea that terrorism is the new emergency," says summit spokesman Claudio Jampaglia. "The emergencies remain hunger and poverty and racism."

Event organizers shrug off suggestions that they must contain the violent elements that may arrive at their protests. The bloodshed at Genoa, they insist, was provoked by police with the silent assent of the center-right government. That's an argument that gained wider acceptance in Italy in the aftermath of the summit, when episodes of police brutality on the streets of Genoa were broadcast — many videotaped by protesters themselves — and authorities were unable to justify the storming of a school where demonstrators were sleeping, and the subsequent beating of several of them. Opposition politicians this month made their latest call for a sweeping parliamentary investigation after it emerged that several Molotov cocktails had been planted at the school by police as a way of justifying the raid.

Jampaglia says he doesn't expect violence in Florence, but "nothing could surprise" him after police actions in Genoa. Still, he says, the protest movement — particularly in Italy — must move on: "We need to overcome the mourning." The first step is for the summit in Florence to offer no new reasons to mourn.

 
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