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: Germany
German authorities suspend right to demonstrate outside Munich
Security Conference
By Justus Leicht
6 February 2002
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In order to make clear that German militarism is not restricted
to the suppression of peoples of foreign countries but also will
be used at home, all demonstrations directed against the 38th
Munich Security Conference last weekend were banned. A massive
police presence was used to suppress even the most peaceful of
protests and criminalise numerous young demonstrators.
In the run-up to the conference, a range of varied groups had
issued calls for demonstrations and meetings. Many came from groups
associated with the Church, pacifism and anti-racism.
Munich city authorities, led by Mayor Christian Ude (SPD),
proceeded to ban all demonstrations in the city and the ban was
subsequently confirmed by a succession of courts in the state
of Bayern. In justifying the action, both the city administration
and the courts uncritically cited claims by German intelligence
sources that 3,000 potentially violent autonomes
(anarchists) were on the way, intent on disrupting
Munichs city centre.
The Süddeutsche Zeitung commented: Overnightnamely
from Thursday to Fridayan apparent 300 potentially violent
demonstrators on the way to Munich turned into 3,000. Nobody is
completely sure how this came about, but it was nevertheless the
reason for imposing a sort of quarantine of fundamental rights
over the entire city for a period of three days: no demos, no
banners, no whistling.
In addition, Mayor Ude threatened consequences
for city-sponsored institutions and organisations which afforded
any sort of logistical assistance to the demonstrators. The citys
Culture Department had previously banned two meetings planned
by opponents of the security conference to be held in the citys
One World House. At an information meeting on January
17, it was claimed, leaflets had been distributed calling for
disruption of the conference.
Prior to the conference, on Thursday and Friday, police took
four people into custody, including a press speaker for the Alliance
against the NATO Security Conference, Hans-Georg Eberl.
A group of 13 persons who took to the streets in a silent protest
were stopped by police and subjected to police control.
Later, Claus Schreer, the organiser of the Alliance against
the Nato Security Conference, was arrested and held in police
custody until the end of the Munich conference on Sunday afternoon.
A police speaker explained that the purpose of the arrest was
to prevent the two men organising a fresh demonstration
and thereby violating the ban on demonstrations.
A total of 3,500 police, drawn from across Germany, used barricades,
water-throwers and armoured bulldozers to seal off a wide area
around the conference centre. Helicopters flew non-stop over the
city centre and a virtual state of emergency existed in the city.
Despite the ban on demonstrations, many NATO opponents took
to the streets. At a demonstration of around 2,000 on Friday evening,
300 were taken into custody and 29 arrested. According to the
organisers of the meeting, police employed truncheons and pepper
spray in the course of their intervention. The head of the ambulance
services recorded eight injured demonstrators. Despite all the
warnings of violent disturbances not a single police
officer was injured while, according to a report in the Tageszeitung,
a 70-year-old female demonstrator was handled so aggressively
she had to be hospitalised.
By Saturday afternoon 6,000 to 7,000 demonstrators had gathered
in the city centre. Police also violently intervened to disperse
this demonstration and dislodge sit-down protesters. To begin
with, police formed a ring around the demonstrators and as individuals
broke free from the ring, police reformed to blockade participants.
As evening came police then took many demonstrators into custody.
According to the Junge Welt newspaper, over a period
of six hours police forcibly contained hundreds of people seeking
to attend an officially approved meeting organised by the Alliance
against the NATO Conference to be held in the Munich trade union
headquarters. The group trying to attend the meeting were later
transported to prisoner collection points. In the meantime, special
units of the Brandenburg police sealed off the trade union building.
Nobody was allowed to enter or leave the premises. Police then
demanded that meeting participants already inside the building
leave, one at a time, and allow themselves to be controlled by
the police.
According to official figures, a total of 849 demonstrators
were arrested in the area surrounding the security conference;
57 were charged and presented to investigating judges for causing
bodily harm, breech of the peace or resisting police officers.
In many cases the least protest against the forcible breaking
up of small groups of demonstrators, or any attempt to articulate
a political opinion, was sufficient excuse to merit such a charge.
In addition, police controlled the personal papers of numerous
suspects, i.e., youth looking like potential demonstrators.
This data was then transferred into police computers.
Instead of the alleged 3,000 anarchists, a police
spokesman reported that just 200 had made their way to the conference.
Nevertheless, according to the spokesman, the total ban on demonstrations
was correct and important. He was not prepared to
answer questions regarding the excessive violence employed by
individual officers in the course of the police operation.
See Also:
Second package of anti-terror
laws rushed through German parliament
[15 January 2002]
German government
bans Turkish Islamic group
[19 December 2001]
Cohn-Bendit attacks
German novelist Günter Grass for opposing Afghan war
[14 December 2001]
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