Amelia Hill, Prague
Sunday September 24, 2000

Britons were yesterday among the thousands of protesters turned away from
the Czech border by police determined to minimise the extent of Tuesday's
anti-capitalism protest, organisers said.
About 30,000 demonstrators from across Europe are heading towards Prague
this week, determined to disrupt the 55th Annual Meeting of the World Bank
Group and the Board of Governors of the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

But instead of taking part in today's mass celebration, a warm-up before the
main day of action next week, many demonstrators have spent the weekend
camping at border crossings in pouring rain.

Some have managed to complete their journeys by complaining to their embassy
or by appealing to legal observers waiting behind the border controls. But
thousands of others - at least one in every 50 demonstrators - are spending
days travelling from one border crossing to another, unsuccessfully trying
to find a weak link in the police line, before being forced to return home.

'Czech border police are not making illegal demands on those attempting to
enter the country, but they are sticking to the letter of the law with
absolute rigidity,' said Karlos, a legal observer working for the Initiative
Against Economic Globalisation, an umbrella group known by its Czech
initials, Inpeg, created to coordinate this week's demonstrations.

More than 70 protesters have been denied access to the Czech Republic from
the border crossing at Zinnwald alone, in what organisers claim is a total
contradiction of state rhetoric.

'Nine-hour waits at the borders are now routine because police are searching
exhaustively for ways of banning everyone they possibly can,' said Karlos.
'Occasionally they cross over and violate a human right, but on the whole
they stay a hair's breadth away from actual violation.'

Many activists have been caught by obscure legislation. 'I'm shaking with
anger, but I'm not leaving. l'll find some way of getting through, even if
it takes all week,' said Anya, a 35-year-old activist who spent more than 24
hours driving from Brighton to Prague in her 35ft van, only to be blocked at
Zinnwald after Czech police found a slight irregularity in her vehicle
registration papers.

'I've travelled all over the world with exactly the same papers I gave the
police here,' she said. 'I even came to Prague last year. They let me in
then and now suddenly the same papers aren't good enough.' But Anya's case
does not surprise Karlos, a legal observer on the other side of the
crossing. 'Cases like this show how little truth there was in the words of
the Czech government when it said we had a political right to protest
against the IMF meeting. This entire demonstra tion has shown how determined
the Czech government really is to deny the right to free speech and
political protest,' he said, as he rang around trying to order the papers
Anya needed.

'They see this meeting as a method of entry into the serious world of
big-boy politics and are prepared to deny the right the public has to
express a plurality of political views.'

Border police are using information from the FBI and Scotland Yard on known
activists to prevent people entering the country, including activists from
Seattle and Ya Basta!, a pressure group from Italy .

Despite the difficulties, thousands of activists have successfully got in: a
camp for 20,000 people on the outskirts of the city is already busy and most
hostels and cheap hotels are booked up for the entire week. But police hope
that, by flexing their muscles now, they will curb protesters' plans to
disrupt the conference later in the week.

Their plan appears to have worked: yesterday's nine peaceful demonstrations
are being heralded by the police as proof that their months of preparation
have been a success, although today's mass celebration will test that claim.

Nevertheless, tension in Prague has escalated over the past few days in
anticipation of Tuesday's demonstration. About 11,000 police, most of them
in riot units trained to deal with violent fights rather than peaceful
demonstrations, have been mobilised. They have admitted that tear gas and
water cannon will be used if necessary.

Six armoured personnel carriers, six troop trucks, two fire engines, two
Mi-17 helicopters and two W-3A Sokol helicopters are on standby, according
to the Prague Post .

'We know there are many protesters coming here with the intention of
sabotaging the conference,' said a spokesman for the Czech police. 'Of
course, we're nervous - this is the first major demonstration we have had to
cope with, but if people complain we're too strict, well, rather that than a
repeat of the devastation caused by the Seattle riots last November.'

Prague, a Communist citadel for four decades until 1989, has reverted to a
Soviet-era bunker mentality, closing more than 1,000 public schools and
running a three-month series of alarmist advertisements on television and in
the press, warning of the devastation which could hit the city this week.

Many of Prague's 1.2 million citizens have responded by deserting the city
but, keen to avoid a repetition of last year's much-criticised May Day riots
in Prague, police have agreed to work with 100 volunteer legal observers
stationed around the city who will report any violation of human rights. A
hotline has also been set up by Inpeg for protesters to report incidents of
abuse.

There are tentative signs that the week could pass off smoothly: a
right-wing dem-onstration against globalisation that many feared would act
as a catalyst for the latent violence lurking here passed off smoothly
yesterday, and police attendance was attentive but hands-off.

Even so, protesters are unlikely to find support among older Czechs, said
Danielle, 24, a member of the first free generation in the region for 50
years.

'There is practically no one in our parents' generation who has sympathy for
this demonstration,' she said. 'The government has emphasised again and
again over the past few months how awful it will be here during the
conference, but they have not explained the reason why we feel the need to
protest.'


Guardian 24.09.00


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