Wall Street Journal - August 6, 2001

G-8 Protesters Say They Were Beaten,
Deprived of Rights by Police in Italy

By YAROSLAV TROFIMOV and IAN JOHNSON
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Just before midnight on July 21, Miriam Heigl, a political-science 
student from Munich, was figuring out a way to get home after three 
days protesting the Group of Eight summit in the Italian city of 
Genoa.

As she scanned train schedules posted in the Armando Diaz school 
complex, some 70 members of an Italian SWAT team smashed through the 
front door, wielding truncheons and shields, their faces covered with 
blue and red handkerchiefs. Ms. Heigl and about 30 others were 
arrested and taken to a police barracks, where the 25-year-old says 
she was made to strip, humiliated and deprived of basic civil 
liberties.

Hospital records show that 61 others in the school fared worse -- 
they ended up requiring treatment for injuries. "All I remember is 
being hit on the head with a truncheon right away," says Melanie 
Jonasch, a 28-year-old archeology student from Berlin, "and then I 
woke up here" -- in a Genoese hospital, where she has had surgery for 
a broken mastoid bone behind her left ear.

To millions world-wide, the Genoa G-8 summit two weeks ago will be 
remembered as the most violent in a series of international protests 
against "globalization," a rallying cry first popularized during 
clashes at a 1999 trade meeting in Seattle. As the leaders of eight 
leading industrialized countries met in Italy, TV viewers around the 
world watched police fight citywide battles with anarchist militants 
who set dozens of cars, banks and storefronts afire.

But out of the TV cameras' gaze, another scene of violence was 
unfolding -- on the part of the police. Now, as details of the school 
raid emerge sketchily, it is turning into a political crisis for the 
government of Silvio Berlusconi, the pro-American media mogul who ran 
on a law-and-order platform.

Initially, his government firmly defended police behavior. Mr. 
Berlusconi said the school raid simply proved "collusion" between the 
anarchists and mainstream demonstrators. Communications Minister 
Maurizio Gasparri said it was "a detail" whether "a cop used his 
truncheon four times instead of just three." The police, in a report 
a few hours after the raid, said that the school was a "refuge of the 
extreme fringe of the Black Block," and all those inside were members 
of that violent, anarchist group.

More recently, however, the government said something may have gone 
wrong. The judiciary has launched an inquiry into the use of violence 
during the raid and the treatment of those detained. Parliament has 
formed a separate commission of inquiry. Interior Minister Claudio 
Scajola promised last Wednesday that "if some untoward behavior will 
emerge, and it looks like it is emerging, then it will be severely 
reprimanded." Shortly thereafter, he removed three top police 
officials, saying this would make it easier to investigate.

Part of the pressure on the government is coming from abroad, 
especially Germany. After first helping gather information on 39 
Germans arrested in the sweep at Diaz, Berlin is calling for a fuller 
accounting. German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer delivered that 
demand to his Italian counterpart in a telephone call last week.

The official inquiries are just beginning, but interviews with 
numerous participants and witnesses offer the most complete account 
yet of the events at the Diaz school. The accounts of 19 Diaz 
detainees, who were interviewed in five countries, and those of 
doctors, local officials and neighborhood witnesses indicate that 
heavy force was used to arrest demonstrators who, for the most part, 
hadn't been organizing the preceding days' violence but had been 
peacefully protesting. After being denied contact with lawyers and 
families for anywhere from one to four days, most of the people 
detained at Diaz were brought before judges, who released all but one 
and found that the overwhelming majority of the arrests were 
"illegitimate."

A complete response from the police wasn't possible because the raid 
is under investigation. In an interview, Francesco Gratteri, head of 
the national police Central Operative Service, partly defended the 
raid. "One must take into account that the raid was very energetic 
because it was met with an equally energetic resistance," said Mr. 
Gratteri, who stood in the school's courtyard when the police charged 
in. But he added that "evidently something abnormal happened there, 
which is why there is an investigation."

For Ms. Heigl, the events began around 11 p.m. on Saturday, July 21. 
She and her boyfriend, Tobias Hubner, were heading over to the 
Pertini middle school, part of a group of junior and senior high 
schools known as the Diaz school complex.

Ms. Heigl was feeling a sense of relief. On Friday, a militant had 
been shot dead by police. On Saturday afternoon, tear gas had been 
used to disperse a crowd estimated by the interior ministry at 
200,000. As rumors circulated that the police would raid places where 
the demonstrators camped, such as the stadium where she and Mr. 
Hubner had been sleeping, they decided they wanted a safer place. 
They headed for the school, also open to the demonstrators, because 
it was just across the street from the headquarters and press center 
for the mainstream organizers.

