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WSWS : News
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Politics
Massive police buildup in preparation for protests at Bush
inauguration
By Paul Scherrer
17 January 2001
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this version to print
A massive police presence will greet the demonstrators who
plan to come to Washington this Saturday to protest during George
W. Bush's presidential inauguration ceremonies. Coordinated by
Republican Party officials and law enforcement agencies, the well-publicized
police buildup provides a preview of the undemocratic measures
the Bush administration will use to suppress public dissent.
Police from 16 federal, state and local agencies will line
the parade route. In addition, police in helicopters, sharpshooters
on rooftops, and police on horseback will watch over the protests.
Plainclothes officers will be circulating among the crowds.
For the first time in history, people participating in the
protests as well as the inauguration in general must pass though
checkpoints. All bags and purses will be searched and individuals
frisked. Two stops of the capital city's subway system will be
closed, along with large sections of the city's mall from the
Washington Monument to the Capitol.
A dozen organizations representing a broad range of viewsfrom
those opposed to the violation of voting rights in Florida, to
opponents of the death penalty and continued sanctions against
Iraq, to the National Organization of Womenhave obtained
permits along the parade route. Representatives from several of
these groups have denounced the police build up as an effort to
restrict their freedom of expression.
This is intentionally being done to try and scare people
from coming, said Louis Posner, chairman of VotersMarch.org,
one of the groups that has obtained a permit to protest. It
took us forever to get a permit and now they are trying to scare
people away, he said.
The police buildup is the largest ever undertaken for a presidential
inauguration. The number of police on duty will be more than twice
the number as were present when Bill Clinton took the oath of
office in 1997. For the first time an inauguration has been declared
a national special security event, which means that
the US Secret Service is in overall charge of security arrangements
and will direct the activities of the other police agencies involved.
No special security concerns have been cited to justify this
high level of security other than the fact that the largest number
of protesters are expected since the 1973 inauguration of Richard
Nixon, which took place during the Vietnam War. Instead authorities
have claimed the measures are necessary because of so-called violence
during protests at the World Trade Organization (WTO) meeting
in Seattle in late 1999 and the World Bank meeting in Washington
DC last spring, as well as the national conventions of the Democratic
Party in Los Angeles and Republican Party in Philadelphia last
summer.
In most cases, the incidents of violence at the previous demonstrations
were carried out by police against peaceful protesters and those
practicing civil disobedience. Moreover, several organizations
reported that police spies and provocateurs had infiltrated their
groups in order to create a pretext for police action.
Last week the Secret Service invited the press to witness a
mock attack on a motorcade designed to reconstruct the type of
limousines that Bush and his entourage will be riding in during
the inauguration parade. The protesters attacking the vehicles
in the demonstration used rockets and automatic rifles.
The press and police have mounted a concerted campaign to depict
the protesters as violent in order to justify a police crackdown.
The same rationale was given for the conduct of police at the
WTO protests as well as at the Democratic and Republican conventions.
Police provoked and attacked demonstrators outside the Democratic
National Convention last August, and earlier at the Republican
National Convention hundreds of peaceful protesters were arrested
and many were held in prison for several weeks.
In preparation for Saturday's protests, the Secret Service
has stated that it has plans in place for mass arrests, including
the transportation of large numbers of people to detention and
judicial centers.
Police will set up 16 checkpoints that all people attending
the inauguration will have to pass through, where bags, signs
and other materials will be inspected. Six of these checkpoints
will be used for the 42,000 people with tickets given out by the
Republican inauguration committee. Everyone else taking part in
the protests or watching the inauguration will be required to
pass through the other 10 checkpoints, creating the potential
for a huge jam of people entering the event.
This is a coordinated police-media campaign to make us
out as outsiders, said Shara Sloan, a staff organizer with
the International Action Center, which is protesting for the freedom
of political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal and against militarism.
Sloan continued, They are definitely trying to scare people
away, from expressing their right to dissent. They want a new
day in Washington DC; they want four years without protest.
Police have stated that only handmade signs no larger than
3 x 20 feet will be allowed. Signs can only be carried with wooden
sticks no larger than 3/4 x 3/4 of an inch thick. Large puppets
and people on stilts, a popular form of expression at recent protests,
will not be allowed because police say they can be used to conceal
weapons. Organizations will be prohibited from setting up platforms
for speakers, even though they have been granted permits to protest.
Ben Balbey of the Justice Action Movement commented: It
is an attempt to intimidate people from coming with signs to the
parade routes.... It is people's constitutional right to assembly
and right to protest and this is being done to effectively limit
that right.
The number of police, agents and plainclothesmen that will
be present is not being made public. What is known is that all
3,600 officers of the Washington DC Metropolitan Police Department
will be on duty. In addition, about 1,250 officers from the surrounding
states of Maryland and Virginia will be deputized and brought
in to assist. The DC police will line the entire 13-block parade
route with officers spaced at arms reach apart.
The Secret Service will not say how many of its 2,800 agents
and 1,100 uniformed officers will be on duty. All of the 1,200
Capitol Police and all 650 officers of the Park Service police
will be activated. In addition, officers from the Capitol police,
the Supreme Court police, the National Park police, the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms will be taking part.
In addition to the police presence, a number of right-wing
organizations encouraged by the Republican Party are planning
counter-demonstrations. The Loud Citizens, a group organized to
oppose the recount effort in Florida, plans to protest and the
Christian Defense Coalition will rally at the Supreme Court, opposite
the rally organized by Al Sharpton.
See Also:
Los Angeles police attack
protesters at Democratic convention
[17 August 2000]
Over 200 Republican
Convention protesters remain in Philadelphia jails
[12 August 2000]
Police attack protesters
at Seattle WTO meeting
[1 December 1999]
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