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[In scenes unseen in Austria since WWII, dissidents are being deported on 
trains out of the country!  After the shooting of protesters in Goetemberg, 
and the 200 body-bags prepared for this months Genoa Summit of the G8 
leaders, the deportation of 400 protesters on specially organized trains 
marks a new and ominous level of repression orchestrated by the neoliberal 
elites in the West. Of course, this as well as other crimes including murder, 
assassination, and terrorism of dissident activists has been a routine 
occurence in the global South in attempts to implement the globalization 
agenda.  Obviously the borderless world of the few is increasingly becoming a 
bordered world for the many (even in the West).]

In a message dated 02/07/01 11:58:01 Eastern Daylight Time, Kilibarda78 
writes:

<< Monday, 2 July, 2001, 13:40 GMT 14:40 UK 
 Salzburg expels protesters
 
 http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/europe/newsid_1418000/1418470.stm
 
 Protesters blamed police for escalating the situation
 
 Four hundred people have been removed from the Austrian city of Salzburg 
after violent clashes erupted between police and anti-globalisation 
protesters on Sunday. 
 Thirteen people were arrested following the protests and at least three 
police officers and one demonstrator were injured in the clashes. 
 
 Around 1,000 people are estimated to have descended on Salzburg to protest 
at the economic summit taking place there. 
 
 The police drafted in at least 4,000 reinforcements in anticipation of 
trouble after the EU summit in the Swedish city of Gothenburg was overwhelmed 
by protesters last month. 
 
 Police blamed 
 
 Authorities in Salzburg organised special trains late on Sunday to remove a 
hard core of 400 demonstrators from the city. 
 
 
 
 At least three police officers were injured
  
 They were taken to the capital, Vienna, and to Germany and Switzerland. 
 
 The protests began peacefully outside the train station on Sunday afternoon 
but violence broke out when a small group tried to enter the city centre 
where protests had been banned. 
 
 Demonstrators threw bottles, stones and bricks - police retaliated with 
batons. 
 
 The protesters accused the police of having escalated the situation, saying 
that they had not wanted the situation to turn violent.
 
 Salzburg's mayor, Heinz Schaden, negotiated between the two sides to defuse 
the situation. 
 
 The summit, organised by the World Economic Forum (WEF), is being attended 
by heads of state and government from some 15 countries, as well as 
government ministers and hundreds of business leaders. 
 
 European Commissioner for Enlargement Guenter Verheugen opened the summit on 
Sunday with a call to push ahead with plans to expand the European Union. 
   >>




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Monday, 2 July, 2001, 13:40 GMT 14:40 UK 
Salzburg expels protesters

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/europe/newsid_1418000/1418470.stm

Protesters blamed police for escalating the situation

Four hundred people have been removed from the Austrian city of Salzburg 
after violent clashes erupted between police and anti-globalisation 
protesters on Sunday. 
Thirteen people were arrested following the protests and at least three 
police officers and one demonstrator were injured in the clashes. 

Around 1,000 people are estimated to have descended on Salzburg to protest at 
the economic summit taking place there. 

The police drafted in at least 4,000 reinforcements in anticipation of 
trouble after the EU summit in the Swedish city of Gothenburg was overwhelmed 
by protesters last month. 

Police blamed 

Authorities in Salzburg organised special trains late on Sunday to remove a 
hard core of 400 demonstrators from the city. 



At least three police officers were injured
 
They were taken to the capital, Vienna, and to Germany and Switzerland. 

The protests began peacefully outside the train station on Sunday afternoon 
but violence broke out when a small group tried to enter the city centre 
where protests had been banned. 

Demonstrators threw bottles, stones and bricks - police retaliated with 
batons. 

The protesters accused the police of having escalated the situation, saying 
that they had not wanted the situation to turn violent.

Salzburg's mayor, Heinz Schaden, negotiated between the two sides to defuse 
the situation. 

The summit, organised by the World Economic Forum (WEF), is being attended by 
heads of state and government from some 15 countries, as well as government 
ministers and hundreds of business leaders. 

European Commissioner for Enlargement Guenter Verheugen opened the summit on 
Sunday with a call to push ahead with plans to expand the European Union. 
 


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