-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the March 6, 2003
issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

FROM DISSENT TO RESISTANCE: EUROPEAN WORKERS BLOCK 
BASES AND "DEATH TRAINS"

By John Catalinotto

Railroad workers and anti-globalization "disobeddienti" have joined 
together in northern Italy to block the moving of U.S. tanks and trucks 
to be used against Iraq.

On Feb. 21 thousands of railroad workers who were demonstrating in 
Padova against layoffs also raised anti-war slogans. Word arrived that a 
train loaded with military materiel was traveling from nearby Camp 
Ederle, the site of weekly protests, to Camp Darby, near Pisa. Rail road 
workers had blocked its path near the town of Monselice.

By the time national police removed those blocking the train, word had 
also reached the anti-globalization movement. Further down the line near 
Padova, other groups blocked the tracks. They set off flares to stop the 
train for about two hours.

Meanwhile, more demonstrators were gathering further south, threatening 
to camp out on the railroad tracks to stop the "death train." Anti-
globalization organizers said people were ready to struggle in Ferrara, 
Bologna and even in Tuscany further south.

Confronted by the workers, executives admitted this train was only the 
first of at least 26 that would be carrying "tactical arms" to Turkey. 
The anti-war movement in Italy says Premier Silvio Berlusconi's turning 
over Italy's infrastructure to the U.S. war machine is a crime and must 
be stopped.

Union workers and anti-war activists notified the railroad bosses that 
their actions were only the first in a series to "stop the global war." 
Roberto Martelli, the railway union secretary general in Tus cany, said: 
"The traditions of the railroad workers and their union are based on the 
principle of peace. Our members have no intentions to offer their 
services to the war."

Dock workers at Livorno are also refusing to unload military transport 
ships.

INSPECTING FRANKFORT'S AIRPORT

On Feb. 22 at the military section of the Rhine-Main airport in Germany, 
demonstrators dressed as weapons inspectors and labeled "Hans Blix" and 
"Mohamed El Baradei" led 3,000 others trying to get through police and 
guards to look for U.S. weapons of mass destruction. Militant 
demonstrators got through to the tarmac, where they blockaded the base 
for three hours.

In Britain on Feb. 20, four anti-war activists used their bodies to 
block the runway of the Brize Norton base, from which British troops are 
being flown to the Persian Gulf.

On Feb. 23, some 450 people took part in a march on the Fairford base of 
Britain's Royal Air Force. A dozen breached the main gate before they 
were apprehended and arrested. Fairford was a point of departure for 
U.S. B-52 bombers during the 1991 Gulf war and 1999 assault on 
Yugoslavia.

- END -

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