-Caveat Lector-

http://www.bankindex.com/read.asp?ID=1483

Charged under Mussolini-era subversion laws: Italy, Twenty anti- globalization 
activists
arrested in police sweeps

By Stefan Steinberg
21 November 2002
Less than a week after one of the biggest anti-war demonstrations in Europe since the 
end
of World War II, the Italian judiciary and police have conducted a large-scale 
operation
against anti-globalisation protesters.

In the early hours of November 15, police stormed houses and apartments in a number of
cities in southern Italy and arrested 20 representatives of anti- globalisation protest
movements. A total of 41 persons are subjects of investigations throughout Italy. They 
are
suspected of various offences, including violating article 270/270b of Italian law, 
breaches
of �democratic order� and conspiracy.

The mass demonstration against US war in Iraq took place on November 12 in the Italian
city of Florence. The demonstration, which was peaceful, came at the end of the first
meeting of the European Social Forum, a week of discussions and debates on the social
consequences of globalisation. Many of those arrested last week participated in and 
helped
organise the activities of the Forum and the mass demonstration.

Among those arrested are the two leading representatives of the southern Italian �no
global� network, Francesco Caruso and Giuseppe Fonzino. Thirteen of the arrested were
immediately held in custody in the high security Trani prison; the remaining seven are
under house arrest. Houses were also searched in a number of Italian cities.

The timing of the arrests, directly after the Forum and demonstration, make clear that 
the
Italian state is moving rapidly to suppress the mass movement emerging against war, as
well as seeking to neutralise critics of global capitalism and the government of Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

According to newspaper reports, the state prosecutor�s office in Cosenza had conducted 
a
one-and-a-half-year investigation leading to the arrests. This probe produced a 
360-page
file on the activities of the anti-globalisation protesters and included detailed 
surveys of
60,000 emails, the systematic surveillance of Internet sites, the shadowing of 
suspects, film
recordings and wiretaps.

Prosecutors are attempting to prove links between the �no-global� movement and other
anarchist movements that have been active in the so-called �Black Blocs,� which were a
source of provocations and violence in recent demonstrations at the Global Forum in 
Naples
and the 2001 G-8 summit in Genoa. In fact, recent investigations by independent legal
organisations and filmmakers have made it clear that police provocateurs and 
intelligence
agents were heavily active in infiltrating the Black Blocs.

The arrests sparked off immediate protests throughout the country. Several thousands
joined spontaneous street demonstrations last Friday in Rome and Milan calling for the
immediate release of those arrested. Further mass protests are planned this week in
southern Italy and the city of Naples where many of the arrests took place.

Last Friday also saw demonstrations and blockades by striking Fiat car workers 
organised
by the Italian trade union FIOM in collaboration with the �no global� network. 
According to
some newspaper commentaries, the arrests were also aimed at ensuring that protests and
disruptions by striking workers did not spill over into a more general movement 
directed
against the Italian government.

A lawyer representing Caruso, one of the accused, commented in a newspaper interview:
�The government is seeking to criminalise the movement precisely at a time when its
policies and forms of action are finding more and more support amongst ordinary people
and in the trade unions.�


Origins of article 270

The majority of charges levelled against the accused are based on article 270/270b of
Italian law, which was introduced and extensively used by the fascist regime of Benito
Mussolini to silence any opposition, and in particular communist opponents of his 
rule. Part
of the notorious Leggi di difesa, article 270 enables prosecution merely on the basis 
that,
according to the prosecutor, the accused were planning or conspiring to conduct 
activities
detrimental to the Italian government. Article 270 explicitly refers to the danger of 
groups
aiming to overthrow the economic order of Italy. Under Mussolini in the 1930s, mere
possession of a Communist leaflet was sufficient to ensure arrest, prosecution and
imprisonment.

The article stipulates that those found guilty (ringleaders) can be imprisoned for up 
to 12
years. Supporters of conspiracy can be locked up for three years. After the collapse of
Italian fascism at the end of the Second World War, article 270 was kept on the books,
even as Italian Communist Party leader Palmiro Togliatti became the first post-war 
Italian
justice minister. The government reworked the law following the terror attacks of
September 11 and has invoked it with increasing regularity against its political 
opponents
over the past few years.

The latest arrests are a clear warning of the sharp lurch to the right by the 
Berlusconi
government. At the same time, they expose the claims by leading members of the
opposition Olive Tree alliance and Democratic Left who claimed that after his election
Berlusconi would be forced to take into account post-war Italy�s democratic traditions 
and
moderate his policies. A number of social democrats and �post-communists� who claimed
that Berlusconi could be tamed also applauded the �restraint� of the Italian police and
judiciary following the peaceful demonstration of November 10.

Now Berlusconi has given his answer. The latest arrests make clear that his government 
is
prepared to move rapidly and employ the most extreme methods to strangle any potential
opposition to his government�including the use of fascist laws.

These latest arrests take place in the context of continuous assaults by the 
government on
democratic rights. Berlusconi has made no secret of his contempt for those aspects of
Italian law that he regards as obstacles to his drive for economic and political power.
Following the sentencing this week of former Italian prime minister Giulio Andreotti 
to 24
years imprisonment on charges of abetting the murder of a journalist, Berlusconi once
more lashed out at Italian courts and complained that �politically biased judges have
attempted to change the course of democratic politics and rewrite Italian history.�

CLICK BELOW FOR ADDITIONAL ARTICLES


Written by Stefan Steinberg of WSWS.ORG--Posted 11/21/2002

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