Eager to Get Home

Back in Munich, Ms. Heigl had been engaged in fighting radical 
right-wing groups and won a prestigious national award for her work. 
But this was the first big demonstration she had attended, and she 
was exhausted from the crowds and flood of information. "Everyone was 
unsettled and we just wanted to get home," Ms. Heigl says.

After checking train schedules near a computer area on the ground 
floor, she and Mr. Hubner walked upstairs to visit a friend. 
Suddenly, panic broke loose. From downstairs she heard cries of 
"Police! Police!" as the front door crashed open. Then she heard 
screams and the sounds of police yelling and smashing things. "We had 
total fear," she says.

Panicked, she and her boyfriend looked for an escape. The school was 
under renovation, and scaffolding lined the outer walls. They climbed 
onto it and waited.

Downstairs at the computers, Ms. Jonasch stayed put, figuring that 
her fluency in Italian would help her explain that she wasn't a 
violent militant. She says she had been working as a volunteer at the 
headquarters and hadn't been out to the protests. But she says a 
group of riot police wearing helmets and body armor charged around 
the corner, truncheons flying. She says that besides the initial blow 
to her head, which knocked her out, she was hit on the shoulder and 
buttocks.

The hospital that treated her received dozens of similar cases. Among 
patients still there last week was Daniel Albrecht, a 21-year-old 
cello student from Berlin, who has undergone brain surgery to treat 
cerebral bleeding and says he hears metallic sounds when he speaks.

Another patient was Lena Zuhlke, a 24-year-old student of Indian 
culture at the University of Hamburg, who says she was beaten, thrown 
down two flights of stairs and dragged by the hair. "I didn't see any 
faces. Throughout all this, I couldn't see anything at all above the 
knees," says Ms. Zuhlke, her hand on a jar attached to her chest to 
catch fluid draining from her lungs.

Police, while asserting that all those inside the school were 
anarchist militants, also have said that any protesters who were 
hospitalized were extremists injured during earlier street battles. 
That's an explanation that doctors say doesn't mesh with the cases 
they saw. "There is no doubt that these wounds were fresh. We had to 
sew up many of them on the spot," says Roberto Papparo, head of the 
emergency department at Ospedale San Martino, Genoa's biggest 
hospital. It dealt with more than 50 injured youths from the Diaz 
school shortly after the raid, Dr. Papparo says, adding: "If these 
people weren't brought to the hospital, there is no doubt that some 
of them wouldn't be alive anymore."

A visit to the school several hours after the raid showed pools of 
blood on the floor and walls and several teeth strewn around.

Apart from a handful who escaped, all the demonstrators at Diaz who 
weren't hospitalized -- 32 people -- were rounded up. Ms. Heigl says 
that after she heard the screaming and saw police beating students 
unconscious, she and Mr. Hubner feared they would be in worse danger 
if caught clinging to scaffolding. They climbed into the room, knelt 
on the floor and put their hands on their heads. That didn't prevent 
Mr. Hubner from receiving a few blows to the back and head with a 
truncheon, and a dozen others interviewed say they too were hit while 
in a submissive position.

Ms. Heigl says she wasn't hit. She was taken to the Bolzaneto police 
barracks, which had been turned into a holding center for the G-8 
summit. Situated inside a vast park-like complex of the national 
police VI Mobile Division, the center had a series of unfurnished 
cells that could hold 20 to 30 people each.

Detainees say they had to stand spread-eagle against the wall for two 
to three hours. They add that police walked up and down the line, 
beating those whose hands slipped and whose heads weren't bent down. 
"They kept cursing us and calling us names that I couldn't 
understand," Ms. Heigl says.

The man next to Ms. Heigl was pulled from the wall and sprayed 
directly in the face with tear gas, say Ms. Heigl and a protester 
interviewed separately. He collapsed and was dragged away to be 
showered. He came back later, shivering, saying he had been stripped 
naked and left under the water for half an hour. The group was then 
sent to their cells, and the man had nothing to clothe himself with 
except a plastic shower curtain, according to Ms. Heigl and the other 
person, who both say they received just one cookie each to eat on 
Sunday. At night, they say, they slept on a concrete floor and had 
just three blankets for 30 or so people.

"We had this feeling that everything was completely arbitrary and 
that they had lost their minds," Ms. Heigl says. "But now I see that 
it was all done extremely professionally. They wanted to disorient us 
and break us, as though they were dealing with a gang of hardened 
terrorists."

The prisoners were registered on Monday, and their numbers at 
Bolzaneto police barracks grew as many initially hospitalized were 
sent over. Among them was Sherman Sparks, a 23-year-old from Oregon 
spending a year in Europe. He said in a sworn affidavit that he had 
been kicked in the head and groin during the raid.

