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----- Original Message ----- 
From: secr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, December 17, 2001 7:11 PM
Subject: [mobilize-globally] Report back from Brussels



------ Forwarded Message
From: "bohater1" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Mon, 17 Dec 2001 07:07:35 -0000
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [UK_Left_Network] Report back from Brussels


I have just returned from Brussels where I was at most of the major
events during December 13-15. Here are some fairly brief impressions:
My first port of call was Indymedia, which is a left-wing attempt to
bypass the bourgeois media. I found it notably well organised though
that did not stop crises from breaking out from time to time. The
main hall in Cinema Nova, central Brussels, where it was based, was
packed with PCs and people typing away on them or talking into mobile
phones, and the walls were covered in A3 posters written in coloured
marker giving contact details and information about events, rapidly
updated as and when necessary. My belief that most of the left cannot
organise its way out of a wet paper bag was dealt a blow by this
spectacle. Incidentally, anarchists, Trotskyists and Stalinists
seemed to be able to stay in the same room without blood erupting
onto the carpet, a fact which was also welcome though surprising.
I went to the huge TU march on the 13th, which I believe was in
excess of 100,000 people. One of the things I like about the really
big marches is that it is so much easier to hand out leaflets, even
when your hands are turning blue with cold. At such a march you also
got some idea of the latent power of TUs and the working class
generally, if it could be but harnessed.
The march on the 14th was predictably smaller and mainly consisted of
the usual suspects, but was still impressive. I estimated about
20,000 participants. There was also trouble, though I did not witness
it personally - just some Belgian gendarmes in riot gear rushing off
to some kind of trouble which I could not see.
The following day I went to an anti-war march from the Free
University of Brussels. This was the smallest of the three, with
perhaps 5,000 taking part. Later I went back to Indymedia and met a
Belgian activist I know. She said she had been one of those detained
by the police the previous day. She showed me pictures she had taken
of suspected agent provocateurs who had mostly disguised themselves
as anarchists, and said these provocateurs were responsible for at
least part of the trouble that day.
All in all, these days were a worthwhile event which highlighted the
left's strengths and weaknesses and also showed that the state is not
idle.

Felix




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