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Millions demonstrate in Rome against Berlusconi
By Peter Schwarz
26 March 2002
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Between two and three million people converged on Rome March
23 to protest the policies of the Berlusconi government in the
biggest demonstration in the history of post-war Italy.
The rally was called by the trade union movement CGIL, which
was associated with the Italian Communist Party (ICP) until the
demise of that organization. The CGIL remains the most influential
trade union body in Italy. Originally, the union planned to protest
against plans by the right-wing government to gut legal protections
for workers against redundancy.
However, four days prior to the protest a government adviser
was murdered and an offshoot of the Red Brigades reportedly claimed
responsibility. In response, the organizers of the protest expanded
its aims to embrace opposition to attacks on democratic rights
and opposition to terrorism, as well as the defence of the welfare
state.
The rally was an impressive mass demonstration against the
Berlusconi government and everything it representspolitically,
socially and culturally. The six different marches that streamed
together in a sea of mainly red trade union and party banners
to the central gathering at the ancient Circus Maximus were clearly
visible even from the air.
Together with the CGIL, the entire parliamentary and extra-parliamentary
opposition took part in the marchincluding the most varied,
internally divided sections of the centre-left Olive Tree alliance
and the Party of Refounded Communists (Rifondazione Communista),
which had previously rejected joint action with the Olive Tree
alliance.
Also taking part were anti-globalisation groups, their contingent
comprising some 200,000 participants, and the movement Girotondi,
which was founded at the start of this year at the initiative
of academics and artists in protest against the authoritarian
nature of Berlusconi regime.
According to one observer, the participants represented in
terms of age, sex, occupation and background a cross section of
the Italian population unlike almost any other mass meetingpeople
like those you usually meet everywhere on the street, in bars,
behind counters, on the bus.
Teachers marched together with the unemployed, students with
factory workers, pensioners with students. They came from all
over the country in 10,000 buses, 60 special trains, four ships,
private cars and airplanes.
The demonstration of March 23 has effectively destroyed the
impression carefully cultivated by the Italian and international
media that Italians, or at least a majority of Italians, are firmly
behind the government of Silvio Berlusconi. This illusion could
previously be maintained because the widespread aversion to the
Berlusconi government lacked any organized political expression.
In its five years in office, the Olive Tree alliance had prepared
the way for Berlusconi with its own right-wing social policies,
and then abstained from any effective opposition following its
electoral defeat in May 2001.
The main leader of the demonstration was 54-year-old Sergio
Cofferati. The CGIL chairman from Italys industrial north
is a member of the Left Democrats, the main successor organisation
to the dissolved Italian Communist Party. He is generally regarded
as an opponent of the Left Democrats current leadership.
At the party conference last autumn he supported the candidate
of the left wing, Giovanni Berlinguer, who was defeated in his
battle against the partys present chairman, Piero Fassino,
the candidate of former government head Massimo DAlema.
Cofferati, whose term in office as trade union head is due to
expire in June, is now regarded as the most likely successor to
Fassino and future head of the anti-Berlusconi opposition.
Cofferati has been a full-time trade union functionary since
1975. In 1994, during the period of the first Berlusconi government,
he was voted head of the CGIL with its 5.4 million members. Unlike
the leaders of two smaller trade union bodies, Cofferati has refused
up to now to take part in discussions with the government on the
dismantling of workers rights. He has justified his stance
by saying one could talk about tariffs, but not about rights.
He has rejected the governments current plans to undermine
redundancy protection with the argument that when the dam is broken,
there is no stopping the flood. This standpoint, distinguishing
Cofferati from the Olive Tree alliances readiness to compromise,
has made him popular and contributed to the massive outpouring
at the March 23 demonstration. His standpoint corresponds to the
mood of broad layers of the population that are not prepared to
passively tolerate the attacks launched by the government.
Cofferatis position, however, cannot disguise the fact
that his perspective does not go beyond the political framework
within which the Left Democrats have operated since their formation.
Cofferatis ally, Giovanni Berlinguer, is a younger brother
of the former CP chairman, Enrico Berlinguer, who was instrumental
in leading the party towards the social democratic mainstream.
Cofferatis stance during the period when his own party
friends headed the government is symptomatic of his politics.
When Left Democrat government head DAlema announced plans
for massive cuts in pensions in the summer of 1999, Cofferati
reacted with loud verbal protests and threats of a general strike.
When the government subsequently gave way and announced
it would cut 15 billion lira instead of 16 billion, he declared
the cosmetic change a huge success and called off the protests.
Cofferatis current posture of intransigence towards the
Berlusconi government should therefore be regarded as less an
expression of a genuine alternative perspective and more the result
of his fear that the continuous decline in membership of both
the Left Democrats and the trade unions threatens to undermine
their control over the growing popular opposition.
The murder of Marco Biagi
Four days before the Rome demonstration, government advisor
Marco Biagi was murdered in Bologna. The professor of labour law
was fatally shot in his home.
Subsequently, in a long letter an organisation calling itself
Red Brigades for the construction of a fighting communist
party (BR-PCC) admitted responsibility for the murder.
Biagi, who had long been a member of the Italian Socialist
Party, participated as an advisor to Labour Minister Roberto Maroni
(the Northern League) in drafting the labour reform
law opposed by demonstrators on Saturdays protest. Regarding
the controversial issue of protection against redundancy, Biagi
is said to have differed with his own minister and argued that
modernisation of the labour market should not begin by removing
legal obstacles to the layoff of workers.
