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Australia: Police mobilised against high school students at
APEC demonstration
By Patrick OConnor
6 September 2007
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Police in the Australian state of New South Wales launched
a major operation yesterday aimed at intimidating high school
students protesting against the Iraq war and US President George
Bush. Along with 20 other world leaders, Bush is in Australia
for this weeks Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)
summit.
About 200 high school students participated in the Sydney demonstration,
while smaller school walkouts were staged in other major cities,
all in defiance of threats from police, state and federal politicians,
and the state education departments. One school, North Sydney
Girls High, locked its gates and placed teachers in front
of exits to prevent students from attending the demonstration.
Students banners and slogans reflected their determination
to defend their democratic rights. They included: Not too
young to protest, We have the right to protest.
Others called for an end to the Iraq war and condemned Bush as
a war criminal and terrorist.

Police patrolled trains before the demonstration searching
for protestors. Exploiting truancy legislation, officers stopped
students and demanded their names, phone numbers, and schools.
Students who later spoke to the World Socialist Web Site
reported that the police aggressively asked what they planned
to do and tried to deter them from attending the protest. Police
apparently even telephoned students high schools, and in
at least one case encouraged the principal to suspend the protestors.
Two members of the Socialist Equality Party were questioned
by police while travelling on a train into the city before the
demonstration. An officer moving through the train saw leaflets
that were later distributed (including Join
the International Students for Social Equality! Build an ISSE
chapter at your college or high school!). After demanding
to be given a leaflet, the cop asked that the SEP members identify
themselves and questioned whether they were on the list of excluded
persons banned from entering large parts of central Sydney.
The SEP members refused to comply with the interrogation and asked
the officer to explain the legal basis for her questioning.
We are patrolling trains for protestors, the officer
replied, implying that attendance at a demonstration was a suspicious,
if not illegal, act.
Unprecedented legislative and security measures have been enacted
for the APEC summit. A five-kilometre long and 2.8 metre high
steel fence has been erected around sections of central Sydney.
In the past few days several people, including visiting tourists,
have been stopped and questioned by police for photographing the
fence. Police have demanded that photos taken with digital cameras
be deleted, and media personnel have been warned to stay away.
In the wider areas of Sydney declared APEC security areas,
police have been given unchecked powers to stop and search people
without warrant. Those on the excluded persons list
are banned from entering these areas and face up to two years
imprisonment if they do.
The main APEC protest, due to be held on Saturday, was originally
planned to include a march through part of a security area,
but in a highly undemocratic ruling, the NSW Supreme Court yesterday
backed legal action brought by police to ban the proposed route.
The demonstration is still scheduled to proceed, but with a different
route.
Stephen Cullen, commander of the Public Order and Riot Squad,
told the court that: Police lines will come under attack
and a full-scale riot is probable. In reality, those most
likely to provoke violence at the planned demonstration are the
police themselves.
At yesterdays demonstration, the students marched through
the city, but did not attempt to enter the so-called security
areas. The protest was entirely peaceful, despite earlier lurid
predictions by the media and the police, and a campaign of vilification
led by Labor politicians. Last month NSW Labor Premier Morris
Iemma condemned the protest organisers as feral groups
and senior police warned they could not guarantee
students safety. Federal Labor leader Kevin Rudd also weighed
in. I would strongly suggest that kids stick to their books,
he declared. This is not a time for kids to get mixed up
in protest activity.
Rudds remarks underscored the bipartisan character of
the current assault on democratic rights. In conditions of escalating
social inequality, the chasm separating ordinary working people
from the establishment parties is widening ever further. Committed
to a program of militarism and war, governments internationally
are abrogating democratic rights and preparing new repressive
forms of rule.
None of these issues was raised by the organisers of the student
rally. The main speakers, from the middle class radical organisation,
Socialist Alliance, and its youth group, Resistance, sought to
restrict discussion to the lowest political level. Bush and Howard
were denounced in demagogic and frequently puerile terms, but
no mention was made of the critical political role played by the
Democrats in the US and the Labor Party in Australia in enabling
the criminal US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq to proceed.
Nor was there any discussion about an independent and socialist
perspective against war. Instead, students were encouraged to
protest in order to pressure the political establishment.
A different note was struck by one invited speaker, former
US Marine Matt Howard, who served two terms in Iraq. Howard stressed
the need for young people to study history and examine the real
record in the Middle East. Young soldiers sent to Iraq were robbed
of history, he said. We were told we were invading
a backward society. He said the Bush administration had
instigated a civil conflict in Iraq, where there had never before
been a Shiite-Sunni civil war.
