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AFP. 14 March 2002. Barcelona protest pulls 100,000 on eve of EU summit.

BARCELONA -- Some 100,000 trade unionists filled the streets of
Barcelona calling for a "social Europe" in a protest called ahead of
this weekend's EU summit in the Catalan capital, police and organizers
said.

Demonstrators marched behind a banner demanding full employment and
social rights in the European Union, in a protest called by the
Confederation of European Trade Unions, with representatives from across
the 15-member body.

Several thousand people also joined a demonstration called by the
Barcelona Social Forum, which has united around 50 political parties,
trade unions and protest groups ahead of the weekend summit.

The snaking demonstration was dominated by the red flags of Spanish and
French left-wing trade unions as it left the city centre.

"Everything has come together to show that European social movements are
unified around these social protests," the head of one of the main
Spanish trade unions said before the protest set off.

Italy's conservative prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, whose government
announced plans Thursday to make it easier for employers to lay off
workers, dismissed the protesters as "professional globetrotters" in
search of a reason to party.

About 1,000 national police officers based in Catalonia staged a
demonstration of their own Thursday, demanding equal pay with their
regional and municipal counterparts whose paycheques, police union
leaders say, are 20 percent higher.

Trade unions are planning a series of huge demonstrations in the Catalan
capital ahead of the weekend summit in defence of social justice and
gender equality in the workplace.

Anti-globalisation demonstrators and Spanish police are preparing for a
showdown as EU leaders gather at the summit venue, with protesters
already firmly pinning the blame on police for any violence that may
erupt.

Members of the Campaign against a Europe of Capitalism and War have
described their planned actions as "festive, playful," adding that if
any violence kicks off "it will be the fault of the Spanish government."

The group has planned a huge rally for Saturday while underlining the
non-violent nature of the group and its protests.

Some 8,500 police are being deployed in the city to keep a watchful eye
on anti-globalisation and trade union protests.

Madrid reinstated passport controls at the border with France and in
Spain's airports last weekend in a bid to bar known violent militants
from reaching the Mediterranean port city.

Security forces have cordoned off the area around the summit venue, as
well as around the hotels where the EU delegations will be staying.

But one protest group member said that reining in wayward elements of
the campaign was not the job of the group.

"The climate of violence doesn't come from us, but the security forces
and the government," he said, referring to a June 2001 protest during a
World Bank summit in the city.


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

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