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Death And Terror In Genoa

Ramor Ryan provides a more detailed and poetic account of the days of Genoa: "


Death And Terror In Genoa

by Ramor Ryan


The Siege of Genoa


The walls went up around the old quarter of Genoa, enclosing the Group of 8 (G8) and their cohorts. Huge heavy walls of concrete and metal, like medieval fortifications or prison fences; walls to keep the people out, the world leaders penned in. Genoa is a beautiful renaissance city carved out of a treacherous mountain slope that seems as if it might slide irrevocably into the sea. Its pulsating streets, the mystery of its dense labyrinth and the expansive calm of the sea front are a surreal theater for the battle that would consume it.


Leading up to the summit, the authorities closed down the airport, main
railway stations and severely restricted access by road. Aside from the
center of town (the red zone,) which was completely forbidden to citizens, the surrounding area (the yellow zone) was also restricted with people enduring random stop and searches. Local people fled the town in droves, and most businesses closed for the duration of the summit. The G8 had transformed Genoa from a thriving commercial and tourist metropolis to a war zone under a form of martial law.


As if to justify the extraordinary security measures, the media reported various bomb scares and explosive finds, all of which protesters viewed skeptically. No groups present claimed responsibility, and these are not
tactics used by the alternative globalization movement. The Italian military brought in an array of defensive missiles.  War ships were stationed in the bay. A state of paranoid terror was created to dissuade protesters from coming, and to criminalize those who did.


No Borders!


On the Austrian border, activists from the group No Borders were attacked; one woman lost 5 teeth. A boat full of protesters from Greece was held and the passengers attacked by riot police. Several hundred British protesters traveling by train were detained in France and a group of cyclists were held at the German border. Seventy migrants traveling from Germany to attend the Migrants March on the Thursday prior top the G8 Summit were refused entry into Italy. People disembarking at airports in Milan and Turin were subjected to interrogation and searches. Cars were routinely pulled over and
the occupants detained. Nevertheless, tens of thousands of outsiders would make it to Genoa and more than 200,000 demonstrators attended the final manifestation.


The Genoa Social Forum


The logistical setup for the protesters centered around the Genoa Social Forum (GSF), the organizing body representing over 800 diverse groups advocating for an alternative to the current corporate globalization. Their slogan was A Different World Is Possible.  They pointed out that the movement was not anti-globalization, but an alternative vision of globalization, one that does not put profits before people, free trade before free movement; a movement that seeks to eliminate the gap between rich and poor, the powerful and the powerless. In a word, to democratize the process of globalization.


The GSF was based in a huge parking lot on the sea front. From this
Convergence Center, people were dispatched to camping in various stadiums and parks across the city, loosely based on group affiliation. A thriving Indymedia Center was located nearby.  There were legal, medical and administrative centers demonstrating how the movement organizes itself, autonomously. Cafe Clandestino provided free food and drink, while Manu Chao played a free late night concert before 25,000 ecstatic revelers the night before the summit began. A message from Sub-Commandante Marcos was boomed over the PA. How can one town hold so many Che Guevara t-shirts, Zapatista paliacates, Palestinian scarves?! The international connection, bridges between 1st and 3rd worlds,
North and South, were everywhere to be seen, not just in the presence of Kurdish, African, Japanese or Indian delegates, but also with Europeans who bring their foreign experiences home.


Ya Basta!  Enough!


The paramilitary police raided the camping centers at dawn on the 20th, even before the summit began.  From the start it was clear: heavy repression would be used to stifle protestwith an iron fist. At the Carlini Stadium, temporary home to the strong Ya Basta! faction, the loudspeakers woke us at 5:30 am.  "The police have surrounded us, everybody defend the gates!"


Outside, lines of heavily armed paramilitary police stood ready. They
demanded to enter to search for arms and explosives.  Ya Basta! is a
non-violent direct action organization. "To show we have nothing to hide" and to diffuse the situation, the central committee allowed a delegation of cops in to search the premises. Many people were furious to have to submit to this search, but the Ya Basta leaders prevailed. From early on, a split was emerging within the protesters ranks between those who wished to resist the repression, and those who wanted to avoid confrontation. All around the city campsites are raided, causing distress, confusion, fear, and depriving people of sleep.  Meanwhile houses of activists preparing to go to Genoa are raided in other cities; doors are kicked down, people detained.
Five Germans are arrested while driving in a car close to the red zone.


The first mobilization takes place on Thursday 19 July. About 50,000 people gather for a Migrants March. The day is warm and sunny and the streets throng with a peaceful, high-spirited multitude. There are no cops in sight, an the mood is light. The first demand- open the borders to people as well as goods. We are not against globalization, but against globalization that criminalizes and marginalizes migrants. Are the G8 listening?  Do they care?
At least it is reported that they are shifting their agenda to talk about debt relief (for people who never themselves borrowed the money which invariably benefits those nearest to the top of the pyramid) and an Aids fund for Africa ($10 billion is requested, $1 billion is agreed upon.)  The media is chocabloc full of street stories, scare stories, spectacular images, all fueling the tension. The stage is set: The New World Order, the Global Empire, protected by 20,000 police
and military,  besieged by the new Global protest movement. Graffiti appears on the walls. They make misery, we make history.


Friday 20 July. Storming the Gates of Heaven.


