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Heiligendamms Green Zone
Massive security preparations for upcoming G8 summit in Germany
By Peter Schwarz
25 May 2007
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In preparation for the G8 summit of world leaders to be held
June 6-8 in Germany, the idyllic bathing resort of Heiligendamm
is being transformed into a high-security tract resembling the
notorious Green Zone in Baghdad. The leaders of the
seven major industrial nations and Russia will be entrenched behind
a wall 12 kilometres long, 2.5 metres high (7.5 miles by 8.2 feet),
comprising 4,600 steel panels, mounted with barbed wire, cameras
and sensory detectors. An exclusion zone of 11 nautical miles
will be established out to sea, complemented by an air exclusion
zone extended 50 kilometres into the skies.
The cost of these measures is estimated at 92 million.
Additional expenses include the wages and overtime of 16,000 police
assembled from across Germany, who will provide around-the-clock
protection for the eight world leaders attending the summit.
Even this is not enough, however. To prevent protests against
the summit and to intimidate demonstrators, the federal interior
minister and police authority are working with their counterparts
in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania (MWP)where
Heiligendamm is situatedto draw up a range of repressive
measures which would warm the hearts of most authoritarian rulers.
These measures began on May 9 with a series of coordinated
police raids carried out across the country involving 900 police
officers in six northern German states. Police searched 40 offices
and dwellings occupied by opponents of the summit and seized computers,
hard discs and written documents. The raids were organised by
the general federal attorney, Monika Harms, and justified on the
basis of Germanys anti-terror laws. The raids represented
the first-ever use of the controversial paragraph 129aallegedly
directed against the danger of terrorismfor the criminalisation
of political opponents.
The raids were subsequently condemned by a number of jurists
and politicians who declared them to be completely out of proportion
to any real danger to the state. They were clearly aimed at intimidating
the opponents of the summit and collecting confidential information
about planned protests. After the raid, the Federal Prosecutors
Office declared it was investigating 21 suspects in connection
with terrorist arson attacks, but no arrest warrants
had been issued because, according to a spokeswoman, there was
a lack of any real evidence. It is clear, therefore, that the
suspicions of terrorism were merely a pretext.
Since then, there has been a veritable flood of new measures
against the planned protests proposed by the federal interior
minister, Wolfgang Schäuble (Christian Democratic Union,
CDU) and local police authorities.
According to one of Germanys main television channels,
the state of MWP is preparing mass prisons for opponents
of globalisation. Potential prisoners include not only demonstrators,
guilty of an offence or refusing to obey the dictates of the police,
but also potential delinquents, who can be pre-emptively
imprisoneda practice disturbingly similar to the notorious
protective custody of the Nazis.
Following the threat of preventive detention for potentially
violent demonstrators by Interior Minister Schäuble, the
spokeswoman for the MWP interior ministry, Marion Schlender, declared
that the state would fully exhaust its legal capacities
for preventive detention of presumed culprits.
MWPs Security and Order Law (SOG) allows so-called preventive
safekeeping of up to 10 days. The law was passed in the last legislative
period with the votes of the Left-Party-PDS, which governed in
a coalition with the Social Democratic Party (SPD). Following
a recent state election, the state is now governed by a grand
coalition of the SPD and CDU. While the Left Party is one of the
co-organisers of the current protests against the G8 summit, it
prefers to keep quiet about the role played by members of its
own party in introducing repressive legislation in MWP.
MWP Interior Minister Lorenz Caffier (CDU) has also taken precautions
to speed up the prosecution of offending demonstrators, so they
can be sentenced immediately after their alleged offence.
Protesters could end up behind bars for simply getting too
close to the security fence. For the period May 30 to June 8,
the regional police has banned all public meetings within a distance
of 200 metres from the security fence and around the local airport
where summit leaders will land for their conference.
This means that the ban on demonstrations extends to a distance
of 5-10 kilometres from the conference centre. There is no legal
basis for this restriction. The organisers of the planned protests
have asserted that they will apply for an injunction against the
ruling and if necessary take the issue to the German Constitutional
Court.
The interior undersecretary of state and former president of
the Federal Information Service (BND), August Hanning, cynically
justified this flagrant violation of the freedom of assembly with
the assertion that Germany wanted to be a good host.
This evidently means that demonstrations against the summit are
permissible only if the summit participants and accompanying journalists
are completely unaware of them.
The Federal Prosecutors Office has also resorted to obtaining
samples of the odours of globalisation opponents, in order to
be able to identify them later with the help of sniffer dogs.
Up until now, such operational methods were the exclusive domain
of the Stasi Stalinist secret police in the former East Germany.
At a museum dedicated to the activities of the Stasi, it is still
possible to view the odour samples (in glass bottles) obtained
by agents of opponents of the GDR regime.
While a number of politicians have raised reservations of this
practiceparliamentary Vice-President Wolfgang Thierse (SPD)
complained of police state methods à la GDRInterior
Minister Schäuble has unreservedly defended the measures.
He told Bavarian radio, In certain cases it is a means to
identify possible suspects. The issue was to ensure the
security of the G8 summit, he said, and this would be done by
the police using all appropriate means.
The external circumstances of the G8 summit mirror the relationship
between the heads of states and governments who often describe
themselves as the leaders of the free world and the
mass of the population, which is held at bay by barbed wire fences,
troops of police and bans on demonstration: a deep social and
political gulf yawns between the two sides.
See Also:
Under the pretext of the struggle
against terror: German police conduct massive operation
against G8 protesters
[11 May 2007]
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