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Italy on day X

category national | miscellaneous | news report author Saturday March 22, 2003 16:29author by hs - sp/cwi Report this post to the editors

When The War Starts Our World Stops”

When The War Starts Our World Stops With these words workers and young people from all over Italy took to the streets in what was the biggest anti war movement in history. Almost immediately after news of the first bombings action was taken on the streets.

“When The War Starts Our World Stops”

With these words workers and young people from all over Italy took to the streets in what was the biggest anti war movement in history. Almost immediately after news of the first bombings action was taken on the streets.
In Florence at four o’clock in the morning only thirty minutes after the first bomb dropped two hundred students protested outside the American consulate. The COBAS rank and file union held a protest first thing in the morning and by the afternoon 80,000 packed the streets of this small city in a demonstration called by the three major unions, CGIL, CISL and UIL.
All over Italy the same thing was happening. Eighty Five major demonstrations were held as well as countless smaller ones.
Spontaneous strikes broke out all over the North of the country until the official CGIL-CISL-UIL strike of two hours between three and five. But according to the Italian press many provinces saw strikes of three and four hours take place. In Turin the FIAT workers, currently locked in a life and death struggle with their bosses, led a two hour strike between nine and eleven am which saw all of the major factories in the city take part.
Transport was brought to a standstill the length and breath of the country. Between twelve and twelve fifteen all trains were stopped by their drivers in a symbolic action against the war. But young people in Florence, Turin, Rome, Milan and Brescia occupied the tracks in the central stations.
In Rome’s main airport workers walked out in protest of the airport being used for military purposes. Millions of workers took part in some form of action against the war. Gianni Rinaldini the General Secretary of the metalworkers union FIOM called it “a great popular mobilisation for peace against war and against the servile position of the government of our country”
One of the most impressive actions took place in Genova where the Mediterranean’s biggest port was struck and the docks were blockaded for twenty four hours. 40,000 youth and workers packed the city in protest.
Massive protests took place throughout the first day of war. The biggest was in Milan where 150,000 heard Cofferatti denounce the war as a “grave responsibility” which will destabilise the middle east.
In Rome 100,000 took the streets in a candlelight procession for peace. In Turin 25,000 protested. In Padova 30,000 came out in Savona 7,000 and in the industrial heartland of Tuscany thousands of workers took to the streets. Pistoa alone saw 10,000.
In the South Naples saw 20,000 take to the streets and Palermo and Bari 10,000 each. On the island of Sardinia it’s estimated 30,000 protested in all.
In Venice the there was some scuffles outside the US British consulate and in Trieste disobedients tried to occupy the US consulate.
As well as the wonderful actions of the Italian workers the youth as always were on the front line. Most secondary schools in the country struck or held student assemblies where the war was denounced. It is estimated that a quarter of the Rome demonstration was made up of secondary school students. Universities across the country struck and occupied faculties.
The opposition to this war has dovetailed with the workers movement who have been in constant struggle with Berlusconi since his return to power. This has given the anti war movement much more muscle as protests are backed up by industrial action. The protests in the cities had a very working class character with workers marching out from the factories. The movement too is backed up by the growing no global anti capitalist movement. All the Italian trade unions are united in opposition to the war and even the fractorious centre left in parliament were united for the first time in the present parliament. With even the church opposed to the war this takes away a huge part of Berlusconi’s natural support base.
The entire country is united in oppisition to this war and Berlusconi’s attempts to wash his hands of the slaughter while allowing Italian airspace and US airbases to be used and supplying logistical support to the US military. Here no one is any doubt about why the war is being fought, for oil power and prestige. This is only a taste of what happened in Italy on the first day and what could happen in the future as the casualties in Iraq and the anger of the Italian people mounts.

(Today the Olive Tree coalition have called for a national protest in Rome. And tomorrow the Sigonella Naval Airbase, the most important US airbase in the Mediterranean will be protested.)

author by ipsiphi - disobedientipublication date Sun Mar 23, 2003 21:01author address author phone Report this post to the editors

mi sono svegliato una matina che trovato il invasor o bella ciao bella ciao bella ciao ciao ciao, é un fiore che bella fiore é piú no posso riocordare però no ci importa adesso. Bello gli italiani sono tutti insieme per la pace é veró che questo volte no parliamone di 1972.

It struck me how different these train stopping protests were to the Italian worker struggles that we must remember started the Red Brigade in the past, this time that protesting tactic was re-used and refined. True there are many working class characteristics to this phase of Italian resistance.

It's nice to read your words HS.

bella ciao bella ciao bella ciao ciao.
o partigiano! o partigiano!
disobedienti siamo qua.
:-)
we really are getting better all the time.

 
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