-Caveat Lector-

#
#    August 6, 2001
#
#    Page One Feature
#
#    Attack Trampled Spirit of Democracy
#    In Genoa, Globalization Protesters Say
#
#    By YAROSLAV TROFIMOV and IAN JOHNSON
#    Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
#
#    Just before midnight on July 21, Miriam Heigl, a political-science
#    student from Munich, was figuring out a way to get home after
#    three days protesting the Group of Eight summit in the Italian
#    city of Genoa.
#
#    As she scanned train schedules posted in the Armando Diaz school
#    complex, some 70 members of an Italian SWAT team smashed through
#    the front door, wielding truncheons and shields, their faces
#    covered with blue and red handkerchiefs. Ms. Heigl and about
#    30 others were arrested and taken to a police barracks, where
#    the 25-year-old says she was made to strip, humiliated and
#    deprived of basic civil liberties.
#
#    Hospital records show that 61 others in the school fared worse
#    -- they ended up requiring treatment for injuries. "All I remember
#    is being hit on the head with a truncheon right away," says
#    Melanie Jonasch, a 28-year-old archeology student from Berlin,
#    "and then I woke up here" -- in a Genoese hospital, where she
#    has had surgery for a broken mastoid bone behind her left ear.
#
#    To millions world-wide, the Genoa G-8 summit two weeks ago will
#    be remembered as the most violent in a series of international
#    protests against "globalization," a rallying cry first popularized
#    during clashes at a 1999 trade meeting in Seattle. As the leaders
#    of eight leading industrialized countries met in Italy, TV viewers
#    around the world watched police fight citywide battles with
#    anarchist militants who set dozens of cars, banks and storefronts
#    afire.
#
#    But out of the TV cameras' gaze, another scene of violence was
#    unfolding -- on the part of the police. Now, as details of the
#    school raid emerge sketchily, it is turning into a political
#    crisis for the government of Silvio Berlusconi, the pro-American
#    media mogul who ran on a law-and-order platform.
#
#    Initially, his government firmly defended police behavior. Mr.
#    Berlusconi said the school raid simply proved "collusion" between
#    the anarchists and mainstream demonstrators. Communications
#    Minister Maurizio Gasparri said it was "a detail" whether "a
#    cop used his truncheon four times instead of just three." The
#    police, in a report a few hours after the raid, said that the
#    school was a "refuge of the extreme fringe of the Black Block,"
#    and all those inside were members of that violent, anarchist
#    group.
#
#    More recently, however, the government said something may have
#    gone wrong. The judiciary has launched an inquiry into the use
#    of violence during the raid and the treatment of those detained.
#    Parliament has formed a separate commission of inquiry. Interior
#    Minister Claudio Scajola promised last Wednesday that "if some
#    untoward behavior will emerge, and it looks like it is emerging,
#    then it will be severely reprimanded." Shortly thereafter, he
#    removed three top police officials, saying this would make it
#    easier to investigate.
#
#    Part of the pressure on the government is coming from abroad,
#    especially Germany. After first helping gather information on
#    39 Germans arrested in the sweep at Diaz, Berlin is calling for
#    a fuller accounting. German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer
#    delivered that demand to his Italian counterpart in a telephone
#    call last week.
#
#    The official inquiries are just beginning, but interviews with
#    numerous participants and witnesses offer the most complete
#    account yet of the events at the Diaz school. The accounts of
#    19 Diaz detainees, who were interviewed in five countries, and
#    those of doctors, local officials and neighborhood witnesses
#    indicate that heavy force was used to arrest demonstrators who,
#    for the most part, hadn't been organizing the preceding days'
#    violence but had been peacefully protesting. After being denied
#    contact with lawyers and families for anywhere from one to four
#    days, most of the people detained at Diaz were brought before
#    judges, who released all but one and found that the overwhelming
#    majority of the arrests were "illegitimate."
#
#    A complete response from the police wasn't possible because the
#    raid is under investigation. In an interview, Francesco Gratteri,
#    head of the national police Central Operative Service, partly
#    defended the raid. "One must take into account that the raid
#    was very energetic because it was met with an equally energetic
#    resistance," said Mr. Gratteri, who stood in the school's
#    courtyard when the police charged in. But he added that "evidently
#    something abnormal happened there, which is why there is an
#    investigation."
#
#    For Ms. Heigl, the events began around 11 p.m. on Saturday, July
#    21. She and her boyfriend, Tobias Hubner, were heading over to
#    the Pertini middle school, part of a group of junior and senior
#    high schools known as the Diaz school complex.
#
#    Ms. Heigl was feeling a sense of relief. On Friday, a militant
#    had been shot dead by police. On Saturday afternoon, tear gas
#    had been used to disperse a crowd estimated by the interior
#    ministry at 200,000. As rumors circulated that the police would
#    raid places where the demonstrators camped, such as the stadium
#    where she and Mr. Hubner had been sleeping, they decided they
#    wanted a safer place. They headed for the school, also open to
#    the demonstrators, because it was just across the street from
#    the headquarters and press center for the mainstream organizers.
