Anti-globalisation clashes in Italy



Protesters break through a police security line

Thousands of anti-globalisation protesters have clashed with riot police in the
Italian city of Naples.
An estimated 20,000 demonstrators gathered to protest against a meeting of the Global
Forum - a conference of government and technology leaders being held in the city.

Police fired teargas and rubber bullets at demonstrators after they broke through
barricades in an attempt to reach conference delegates from 120 governments.



There were casualties on both sides

More than 100 people were injured in the violence, including one police commander who
was taken to hospital with serious head wounds.

Paving stones and smoke bombs were thrown from the crowds and rubbish containers were
set on fire.


The protest was organised by the No Global Network and included hard-line left-wing
groups, anarchists, environmentalists and local unemployed people from Naples.

Witnesses said the central square looked like a battlefield as ambulances ferried the
injured out.

Helicopters overhead

Several people, including journalists and parliamentarians, accused the police of
using "gratuitous violence", but the Naples police chief said his men were attacked
and the response was fitting.

A journalist and photographer said they had been beaten up by the police, while
protest organisers said a pregnant woman had been among those hurt.



Extra police were brought in

An Italian television crew was also attacked by the protesters.

Cars and offices were damaged in the protest and shop windows were smashed.

Many store owners had shut their businesses in anticipation of the violence.

Helicopters circled overhead monitoring the clashes and about 100 people are reported
to have been arrested.

"The situation is under control, but we remain vigilant," police spokesman Nicola Izzo
said.

The demonstrators gathered at the scene after arriving in Naples on trains from Milan
and Palermo.

Digital divide

A total of 6,000 police had been drafted into the city, and had sealed off the centre
with barricades and riot vehicles in preparation for possible clashes.

The global forum, involving 800 delegates from governments and international
organisations, has focused on how new technologies change the concept and practice of
government.

While the five-day forum has a section dedicated to the digital divide, and ways of
ensuring electronic access to developing nations, the protestors say the Internet age
is only exacerbating inequalities.

Tight security has been imposed at dozens of summits and high-level finance meetings
throughout Europe and the United States since huge anti-globalisation riots wrecked a
meeting of the World Trade Organisation in Seattle in 1999.

See also:


26 Jan 01 | Business
Debating globalisation
21 Dec 00 | Review
Globalisation and its discontents
07 Nov 00 | Business
The limits of globalisation
19 Jun 00 | Middle East
G15 leaders attack globalisation
14 Sep 00 | e-cyclopedia
Globalisation: What on Earth is it about?
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