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Canada: Police agent-provocateurs unmasked at Montebello summit
protests
By François Tremblay
4 September 2007
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An amateur video posted on the internet shows cops disguised
as anarchist protesters trying to provoke fights between riot
police and demonstrators at last months Montebello, Quebec,
summit meeting of the US and Mexican presidents and Canadas
prime minister.
On August 20-21, the luxurious Château Montebello was
transformed into a fortress for the Security and Prosperity Partnership
of North America summit meeting. Three thousand policemen patrolled
at or near the Châteauthe Royal Canadian Mounted Police
(RCMP) guarding an inner perimeter and the Quebec Provincial Police
(SQ) patrolling the streets of Montebello. Helicopters flew over
the small Quebec municipality, while coast-guard boats monitored
the Ottawa River.
The size of this vast security operation reflected the chasm
that separates the North American ruling elite from the mass of
ordinary people. The three heads of government in attendance,
despite sharp conflicts arising from the contradictory national
interests of the elites they represent, are all carrying out policies
that consistently favor the super-rich-directly represented at
the summit by some of the most powerful businessmen of the three
countriesto the detriment of the social needs of the majority.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper leads a Conservative
minority government whose free-market policies and unbridled militarism
in Afghanistan are increasingly unpopular. Mexican President Felipe
Calderón, who took power after an election marred by accusations
of fraud, is carrying out a fear campaign to push the Mexican
public towards accepting more authoritarian methods of rule. As
for the US President, George W. Bush, he personifies the brutality
of a US ruling elite ready to commit the worst war crimesas
in Iraqto seize control of the energy resources of the planet
and pursue its plans for global hegemony.
Police officials tried to justify the extraordinary measures
deployed at Montebello by claiming they were needed to control
extremist demonstrators and prevent them from overwhelming
conference security forces. In fact, video images reveal a long-established
police practice, that is, the use of agent provocateurs to provide
a pretext for a brutal intervention by riot police against anti-government
demonstrators and still further restrictions on the right to protest
and other basic democratic rights.
The video, dated August 20, shows three burly, aggressive-looking
masked men trying to join a group of smaller, youthful demonstrators
wearing black and carrying red flags. One of the thugs is carrying
a sign that says: An end to war and globalization.
Another has a rock in his hand.
Dave Coles, president of the Communications, Energy, and Paperworkers
Union of Canada, one of the demonstrations organizers, confronts
the three thugs. He asks the one with a rock to drop it and asks
all of them to show their faces. One of the masked-men then shoves
Coles and gives him the middle finger. At this moment, a group
of peaceful demonstrators begins chanting, Police, police.
One hears a young demonstrator say: They want to trick us,
they want us to be aggressive with them. [...] They are agent
provocateurs.
In the meantime, the three masked men quietly approach the
riot squad, which is forming a cordon a few paces away. One of
them whispers something into the ear of a policeman. After a brief
staged scuffle, the police cordon opens, letting the men through
and they are gently placed in handcuffs. As the three walk away,
one clearly sees that the fake demonstrators are wearing the same
boots as their police escorts.
As usual for security forces, top SQ officials initially categorically
denied that the three men in question were policemen. But after
the video was posted to YouTube.com (to see the video, click on
Stop SPP Protest - Union Leader stops provocateurs), the SQ was
forced to admit that the men are indeed SQ cops.
Without the YouTube video, the incident would in all likelihood
never have been mentioned by the corporate media. As it is, the
media dropped the story of the exposure of the SQ agent provocateurs
after a single day.
On August 20 Radio Canada, the website of French-language section
of the state-owned radio and television broadcasting service,
titled its account Montebello Summit: Demonstrations in
relative calm, and mentioned a few isolated confrontations
after the departure of most of the demonstrators.
In fact, there were relatively few protestorsonly a few
hundred, according to the mediayet they were subjected to
a gratuitous and completely disproportionate show of state violence.
Police repeatedly fired tear gas and rubber bullets, even at a
group that was only trying to drop off a petition with 10,000
names at the Châteaus gates. Four people were arrested,
accused of interfering with police work.
Turning reality on its head, Marcel Savard, an official of
the SQs criminal investigation division, said the three
undercover policemen in the video were tasked with finding
and identifying non-peaceful demonstrators and preventing incidents.
As for the rock clearly visible in one of the SQ undercover cops
hands, Savard claimed that it had come from a demonstrator
who tried to incite him to throw it.
Why then did the disguised policeman refuse to drop the rock
when asked by demonstrators to do so? Why shove Coles and give
him the finger?
Canadas federal government defended the SQ agent provocateurs
even though their behavior, captured on video, is of an illegal
and criminal character. Resorting to the provocative tone and
lies that have become standard fare for the Harper government,
Public Security Minister Stockwell Day said, Because they
[the undercover cops] were not engaging in violence, it was noted
that they were probably not protestors. I think thats a
bit of an indictment against the violent protestors.
This is not the first time that the police have used such methods
to justify the adoption of repressive measures aimed at limiting,
if not abolishing for all practical purposes, the democratic right
to demonstrate in opposition to government policy.
To cite only one recent incident, there was the widely publicized
Germinal affair. For the April 2001, Quebec City Summit of the
Americas, which discussed the creation of a free trade bloc of
the Americas, the Canadian government mounted the largest ever
security operation in Canadian history, spending over $100 million
to equip and train thousands of police and build a massive security
perimeter.
A few days before the summit, police arrested seven young men
traveling to Quebec City, who had in their possession sticks,
smoke bombs, dummy grenades, and gas masks. The press trumpeted
the incident and loudly applauded the security measures around
the summit.
Rapidly, however, the affair was shown to have been a state
provocation. The reputed leader of the Germinal group was an ex-member
of the Canadian Armed Forces. Of the groups 15 members at
least two others were RCMP double agents of and two more part
of the Canadian military. It was one of the soldiers who had introduced
the RCMP moles to the Germinal group. The RCMP moles urged the
group to use Molotov cocktails in Quebec City, an idea the group
rejected citing the possibility of damage or injury. The moles
also furnished a large part of the equipment used to incriminate
the Germinal members.
The same anti-democratic modus operandi was unmasked last week
at Montebello. These images should be emblazoned on workers
memory: when the state tries to deploy its repressive apparatus
under the pretext of fighting extremism, it sends
its own thugs and agents to make trouble and incite violence.
Its objectives are clear: to intimidate demonstrators; to discourage
the populace in general from exercising its democratic right to
express its opposition to the reactionary agenda of the ruling
elite; and to discredit opponents of the government, especially
the youth, by smearing them as vandals and criminals.
See Also:
Australia: Extraordinary security operation
shuts down central Sydney for APEC summit
[4 September 2007]
Alleged Toronto terror
plot included two police agents
[19 October 2006]
Rubber bullets, tear
gas, and mass arrests at the Summit of the Americas in Quebec
City
[2 May 2001]
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