Riots
threaten Prague autumn
Scotland Yard
and FBI called in as fears grow of huge anti-capitalist protests at IMF
summit in Czech capital
Nick Hopkins
and Kate Connolly in Prague
Thursday
August 24, 2000
Scotland Yard
has sent a team of officers to Prague ahead of next month's IMF and World
Bank annual summit amid fears of violent anti-capitalist demonstrations
by up to 50,000 protesters, including many of those involved in the May
Day riots in London.
Special Branch has
been liaising with its counterpart in the Czech Republic and four officers
from Scotland Yard's public order unit, led by Chief Supt Steve French,
flew to the capital last week for two days of talks with police chiefs.
Files and photographs
of demonstrators who incited the trouble in London have been offered to
the Czech authorities, as well as intelligence on potential troublemakers.
Although the Czechs
have insisted that they are confident of coordinating the security operation
and are sensitive about asking for outside help, the republic has turned
to Britain and the United States for advice because of fears the Prague
demonstrations could be the worst so far.
Earlier this year
24 senior Czech officers were sent to the FBI's headquarters in Washington
for training. Three months ago the agency's director, Louis Freeh, went
to Prague to discuss contingency plans if violence flares. The Czechs have
also been working with Interpol in the hope of identifying protesters from
Germany, Poland and Scandinavia.
Concern has been
mounting because of the way anti-globalisation campaigners have disrupted
major conferences in recent years.
There were riots
at last November's World Trade Organisation summit in Seattle, and at an
IMF/World Bank meeting in Washington last April.
Even though the
Metropolitan police cancelled all leave for the May Day protests and swamped
the capital with thousands of officers and undercover "spotters",
demonstrators managed to dig up the grassy area of Parliament Square, daub
paint and graffiti on monuments, including the Cenotaph and a statue of Sir
Winston Churchill. More than 100 people were charged.
The delegation from
Scotland Yard, which included a specialist in media management, flew to
Prague last week.
"We went over to
help them, though officially Prague did not ask for our assistance. We
wanted to share our experiences and our information," said a Scotland Yard
source.
The British embassy
in Prague yesterday also confirmed that there had been "contact" between
senior detectives in both countries.
The Foreign Office
is advising Britons against holiday and non-essential travel to Prague
between September 23 and September 28. The US state department has also
advised Americans not to visit the city at the end of September.
Although the Czech
interior ministry has told Prague's residents to "relax and put your faith
in the authorities", the build-up to the summit has convinced many that
violence in inevitable.
Eleven thousand police
have been assigned to the event and 5,000 soldiers will be on standby.
The health ministry
has warned Prague's four main hospitals to prepare for the worst. They
are taking on extra staff and will be stocked with drugs to combat biological
and chemical attacks.
Keeping wounded delegates
and protesters apart is another practical concern.
"If you have the
delegates in one room and the protesters in another, they could fight in
the corridor," warned a doctor at the Kralovske Vinohrady Teaching Hospital,
which has set aside three luxury bedrooms for high profile financiers.
Fast food restaurants
have already ordered replacement panes of glass, knowing they are likely
to be targeted.
Managers of the
supermarket chain, Tesco, which has a large branch in the centre of Prague,
say they are considering closing during the summit.
Schools and theatres
in the centre of the capital have been ordered to close and Prague residents
have been advised it may be wise to leave the capital or stock up on medicines
and food and stay at home.
Tabloid newspapers
have added to the growing alarm by telling people to barricade their doors
and windows against the "barbarian protesters."
Around 800 safety
vests are to be handed out to journalists covering the summit, which is
due to be attended by 23,000 delegates and politicians.
Scores of British
protesters have already moved to Prague and hundreds more are expected
to arrive in the next fortnight.
In the recent
demonstrations in Britain and the US, police were accused of underestimating
the resourcefulness and determination of the demonstrators and of showing
little understanding of the loose-knit groupings suspected of masterminding
the violence.
Most police attention has
focused on a coalition of Czech environmental, human rights and anarchist
groups, called Inpeg, Initiative Against Economic Globalisation, which plans a
counter summit at the same time as the financial meeting. But Inpeg has
described the police's plans as "hysterical" and insist it is preparing
"non-violent activist training."
With growing trepidation,
the police have also been monitoring the numerous websites that have sprung up
in recent weeks urging protesters to head for Prague. One of the websites,
called DestroyIMF, urges participation in S26 - the demonstrators' nickname
for the event.
"We're going to Prague to
make the IMF summit in September 2000 into Seattle II. The IMF summit will be
protected by a Czech police operation run by the FBI. The challenge to the
workers' movement is to shutdown that summit with the biggest demo Europe has
ever seen."
It adds: "We don't just
want to disrupt their summits - we want to scrap the profit system that allows
institutions like the World Bank, the IMF and WTO to rule the world and the
former Stalinist countries. We want to end debt, poverty and capitalist
exploitation. This site is a protest portal." Protesters have been advised of
the Czech for useful phrases such as "You fascist pig" and "Where is the
nearest McDonalds?"
Police are also worried that
protesters will target a new nuclear power plant in Bohemia which is due to be
activated around the time of the IMF conference.
The Czech president, Vaclev
Havel, has tried to downplay concern, criticising the coverage given to
security arrangements. He said: "It is as if we were getting ready for a civil
war."
A world of protest against the
global economy
June 18
1999 Demonstrations were held in 27 cities worldwide, from the Czech
Republic to Nigeria, in what was dubbed the "global carnival against
capital".
In the City of London, the 3,000-strong peaceful protest turned into
the worst riots seen in the capital since the poll tax demonstration of 1990,
resulting in 46 people needing hospital treatment and an estimated bill of
more than £5m.
November 30 1999
The biggest protest in the US since the Vietnam war took place on the
streets of Seattle, where the World Trade Organisation was
meeting.
An estimated 100,000 people protested peacefully until masked
activists hijacked the demonstration and police in full riot gear responded
with teargas and rubber pellets.
A smaller protest of 2,000
people at Euston station in London led to 40 arrests.
April 16-17
2000
Anti-globalisation protesters descended on Washington to disrupt
meetings of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. Between 6,000 and
10,000 people managed to close the American capital for six hours and the
human chain prevented some finance ministers from getting to their
meetings.
Largely peaceful but violent clashes with police officers - many in
riot gear, which had them being compared to Power Rangers - resulted in 600
arrests.
May 1 2000 May Day protests took place
around the world. In London, where 4,000 people took to the streets, activists
performed "guerrilla gardening" in Parliament Square and daubed paint and
graffiti on monuments. What had been planned as peaceful protests ended in
ugly scenes and 42 arrests.
August 15 2000
Rubber bullets were
fired by police in Los Angeles at the end of a protest concert by the band
Rage Against the Machine. A total of 39 people were arrested in four days in a
series of protests against corporate greed.
Sally James
Gregory
Links
IMF/World
Bank programme of seminars in Prague
Bankwatch: information on Prague events
Special report: May 2K
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