#
#    Eager to Get Home
#
#    Back in Munich, Ms. Heigl had been engaged in fighting radical
#    right-wing groups and won a prestigious national award for her
#    work. But this was the first big demonstration she had attended,
#    and she was exhausted from the crowds and flood of information.
#    "Everyone was unsettled and we just wanted to get home," Ms.
#    Heigl says.
#
#    After checking train schedules near a computer area on the ground
#    floor, she and Mr. Hubner walked upstairs to visit a friend.
#    Suddenly, panic broke loose. From downstairs she heard cries
#    of "Police! Police!" as the front door crashed open. Then she
#    heard screams and the sounds of police yelling and smashing
#    things. "We had total fear," she says.
#
#    Panicked, she and her boyfriend looked for an escape. The school
#    was under renovation, and scaffolding lined the outer walls.
#    They climbed onto it and waited.
#
#    Downstairs at the computers, Ms. Jonasch stayed put, figuring
#    that her fluency in Italian would help her explain that she wasn't
#    a violent militant. She says she had been working as a volunteer
#    at the headquarters and hadn't been out to the protests. But
#    she says a group of riot police wearing helmets and body armor
#    charged around the corner, truncheons flying. She says that
#    besides the initial blow to her head, which knocked her out,
#    she was hit on the shoulder and buttocks.
#
#    The hospital that treated her received dozens of similar cases.
#    Among patients still there last week was Daniel Albrecht, a
#    21-year-old cello student from Berlin, who has undergone brain
#    surgery to treat cerebral bleeding and says he hears metallic
#    sounds when he speaks.
#
#    Another patient was Lena Zuhlke, a 24-year-old student of Indian
#    culture at the University of Hamburg, who says she was beaten,
#    thrown down two flights of stairs and dragged by the hair. "I
#    didn't see any faces. Throughout all this, I couldn't see anything
#    at all above the knees," says Ms. Zuhlke, her hand on a jar
#    attached to her chest to catch fluid draining from her lungs.
#
#    Police, while asserting that all those inside the school were
#    anarchist militants, also have said that any protesters who were
#    hospitalized were extremists injured during earlier street
#    battles. That's an explanation that doctors say doesn't mesh
#    with the cases they saw. "There is no doubt that these wounds
#    were fresh. We had to sew up many of them on the spot," says
#    Roberto Papparo, head of the emergency department at Ospedale
#    San Martino, Genoa's biggest hospital. It dealt with more than
#    50 injured youths from the Diaz school shortly after the raid,
#    Dr. Papparo says, adding: "If these people weren't brought to
#    the hospital, there is no doubt that some of them wouldn't be
#    alive anymore."
#
#    A visit to the school several hours after the raid showed pools
#    of blood on the floor and walls and several teeth strewn around.
#
#    Apart from a handful who escaped, all the demonstrators at Diaz
#    who weren't hospitalized -- 32 people -- were rounded up. Ms.
#    Heigl says that after she heard the screaming and saw police
#    beating students unconscious, she and Mr. Hubner feared they
#    would be in worse danger if caught clinging to scaffolding. They
#    climbed into the room, knelt on the floor and put their hands
#    on their heads. That didn't prevent Mr. Hubner from receiving
#    a few blows to the back and head with a truncheon, and a dozen
#    others interviewed say they too were hit while in a submissive
#    position.
#
#    Ms. Heigl says she wasn't hit. She was taken to the Bolzaneto
#    police barracks, which had been turned into a holding center
#    for the G-8 summit. Situated inside a vast park-like complex
#    of the national police VI Mobile Division, the center had a series
#    of unfurnished cells that could hold 20 to 30 people each.
#
#    Detainees say they had to stand spread-eagle against the wall
#    for two to three hours. They add that police walked up and down
#    the line, beating those whose hands slipped and whose heads
#    weren't bent down. "They kept cursing us and calling us names
#    that I couldn't understand," Ms. Heigl says.
#
#    The man next to Ms. Heigl was pulled from the wall and sprayed
#    directly in the face with tear gas, say Ms. Heigl and a protester
#    interviewed separately. He collapsed and was dragged away to
#    be showered. He came back later, shivering, saying he had been
#    stripped naked and left under the water for half an hour. The
#    group was then sent to their cells, and the man had nothing to
#    clothe himself with except a plastic shower curtain, according
#    to Ms. Heigl and the other person, who both say they received
#    just one cookie each to eat on Sunday. At night, they say, they
#    slept on a concrete floor and had just three blankets for 30
#    or so people.
#
#    "We had this feeling that everything was completely arbitrary
#    and that they had lost their minds," Ms. Heigl says. "But now
#    I see that it was all done extremely professionally. They wanted
#    to disorient us and break us, as though they were dealing with
#    a gang of hardened terrorists."
#
#    The prisoners were registered on Monday, and their numbers at
#    Bolzaneto police barracks grew as many initially hospitalized
#    were sent over. Among them was Sherman Sparks, a 23-year-old
#    from Oregon spending a year in Europe. He said in a sworn
#    affidavit that he had been kicked in the head and groin during
#    the raid.
