Monday, June 17, 2013

Demonstrations, Police Brutality and Anti-Capitalism


This may seem like old news to some but is relevant to the widespread use of police repression around the world and to the growing awareness of the general public that their so-called democracies fall far short of their expectations. Wherever they are demonstrators are subject to increasing harrassment and violence from police decked out in all manner of body armour with a wide array of weaponry and armoured vehicles for crowd control at their disposal. Current, ongoing and recent incidents include attacks in London last week against a small group occupying an empty building readying to protest about upcoming G8 meetings in Northern Ireland; heavy police action in numerous towns around Turkey now in its third week; continued intrusion into anti-austerity demonstrations in Rio de Janeiro; long-standing student protests and clashes with police in Chile against increased charges for education and below some details of recent happenings in Frankfurt which began as protests against government policies and banks' handling of the European debt crisis.

SHIR HEVER, TRNN PRODUCER: On June 1, about 20,000 people from all over Germany and nearby countries came to Frankfurt to participate in the Blockupy protest. The protest grew out of a camp in which activists from Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, and Spain joined with German activists.The Blockupy Frankfurt protest was organized to protest the policy of the government and the banks regarding the European debt crisis.The protesters planned to march on the European Central Bank (the ECB) and on the headquarters of Deutsche Bank and block those banks in order to protest their involvement in the European crisis, their influence over politicians, and their contribution to inequality and debt.

ANI DIESSELMANN, BLOCKUPY FRANKFURT: Our main goal is to show that the regime that is governing Europe through this crisis is neither democratically legitimate nor acting in any way responsible for the people. It's really working for profit. One of its symbolic places is the ECB, a place that has economic and financial reign over Europe.HEVER: Even though Germany and Germany's chancellor, Angela Merkel, are associated with pushing for hard austerity measures in Europe and for threatening Greece and other indebted European countries with sanctions, the Blockupy Frankfurt protests show that the German people do not all share their government's pro-capitalist position.The protestors published a statement with the title "They want capitalism without democracy, we want democracy without capitalism."

IBTIMES REPORTER (VOICEOVER): In the afternoon, the demonstrators would divide up, with some blocking the entrance to Deutsche Bank's twin towers, to protest about food speculation and land grabbing. A second group would head to the city center to protest against rising rents, while around 200 will highlight racism and deportation at Frankfurt airport, Europe's third-busiest hub.

HEVER: Although the protest was authorized by the authorities, and although German law protects the right of the people to demonstrate, the German police disregarded the law and brutally attacked the demonstration.The police encircled about a thousand of the protestors in a "kettle", preventing them from leaving and keeping them trapped for hours, hoping that the other protestors will tire and leave. The remaining protestors did not relent in their commitment to see the kettle removed and all the protestors released.The police arrested about 45 people and injured between 200 and 300 of the demonstrators.The police brutality was surprising and changed the focus of the protests and the media coverage from the banks and capitalism to police brutality.

UNIDENTIFIED: We are standing here for nine hours. Look how the people are mistreated. We are extremely mad.

MARKUS FRANK, CDU, HEAD OF PUBLIC ORDER DEPARTMENT: The problem is, unfortunately, that the organizers didn't succeed in distancing themselves from the violent offenders. They could just continue to demonstrate. The independents, those "black block", could also keep going if they would drop the masquerade, if they would surrender their weapons and they were not ready to do this. Therefore one cannot talk about this as if it went according to plan.

HEVER: Chief of Police of Frankfurt Achim Thiel has been severely criticized for the police brutality. The city council of Frankfurt, and especially representatives from the Left Party, called him to answer questions on the actions of the police on June 1.The Social Democratic Party, SPD, called for the resignation of Minister of the Interior of Hesse (the federal state of Frankfurt) Boris Rhein because of the encirclement of the protestors in a "kettle". Boris Rhein is a member of the Christian Democratic Party, CDU, which is also the party of Chancellor Angela Merkel.The Green Party also joined the SPD in condemning Boris Rhein and the actions of the police.Another demonstration was held the following Saturday, on June 8, specifically against police brutality.
This is Shir Hever for The Real News.

What is noticeable in many of the protests is the number of references in the chants and on the placards to capitalism and its mishandling of events. Could it be that the public, in larger numbers, is joining the dots between austerity, growing unemployment, record levels of disparity between 'us and them', use of violence by police against demonstrators and recognising that the 'anti-capitalism' they call for can become a reality when enough of us decide to commit to that end?

1 comment:

Grung_e_Gene said...

Support for and Faith in "Capitalism" has declined.

And Police forces are often used by the 1% to Quell Domestic Dissent at home. Most laws and allocation of Police Forces are created and deployed in such a way as to deter and oppress the Poor and Middle Class, as opposed to investigating the billions swindeled by Financial Criminals.