George Bush doesnt represent America
World Socialist Web Site reporters interviewed a number
of the student participants.
Julian Wymer and Amy Barley, both 16, attended together with
several other students from Picton High.
There were three police who got us as soon as we got
off the train and then another pair of police as soon as we got
outside the station, Julian said. They told us to
line up against the wall. Two of them were then singling out one
person at a time so theyd have an advantage and be able
to intimidate us. When someone else tried to go over there [where
the police were speaking to the student] they were quite forceful
and yelled at us and told us to go stand up against the wall,
as if wed done something wrong. We had to give our names,
phone numbers, schools, ages.
The police asked us what we were doing. Its like,
what does it look like were doing? We are here to protest
against this sort of behaviour... The police then called our principal.
They said that it was up to the principal; its her discretion
what the disciplinary action would be but that they would suggest
suspension and possible detentions as well.
Asked why they were at the protest, Amy replied, You
wouldnt let a murderer walk into your home so why should
we welcome Bush into the country? Its wrong. Its not
anti-American either. George Bush doesnt represent Americaover
60 percent of the United States does not agree with his policy
on the Iraq war.
Its not America we have the problem with, its
George Bush himself and the war in Iraq, Julian added. To
stop students from protesting isnt right, because its
a persons right, responsibility even, to protest. In about
a year or two well have the right to vote. Theyre
stopping us from expressing our political views and saying were
too young to have them, but within a years time were
going to be voting, so if were not allowed to have political
views now then what are going to do when we have to vote?
The WSWS asked about the lies used to justify the invasion
of Iraq. The weapons of mass destruction thing I dont
understand because America sold weapons to Iraq and Iran for their
war, Julian replied. They supposedly invaded a country
for having weapons of destructionbut they sold them the
weapons of mass destruction... If they were fighting against terrorism
and against weapons of mass destruction they should be fighting
themselves...
Amy added: Its meant to be a war on terrorism but
they are blowing up thousands of innocent people daily. Its
a complete contradiction and no-ones agreeing with it anymore.
Ben, 18, was part of a group of about 10 students from St Marys
Senior High School in Sydneys western suburbs.
He was critical of state Premier Morris Iemma for describing
anti-APEC demonstrators as ferals. There are
no feral animals here, he commented. We are all humans.
These are the true people here. I came to the rally to protest
against George Bush and his ridiculous war in Iraq. The war is
basically to exploit the oil and all the other natural resources
of countries such as Iraq and Afghanistan, only to further the
capitalist governments such as America, Britain and Australia.
Im also here against climate change. Im opposed
to Australias and Americas failure to sign the Kyoto
Protocol, which would be just a first step. My other main concern
is indigenous rights, and John Howards military and police
intervention into the Northern Territory.
Sydney has been turned into a police-state pretty much,
with all the police and FBI agents. Its just because John
Howard wants to win the next election, and doesnt want anyone
speaking out against him. But the Labor Party has the same views.
Theres no difference between them. What good is Rudd going
to do for workplaces and indigenous people? Its a little
sad that people think voting for Kevin Rudd will make any difference.
Fatima, 20, is a student at TAFE
Meadowbank. She told the WSWS that her younger sister had been
warned by the school principal not to attend and her brother had
been unable to come due to concern about the police patrols on
the train.
We dont want George Bush here, we want the troops
out of Iraq, she said. Theyve killed so many
people there, brought destruction, and theres no democracy.
My parents came to Australia from Lebanon; they left to get away
from the war, which America supported. I went back to Lebanon
last year, just after the war, and the destruction I saw... My
grandmothers house, she lives on her own, and I had to help
put the windows back up, all the glass was broken. It was all
because of America, they supplied all the weapons to Israel. So
the Bush administration just wants to destroy the world, theres
no democracy, its not a free world anymore.
I think theyre trying to get closer to Iran. Theyve
gone into Afghanistan and Iraq which both border Iran. The US
wants to be the superpower of the world, dominating every country.
I think thats the whole point, the whole purpose.
Chandi Bates and Sam Kidd, both 15, attend Fort Street High
School. George Bush just shouldnt be here and we dont
support the war in Iraq, Chandi said.
We dont want him to feel welcome here and we want
to make him know that people arent happy with him and what
hes done, Sam added. We oppose the Iraq war
and we know about the 2000 election, where he rigged it and ignored
all the votes from the poor black people in Florida.
Asked what he thought of the Democrats in the US and potential
presidential candidates Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, Sam
replied: I dont think there is much of an alternative
in the US or in Western politics anywhere, like a left alternative.
See Also:
Australia: Extraordinary security operation
shuts down central Sydney for APEC summit
[4 September 2007]
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