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----- Original Message -----
From: Miroslav Antic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2001 12:40 AM
Subject: Three shot in EU summit riots [WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]


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Friday, 15 June, 2001, 21:21 GMT 22:21 UK
Three shot in EU summit riots



Police had not anticipated the extent of the violence

Demonstrators have been battling heavily outnumbered police in violence in
Gothenburg, Sweden as European Union leaders meet for a summit.
Officers opened fire on demonstrators and wounded three of them, one of them
seriously.

Police said live rounds were used because rubber-coated bullets were not
available.




      This is a blatant disregard for democracy and unworthy of a society
such as ours

      Swedish Prime Minister Goran Persson
Police were forced to retreat before a crowd of roughly 1,500 protesters,
abandoning vehicles near the city's university - less than a mile from the
conference centre where the 15 EU leaders are meeting.

Swedish radio warned people to stay away from the city centre due to the
violence on a day when more than 600 people were detained during 12 hours of
rioting.

At a news conference, Swedish Justice Minister Thomas Bodstrom denied that
police had lost control of the situation, but he added that police
procedures would have to be reviewed.


Event moved

The severity of the demonstrations prompted police to relocate a planned
dinner for EU leaders.

Police decided the dinner, originally to be held at the elegant Tragar'n
restaurant in the city's Botanical Gardens, would instead be held in the
conference centre, which is guarded by hundreds of police.

Four delegations attending the summit were also asked to change hotels after
police said they could no longer guarantee their safety from protesters, a
spokesman for the Finnish delegation told AFP.

Anti-globalisation and anti-EU demonstrators have been fighting pitched
battles with police for two days.

On Friday shops were looted and buildings damaged some distance away from
the meeting, where EU leaders discussed ways of putting expansion plans back
on track after Irish voters rejected them.

Violence

The protesters, many wearing face masks, threw fireworks and stones at
police, who fought back with clubs.

Others were seen shattering shop windows, including a McDonald's restaurant
and a bank, and burning cafe furniture along streets littered with debris.

Some mounted policemen were thrown off their horses.



      Mayhem in the streets of Gothenburg

Local health authorities said 27 people were admitted to hospital with
slight to medium injuries, including at least nine police officers. Many
others got first aid on the scene.

Police sealed off a shopping mall in the centre of town after an object
suspected to be a bomb was found.

Demonstrators tried repeatedly to get close to the conference hall where the
15 EU leaders are meeting, and at one stage were reported to be less than a
mile away.

Swedish Prime Minister Goran Persson, whose country holds the rotating EU
presidency, said he was upset by what he called "this destructive
behaviour".

"This is a blatant disregard for democracy and unworthy of a society such as
ours," he added.

At least 440 people were arrested on Thursday after clashes during US
President George W Bush's meeting with EU leaders and police said more were
detained in the second day of riots.

Irish "no"

The Irish rejection of the Nice Treaty has shattered Sweden's hopes that it
might be able to end its EU presidency next month by announcing an entry
date for new members.



      I want to make it absolutely clear that, in my view, the 'no' vote
should not be interpreted as a vote against enlargement

      Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern
The treaty must be approved by the 15 member-states before the EU can expand
to include a dozen applicant countries from eastern Europe.

Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern asked EU leaders to grant his country "an
extended period of reflection" after last week's "no" vote.

"I want to make it absolutely clear that, in my view, the 'no' vote should
not be interpreted as a vote against enlargement," Mr Ahern told his EU
colleagues at the start of the summit.

      EU applicants - wave one
      Cyprus
      Czech Republic
      Estonia
      Hungary
      Poland
      Slovenia
All EU members are expected to approve the Nice Treaty before the end of
2002.

Ireland is the only country that requires a referendum to approve the EU
treaty, and EU leaders hope that the expansion plan will be ratified in a
second vote once Irish concerns about neutrality are allayed.

The EU entered membership negotiations with six countries in 1998 - the
so-called wave one, which includes Poland, Czech Republic, Slovenia,
Hungary, Estonia and Cyprus.

Although no date has been set for their entry, these countries could join
the European bloc by 2004.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/europe/newsid_1391000/1391007.stm

Miroslav Antic,
http://www.antic.org/




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