He, too, said he had to stand spread-eagle for two hours. He said in 
his affidavit, which he sent to the U.S. Consulate in Milan, that 
people standing next to him had broken arms and legs and that one man 
collapsed, shaking uncontrollably. That incident is related by others 
as well. WhenMr. Sparks couldn't understand commands in Italian, his 
affidavit alleges, he was slapped or beaten or his head was rammed 
into the wall.

Detainees held in different cells and not known to each other paint a 
common picture of the one to three days they spent in the detention 
center: Strip searches were common. Men and women alike were forced 
to use the toilet with police officers, usually men, in attendance. 
Women were denied sanitary napkins, and requests for medical 
attention were often refused. Roll calls went on day and night. 
Detainees were asked to sign documents in Italian that they couldn't 
understand and then sent back to the cell. Some signed, while others 
refused. Phone calls and contact with attorneys weren't permitted.

A Little Better

Relief for Ms. Heigl came on Tuesday, July 24, when she was one of 
the last to be transferred to a normal prison. Before leaving, she 
says, she was ordered to strip naked again while a man in a blue polo 
shirt inspected her. Some others say the same thing happened to them. 
Then they were allowed to dress and eyeglasses taken from some 
detainees were returned. But rings, earrings and money that had been 
confiscated were not returned, Ms. Heigl and some other detainees 
assert.

Many detainees say they felt relieved when they got to the regular 
prison. There, they had cots with sheets, and three meals a day. Ms. 
Heigl received a message from her parents.

They had been contacted by German authorities one day after the raid. 
Her father, Wunibald Heigl, a high-school history teacher in Munich, 
says the German authorities hadn't called to provide help but to find 
out as much as possible about his daughter. "We called the German 
consulate in Milan and were coldly told that everything was going 
according to procedures," Mr. Heigl says. The German foreign ministry 
had no comment on the raid, saying it was a subject of bilateral 
talks.

Detainees say they were given consular access for the first time on 
Wednesday or Thursday, except for U.S. citizens, whose diplomats 
visited them hours after the school raid. The detainees were also 
taken before judges but not allowed to speak to an attorney 
beforehand.

All were charged with "aggravated resistance to arrest" and 
"membership in an armed conspiracy to cause destruction." The raid 
confirmed this membership, the police say. According to their report, 
youths inside tried to block the entry gate and "engaged in scuffles" 
with the agents. One allegedly tried to stab a policeman. At a news 
conference, police displayed a small knife and a half-pierced 
protective jacket but couldn't name the attacker.

Many protesters interviewed agree that some Black Block militants may 
have been hiding inside the school. But they say that if present, 
these militants were a minority and didn't advertise their 
affiliation.

Possible Motive

Local government officials say the center of the Black Block was 
elsewhere. According to Marta Vincenzi, governor of the Genoa 
province, 200 to 300 militants had kicked nonviolent demonstrators 
out of a province-owned gym next to the Martin Luther King High 
School in theevening of July 19, breaking school furniture inside to 
fashion weapons. Ms. Vincenzi and other provincial officials say they 
repeatedly called police with requests to intervene, to no avail. Ms. 
Vincenzi theorizes that in their raid at Diaz, "police tried to 
offset their initial excess of tolerance with an excess of vendetta" 
at the school.

Material seized in the raid suggests the police missed their mark. 
The police report said the school "was a place dedicated to the 
strategic planning and material manufacturing, by all persons present 
inside, of instruments to attack police forces." The chief evidence 
was two wine bottles filled with flammable liquid plus hammers and 
nails taken from the construction site on school premises. In 
addition, the police say they confiscated 17 cameras, 13 swimming 
goggles, 10 Swiss army knives, four spent tear-gas shells, three 
cellular phones, two thermos bottles and a bottle of suntan lotion. 
The charges were presented to a team of judges who decided to free 
all but one detainee.

Ms. Heigl was released on Wednesday evening. The police initially 
decreed that she and the other 77 foreign detainees would be expelled 
from Italy and barred for five years, but Italy later said the ban 
didn't apply to EU citizens. Ms. Heigl's parents, who had driven to 
Genoa to find their daughter, followed the police truck that carried 
her and about 30 others to the Austrian border. There, those released 
were put on a train to Munich.

Ms. Heigl now will resume work on her master's degree. Earlier this 
year, she visited Peru to collect material for a thesis on the 
collapse of democracy under Alberto Fujimori. She says her experience 
in Genoa has given her a new appreciation of the fragility of civil 
liberties: "I realize now I didn't have to go all the way to Peru to 
do my studies."

-- Alessandra Pugliese contributed to this article.

Tom Walker
Bowen Island, BC
604 947 2213

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