POSTMARK PRAGUE No.321
Friday 29 September 2000

MORE ARRESTS AS IMF/WORLD BANK MEETING ENDS
The IMF/World Bank summit in Prague ended yesterday with the number
of 
arrested protesters rising to 858, more than 500 of them Czech. 

During the week, in addition to the 300 would-be protesters who were 
denied entry by the Czech Aliens' Police - many of them because they 
figured on a list of "undesirables" compiled by the Czech police,
with 
the help of the globalised FBI's Prague office and Interpol - a 
further 100 activists were deported. 

140 demonstrators were injured as a result of police violence, with a 
total of 10 police and 10 demonstrators hospitalised. The injured 
police were visited in hospital yesterday by the IMF's Director 
General, who congratulated them on their "courage and 
professionality". Czech president Vaclav Havel also visited a police 
detachment to commiserate with them.

Yesterday's issue of the American-owned weekly The Prague Post 
included a graphic account of police violence in Wenceslas Square on 
Tuesday evening, when police swept down the square from the National 
Museum, using dogs, tear gas and concussion grenades. "Demonstrators, 
restaurant patrons and bystanders ran to adjoining side streets in an 
attempt to escape the police, who grabbed and beat people as they
ran. 

"Bystanders caught in the crossfire were bewildered. 'I was just 
having a bloody coffee!' said one British tourist, as another round
of 
explosions startled the crowd into another sprint up Stepanska
Street.

"Police continued, shoulder to shoulder in a riot line, and the crowd 
slowed to a jog. The brief standoff ended when pedestrians realized 
that another line of police was approaching from the opposite 
direction, trapping the crowd between them.

"The police lines stood silently for several minutes, terrifying the 
crowd, many of whom darted into doorways and passages seeking refuge, 
After ordering the press to leave, the police closed in and began 
systematic ID-checks and arrests."
Those arrested include a number of tourists.

Yesterday's peaceful demonstration of solidarity with the 300 foreign 
protesters being held at Plzen, 90 kms west of Prague was attended by 
200 protesters. It was immediately banned by the police. Many of the 
demonstrators refused to disperse, claiming that they had received 
reports that the prisoners had been brutalised. They sat down in the 
roadway, whereupon they were removed by police in riot gear. Some of 
the demonstrators were arrested.

The Spanish consulate in Barcelona was occupied by demonstrators in 
solidarity with the Plzen prisoners. PP has also received reports of 
demonstrations of solidarity with the Prague protesters in Portland, 
Oregon (USA), where at least 20  people were arrested and several 
demonstrators and police hurt, and in Tel Aviv (Israel), where mainly 
young people from 30 organisations came together in the first ever 
such anti-IMF rally and march in the city. 

While the IMF/World Bank was able to claim that it had held its 
summit, attendance by delegates on Wednesday was restricted after the 
previous day's demonstrations. A gala reception planned for Tuesday 
evening was cancelled after 1,500 demonstrators blocked the entrance 
to the venue, the State Opera House. 

Ritual professions of concern about the world's poor were made by 
IMF/World Bank leaders. A World Bank spokesperson said that, as well 
as poverty,  the conference had discussed the Euro and oil price 
crises. She said she hoped the European Union would stop the practice 
of some of its member states in linking aid to lucrative commercial 
contacts. The World Bank had committed itself to halving the number
of 
the world's poor by the year 2015, and the number of countries
getting 
debt relief would be extended from 10 to 20. 

The Czech Republic's Communist Party, the KSCM, which distanced
itself 
from the protests because of its fear of a right-wing backlash in 
Senate and regional council elections in November, has promised to 
"evaluate" the conference and protests at tomorrow's festival of its 
daily paper, Halo noviny.
END

EDITORS! Please note that the October issue of the 16-page
illustrated 
Postmark Prague news review will include reports of this week's 
events. Your readers can get a free copy by writing to PP, OPO Box
42, 
182 21 Prague 8, Czech Republic, or by e-mailing 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]






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