http://public.wsj.com/sn/y/SB995834389684194292.html

July 23, 2001 
Antiglobalization Activists Are Shifting
Focus to Multinational Corporations
By Yaroslav Trofimov and Helene Cooper 
Staff Reporters of The Wall Street Journal 
GENOA, Italy -- Businesses better brace themselves for some unwanted
attention.

Even as activists and police clashed during the weekend in the most
violent protests against globalization to date, demonstration organizers
are making plans to expand their targets beyond the big summit meetings
that have become a lightning rod for free-trade critics.

And multinational companies of all sizes are next on the hit list.

"We're not spending all of our time trying to influence legislators and
governments anymore," said Mike Brune, campaigns director for the
Rainforest Action Network, an environmental group that sent nonviolent
protesters to the meeting here of leaders from the seven major
industrialized nations and Russia.

"We're going after the root of the problem," Mr. Brune said. "Corporate
campaigns are the next frontier -- and definitely it's companies like
CitiGroup , Boise Cascade and Exxon that will be seeing this for sure."

Indeed, on Wednesday, demonstrators from 16 organizations plan to hit the
Itasca, Ill., headquarters of Boise Cascade Office Products, a unit of
Boise Cascade Corp., the paper and forest-products company. The protesters
say they will block traffic and shut down the company's front office to
register their disapproval of its logging of old-growth forests.

Another corporate target up for a "direct-action" hit is District of
Columbia General Hospital, where protesters are focusing on the Washington
facility's privatization. Formerly run as a municipal agency catering
primarily to the city's poor, D.C. General ran into financial problems and
its management was turned over to a private medical group this year.

"The movement will not settle for summit-hopping anymore," said John
Sellers, head of the Ruckus Society, which helped spearhead the 1999 World
Trade Organization protests in Seattle that helped launch the
antiglobalization movement.

By almost all counts, the Genoa conference, which drew close to 100,000
protesters and 15,000 police, was a seminal event. Violence erupted on
both sides in this Mediterranean port city: from a fringe of anarchists,
who threw Molotov cocktails into bank offices and set cars on fire, to the
police themselves, who beat protesters and even a few journalists. By
Sunday evening, the toll was the highest yet for a globalization protest:
one dead, 450 injured, tens of millions of dollars in damage and a large
part of the city devastated by riots.

Early Sunday, Italian police raided a school building housing activists
and arrested all 92 people inside. Afterward, the building was covered
with pools of blood and littered with smashed computers. Several reporters
at the school were hurt; one had his arm broken. Police said 61 of the
detainees had been wounded in riots that preceded the raid, but neighbors
described hours of beatings and screaming coming from the school during
the raid.

Speaking at a news conference at the end of the Group of Eight summit,
Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said anarchist members of the
"Black Block" -- a small roving band behind most of the weekend's violence
-- "apparently were hiding [in the school] and were helped by Genoa Social
Forum representatives" who were "colluding" with the rioters.

To justify the action, the police displayed "weapons" seized at the
school: Apart from two bottles filled with gasoline, the confiscated items
consisted of cellular telephones, swimming goggles, motorcycle helmets
and, mysteriously, tanning lotion, tissue and a packet of headache pills.
Police also displayed nails and hammers, but those were plentiful at a
construction site within the school.

The fatal shooting Friday of a 23-year-old man who apparently was throwing
a fire extinguisher at police may well have provided the movement with its
first martyr. But the violence in Genoa by more-radical protesters also
has distanced them from moderate organizations, prompting many to wonder
whether the traditional tactic of demonstrating at big international
gatherings hasn't become counterproductive.

"For people in the mainstream campaigns, it's change time," said Lucy
Matthew, spokeswoman for Drop the Debt, a British-based nongovernmental
organization that advocates forgiving part of Third World debts to the
World Bank and other lenders and bondholders in industrialized nations.
Adds Maria Grazia Francescato, leader of Italy's Green Party: "The
movement should rethink its entire strategy ... We can't be responsible
for devastating entire cities every time we hold a demonstration."

But the weekend's events in Genoa brought into sharper focus the expansion
plan that protest leaders have been working on: shifting to corporate
targets. Last month, hundreds of biotechnology opponents demonstrated in
San Diego outside of a biotech-industry convention.

To be sure, activists have targeted companies for years. For instance,
Greenpeace, the environmental group, has long waged a war against oil
companies.

But in the past, these efforts mostly have been episodic and
uncoordinated. Now, the globalization protesters have substantial numbers
on their side, and they say they want to turn the "juice" they have stoked
from previous summit protests toward specific corporate targets.

For the companies, getting hit can hurt. "It certainly is a harassment
campaign, and it's directed at our employees and our customers," said
Boise Cascade public-relations manager Michael Moser. In October, three
activists were arrested when they broke into Boise's corporate
headquarters in Boise, Idaho, to try to rappel off the roof.

Mr. Moser maintains that less than 3% of the wood used by the company is
old-growth, but he said that, nonetheless, Boise executives have met with
the activists three times during the past year.

Citigroup Inc. is another target. Activists upset with the
financial-services giant's investment policies follow around after company
executives marketing its credit cards on college campuses. Activists set
up booths next to the New York bank's booths, warning students away from
the cards.

"We're looking to reorient the financial-services industry to target
investments in sustainable agriculture," said Rainforest Action's Mr.
Brune. "Citigroup may not be cutting down the trees, but it's aiding in
the destruction."

Activists launched the campaign against Citigroup last year after the bank
refused their request to fund a conference for opponents of the bank.

"We are proud of our business record," a Citigroup spokeswoman said.

Write to Yaroslav Trofimov at [EMAIL PROTECTED] and Helene Cooper
at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 


Copyright � 2001 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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