Previously, Biagi had advised Italys centre-left government
and was a personal friend of its temporary head and current European
Union Commission President Romano Prodi. The document on social
reform jointly agreed to last month by British Prime Minister
Tony Blair and Berlusconi is also reputed to be mainly Biagis
handiwork.
In the letter claiming responsibility for Biagis killing
posted in the Internet, the ostensible perpetrators justified
their deed by declaring that Biagi had supported a new law
for the exploitation of work. He was, the letter declared,
a leading exponent of the ruling equilibrium and the relationship
between government and trade unions. The aim of the attack
was to create the conditions for transforming class contradictions
into class struggle.
Berlusconi immediately attempted to exploit the murder for
his own propaganda purposes, seeking to discredit the upcoming
mass demonstration. He accused the labour unions of creating a
climate that feeds the inhuman ideology that moves the hand
of the killers. In Italy, he said, with reference to his
critics, there is a spiral of violence resembling civil
war. He called on trade union leaders to immediately return
to talks with his government.
Carlo Taormina, a deputy in Berlusconis Forza Italia
party, expressed himself even more clearly, charging the CGIL
with objective responsibility for the murder. They
have created the conditions that could be exploited by the terrorists,
he declared.
On the evening before the Rome demonstration, Berlusconi made
a speech on television where, in the name of Biagi, he praised
the reform of the labour market and declared his intention of
pushing ahead with the proposals at all costs. We feel morally
responsible to Professor Biagi to continue on the road of reform,
he said.
He once again equated critics of his policies with terrorists,
declaring that those who sought reforms would be the
target of considerable hostility and sometimes even physically
liquidated.
Berlusconis crass attempt to equate a peaceful protest
against the government with a political murder backfired. Instead
of being intimidated, many people felt impelled to join the demonstration.
It was all too evident that the attack on Biagi bore the hallmarks
of a deliberate provocation.
Among the many murky questions surrounding the killing is the
mysterious background of the assailants. The Red Brigades last
carried out assassinations in Italy in the 1970s and 1980s. At
that time there was definite evidence of collaboration between
the Brigades and right-wing terrorists, who carried out a series
of bloody bomb attacks. The latter pursued a strategy of
tension aimed at creating the conditions for a military
or police putsch.
The most prominent Red Brigades victim, leading Christian Democrat
Aldo Moro, was kidnapped in May 1978 and executed after weeks
of captivity. The murder of Moro, who favoured collaboration with
the CP, actually strengthened the right wing of the Christian
Democrats. Since then, Moros widow has claimed that this
right wing was involved in the death of her husband.
The Red Brigades were crushed in the 1980s. Its leaders, who
were sentenced to long stretches in prison, declared the dissolution
of the organisation. Many of its members, who came mainly from
upper layers of the middle class, admitted their guilt and declared
their repentance.
It is therefore a complete mystery as to who is behind the
new Red Brigades, which first hit the headlines in 1999 with the
assassination of labour lawyer Massimo DAntona. Observers
regard it as entirely possible that the re-emergence of the Brigades
is a provocation by either right-wing circles or state intelligence
forces.
Suspicion and controversy were fuelled by the fact that Biagis
own security had been grossly compromised. He had received several
murder threatsthe last on the day before his murderand
had repeatedly asked for personal protection.
That such threats were to be taken seriously was clear from
the murder of DAntona three years previously. DAntona
was advising the centre-left government in the same capacity later
assumed by his friend Biagi in relation to the Berlusconi regime.
It is reported that the same gun used in the murder of DAntona
was used in the attack on Biagi.
The murder of DAntona still remains unsolved. Investigators
were astounded, however, by the remarkable knowledge of the public
service possessed by the murderers, and suspected the involvement
of a mole linking the state apparatus to terrorist
groups.
Although these facts were well known, Interior Minister Claudio
Scajola (Forza Italia) withdrew Biagis bodyguard some months
ago. Scajola was even publicly criticised for his behaviour by
labour minister Maroni, for whom Biagi worked.
Biagis widow was so angry over this negligence that she
turned down an official state funeral for her husband and insisted
on a private funeral service. Berlusconi had proposed a state
funeral for March 23 as a counterweight to the Rome demonstration
planned for the same day.
The massive participation in Saturdays demonstration
and the prominence of demands for the defence of democratic rights
are not least based on fears that the Berlusconi government will
react to growing pressure by resorting to methods of violence
and provocation. Such fears are entirely justified.
Berlusconis style of government, based on a monopoly
of the Italian media, is assuming increasingly authoritarian forms
and the neo-fascists active in Berlusconis government, as
well as backers of Berlusconi (who was a member of the secret
organisation Propaganda 2), were themselves deeply implicated
in right-wing terror circles in the 1970s.
It is clear that the confrontation between the government and
its opponents will intensify in the coming weeks. In his television
speech on Friday evening, Berlusconi emphasised that he would
pursue his attacks on workers rights irrespective of the
Rome demonstration. For its part, the CGIL has announced a general
strike for mid-April.
See Also:
Hundreds of thousands demonstrate in
Rome against Berlusconi government
[7 March 2002]
Italian foreign minister resigns
[19 January 2002]
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