#
#    He, too, said he had to stand spread-eagle for two hours. He
#    said in his affidavit, which he sent to the U.S. Consulate in
#    Milan, that people standing next to him had broken arms and legs
#    and that one man collapsed, shaking uncontrollably. That incident
#    is related by others as well. When Mr. Sparks couldn't understand
#    commands in Italian, his affidavit alleges, he was slapped or
#    beaten or his head was rammed into the wall.
#
#    Detainees held in different cells and not known to each other
#    paint a common picture of the one to three days they spent in
#    the detention center: Strip searches were common. Men and women
#    alike were forced to use the toilet with police officers, usually
#    men, in attendance. Women were denied sanitary napkins, and
#    requests for medical attention were often refused. Roll calls
#    went on day and night. Detainees were asked to sign documents
#    in Italian that they couldn't understand and then sent back to
#    the cell. Some signed, while others refused. Phone calls and
#    contact with attorneys weren't permitted.
#
#    A Little Better
#
#    Relief for Ms. Heigl came on Tuesday, July 24, when she was one
#    of the last to be transferred to a normal prison. Before leaving,
#    she says, she was ordered to strip naked again while a man in
#    a blue polo shirt inspected her. Some others say the same thing
#    happened to them. Then they were allowed to dress and eyeglasses
#    taken from some detainees were returned. But rings, earrings
#    and money that had been confiscated were not returned, Ms. Heigl
#    and some other detainees assert.
#
#    Many detainees say they felt relieved when they got to the regular
#    prison. There, they had cots with sheets, and three meals a day.
#    Ms. Heigl received a message from her parents.
#
#    They had been contacted by German authorities one day after the
#    raid. Her father, Wunibald Heigl, a high-school history teacher
#    in Munich, says the German authorities hadn't called to provide
#    help but to find out as much as possible about his daughter.
#    "We called the German consulate in Milan and were coldly told
#    that everything was going according to procedures," Mr. Heigl
#    says. The German foreign ministry had no comment on the raid,
#    saying it was a subject of bilateral talks.
#
#    Detainees say they were given consular access for the first time
#    on Wednesday or Thursday, except for U.S. citizens, whose
#    diplomats visited them hours after the school raid. The detainees
#    were also taken before judges but not allowed to speak to an
#    attorney beforehand.
#
#    All were charged with "aggravated resistance to arrest" and
#    "membership in an armed conspiracy to cause destruction." The
#    raid confirmed this membership, the police say. According to
#    their report, youths inside tried to block the entry gate and
#    "engaged in scuffles" with the agents. One allegedly tried to
#    stab a policeman. At a news conference, police displayed a small
#    knife and a half-pierced protective jacket but couldn't name
#    the attacker.
#
#    Many protesters interviewed agree that some Black Block militants
#    may have been hiding inside the school. But they say that if
#    present, these militants were a minority and didn't advertise
#    their affiliation.
#
#    Possible Motive
#
#    Local government officials say the center of the Black Block
#    was elsewhere. According to Marta Vincenzi, governor of the Genoa
#    province, 200 to 300 militants had kicked nonviolent demonstrators
#    out of a province-owned gym next to the Martin Luther King High
#    School in the evening of July 19, breaking school furniture inside
#    to fashion weapons. Ms. Vincenzi and other provincial officials
#    say they repeatedly called police with requests to intervene,
#    to no avail. Ms. Vincenzi theorizes that in their raid at Diaz,
#    "police tried to offset their initial excess of tolerance with
#    an excess of vendetta" at the school.
#
#    Material seized in the raid suggests the police missed their
#    mark. The police report said the school "was a place dedicated
#    to the strategic planning and material manufacturing, by all
#    persons present inside, of instruments to attack police forces."
#    The chief evidence was two wine bottles filled with flammable
#    liquid plus hammers and nails taken from the construction site
#    on school premises. In addition, the police say they confiscated
#    17 cameras, 13 swimming goggles, 10 Swiss army knives, four spent
#    tear-gas shells, three cellular phones, two thermos bottles and
#    a bottle of suntan lotion. The charges were presented to a team
#    of judges who decided to free all but one detainee.
#
#    Ms. Heigl was released on Wednesday evening. The police initially
#    decreed that she and the other 77 foreign detainees would be
#    expelled from Italy and barred for five years, but Italy later
#    said the ban didn't apply to EU citizens. Ms. Heigl's parents,
#    who had driven to Genoa to find their daughter, followed the
#    police truck that carried her and about 30 others to the Austrian
#    border. There, those released were put on a train to Munich.
#
#    Ms. Heigl now will resume work on her master's degree. Earlier
#    this year, she visited Peru to collect material for a thesis
#    on the collapse of democracy under Alberto Fujimori. She says
#    her experience in Genoa has given her a new appreciation of the
#    fragility of civil liberties: "I realize now I didn't have to
#    go all the way to Peru to do my studies."
#
#    -- Alessandra Pugliese contributed to this article.
#
#    Write to Yaroslav Trofimov at [EMAIL PROTECTED] and
#    Ian Johnson at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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