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BBC. 13 March 2002. Barcelona braced for summit protests.

BARCELONA -- Police in Barcelona are standing by for the arrival of tens
of thousands of anti-globalisation protesters who are expected for a
European Union summit later this week.

The meeting of heads of state and government on Friday and Saturday will
discuss economic and social reforms as well as anti-terrorism measures.

But among locals, all the pre-summit talk is about the threat of
disruption and the chaos into which the city is being plunged.

More than 8,500 officers will be on duty in the Catalan capital, nearly
a third of them drafted in from other parts of the country, say police.

Riot police will be armed with live and plastic ammunition and tear gas.

In addition, 2,000 civil guards are patrolling Barcelona's airport and
railway and bus terminals, as well as the border with France.

Some reports say suspected protesters have already been turned back at
the border - the first time passports have been checked there since the
Schengen Agreement came into force.

According to Eva Millet, a local journalist, the heightened security in
Barcelona was much in evidence at the weekend when thousands turned out
for marches unrelated to the summit agenda.

Steel barriers and barbed wire have gone up, cordoning off the summit
venue and hotels where delegates will be staying.

Helicopters and mounted police are patrolling the restricted zone around
the conference centre in the Avenida Diagonal and the Catalonia Palace
of Congresses.

It has been searched for explosives by sniffer dogs because the
authorities also fear an attack by the Basque separatist group ETA.

But protesters represent their main concern.

An area one square mile in size around the summit venue has been closed
off, with a nearby university shut down for the duration of the meeting.

Julio Garcia, a transport spokesman at Barcelona's city hall, said a
stretch of the main Barcelona-Madrid road, which carries 140,000 cars a
day, would be closed to private vehicles from Thursday to Saturday.

Two metro stations near the conference centre would also be shut.

A glance at the websites of groups who were in Genoa shows that many
plan to make their presence felt in Barcelona, listing it among their
"mobilisations."

One group, Globalise Resistance, is organising transport from the United
Kingdom. Spokesman Guy Taylor told BBC News Online that the build-up to
the summit had been "quite incredible."

He expected a big turnout, but said he was worried the authorities might
over-react, as they had done in Genoa.

"The Spanish police are notorious for using agents provocateurs."

They were "entirely capable" of being as heavy-handed as their Italian
counterparts, he said.

Police surveillance of anti-globalisation groups has been stepped up -
even monitoring their emails, according to the Izquierda Unida (IU), the
main far left-wing Spanish party.

The two main groups organising protests on the sidelines of the summit
are the Barcelona Social Forum, which groups local activists and trade
unions, and the Campaign Against Capitalist Europe and War.

Those the authorities least want in Barcelona are the so-called "black
bloc," which comprises several loosely-organised anarchist and radical
groups.




. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Barry Stoller
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews

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