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----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <undisclosed-recipients:;>
Sent: Monday, April 30, 2001 11:41 AM
Subject: [mobilize-globally] Lodon cops will fire rubber bullets to the May Day
protesters!


Police may fire rubber bullets at London rioters

By Paul Majendie


LONDON, April 30 (Reuters) - Police may fire rubber bullets if anarchists run
amok in May Day protests, the chairman of London's police authority warned on
Monday.

With 10,000 demonstrators set to descend on London, police have mounted one
of the biggest security operations ever seen in the British capital and vowed
to show "zero tolerance" towards rioters who cause mayhem on Tuesday.

Rubber bullets were used to quell riots in Northern Ireland's 30 years of
sectarian strife but have never been employed by police on the British
mainland who are not normally armed.

Lord Harris, chairman of the Metropolitan Police authority, warned on Monday:
"In extreme circumstances the police have that power."

But he did tell BBC Radio: "It would only be under the most dire
circumstances where it was thought perhaps that lives were at risk."

Asked if the threat to use rubber bullets might be a "red rag" that heightens
tension, he said: "It is a warning to people that the police are taking this
extremely seriously."

The anarchists, who plan a string of demonstrations across London that could
turn into potential flashpoints, accused the police of over-reacting.

Mark, a spokesman for the group "Reclaim The Streets," said the protesters
will not get fair treatment. "No doubt they are going to feel scared and
intimidated," he told BBC Radio.

"The police have been brainwashed up to think there is going to be loads of
violent anarchists -- as they put it -- causing widespread trouble and
disruption. It is a complete fabrication and untruth. "The only antagonism
there is likely to be is from the police," he added.

Police are taking a much tougher line than last year, when they were accused
of doing too little too late while vandals daubed the city's Cenotaph war
memorial with graffiti and dug up the grass on Parliament Square.

The statue of wartime leader Winston Churchill has already been boarded up to
ensure it is not attacked again. Shopkeepers have been given security advice
in Oxford Street, the shopping heart of the capital which protesters are
expected to target.

All police leave has been cancelled and more than 6,000 officers are being
deployed across London, which could also be hit by a series of threatened
hoax bomb calls designed to stretch their resources to the limit.

Security has been boosted at banks, City of London institutions and
commercial chains such as McDonald's that could be potential targets.

Metropolitan Assistant Police Commissioner Michael Todd said: "We will be
highly visible on the streets of London and anyone committing a crime will be
held to account. I am absolutely clear about that."

06:11 04-30-01


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