A day of civil disobedience. The aim, to shut down the G8 by attempting  to breach the fortifications enclosing the summit from a variety of positions.
The tactics, direct action. The first task, to break through the myriad
fortified police lines.  The strongest contingent was the Ya Basta! grouping, numbering more than 10,000 militants known for their successful tactic of wearing layers of protective padding, helmets and using plastic shields to push through police lines. Some wore gas masks. Preparations began with talks followed by training sessions. Resembling an army preparing for war, men and women, predominantly young and Italian, spent all morning taping up their fragile bodies with foam and padding. The atmosphere was tense, the mood defiant. It really seemed anything was possible. There was an ecstatic mood of celebration when we finally set off on the 4 km march to the city
center. An endless sea of bopping helmets interspersed with a vast array of flags of every hue and color.  At the front by a long line of Ya Basta! militants pressed forward behind a wall of plastic shields.  News filtered through from around the city. Bad news. The Italian Trade Union group COBAS had been beaten badly before they had even gotten close to their target.


In another part of the city, the Pink Block, a theatrical and prankster
group of several thousands had also suffered heavy repression. A Women's Non-violent block had been attacked from the air by tear-gas firing helicopters. A strong section of Anarchists and Autonomists had come close to the Red Zone but were now being brutally dispersed. The Police were making pre-emptive strikes with tear gas and batons on every block. Only one of the roaming Black Bloc groups was not getting pounded, as they engaged in property destruction aimed at banks and multinational businesses. The And some good news: one elderly man had, remarkably, penetrated the Red-Zone . Despite all the ominous reports, we swept down the wide boulevard confidently-we were so many! Like an unstoppable river! So many people prepared to use their bodies to break through, to defend themselves, to struggle.  El Pueblo Unido, Jamas Sera Vencido they chanted. Genova Libera! E-Z-L-N! Rage Against The Machine blasted from the mobile P.A. as Fuck You I Wont Do What You Tell Me! was screamed along with by thousands. It was momentarily powerful and wonderful.


Two kilometers from the Red Zone, the police attacked us. First a frantic barrage of tear-gas canisters are lobbed over the front lines, deep into the heart of the demonstration. Nobody here had gas masks. The poisonous gas first blinds you, painfully, then disorientates you. It is immediate and devastating. The people, packed in tightly, panicked and surged backwards. The chaos was manic. 500 heavily armed Riot squad stormed the front lines. In brutal scenes, the Ya Basta! militants crumbled despite brave resistance. All were battered.  People screamed, turned, fled, falling over each other.


We retreated up the road. The sky was heavy with gas, helicopters hovered overhead. A water cannon blasted away, throwing bodies around like paper bags.  What now?  People looked to the Ya Basta! leadership in all this horrible disarray but there was no Plan B. Silence from the microphone that had being commanding us to follow their directions during the whole march. People retreated further and further, eventually sitting down. The Ya Basta! leaders told people to hold this space, this nowhere space 2 km outside the city center signifying nothing. Meanwhile the front lines struggled to hold on, and the fighting was intense, the tear gas volleys raining down, the police hitting out viciously as the plastic shields shattered and the helmets cracked. Bleeding people were rushed to the back with head injuries including some shot in the face with tear gas canisters.


We were defeated before having even begun the non-violent direct action
tactics; an active defense crushed in the face of decisively brutal Police tactics. As the majority of the march sat down further up the road, thousands of others streamed off into the side streets. The right was blocked by the railway track, while to the left side was a labyrinth of enclosed streets. Open new fronts! Break through police lines at 2, 3, 4 different points! A couple of thousand people stormed into the side streets.


To The Barricades


In a beautiful old barrio the battle raged. Protesters charged up tight
streets flinging stones at police lines. The police, protected head to toe, amassed behind shields and flanked by armored vehicles, responded with tear gas and by flinging back the rocks. It was the ferocious spirit of the protesters
more than the paltry stones pushed back the police lines. Barricades were built with dumpsters, cars, anything at hand. The front lines would retreat nursing wounds and poisoned eyes. The more seriously injured were carried to ambulances. One man was carried by with blood spurting from his eye where a canister had hit him. New people rushed to the front, while others tore up the pavement for ammunition. Someone fell back saying " We almost got through, we almost did it, we just need a few more people !!"


Another surge, everyone rushed forward on 2 or 3 different streets. Some riot cops got stranded in their retreat and hand-to-hand fighting ensued. (Those fighting are not necessarily in black, though some are masked. Some have helmets. It is not the Black Bloc, and there are no agent provocateurs.) This is a militant energy driven by people who have really said- Ya Basta!, Fuck the police! rage! energy! resolve!


They move forward and tear gas is everywhere.   The police are retreating. An armored carabinieri truck is captured and the occupants flee. It is smashed up and set ablaze. This symbol of the hated oppressive state, is burning and everyone is cheering, filled with rebel joy. Someone sprays 'We Are Winning!' on the side of the carcass of the armored beast. Now they are almost in Piazza Alimondo. They are pushing the police back, two blocks, then three, further and further.  Protesters are euphoric, storming forward, overwhelming the despised carabinieri. Approaching the despised wall of the G8; Here we are, they chant, we resist!


The Ominous Thud of Live Ammunition


Hundreds strong, they poured into the expansive Piazza Alimondo. Two police vehicles drive recklessly into the crowd, one drives away, the other stalls; people rush toward the vehicle. Shots ring out. Rubber bullets? No, the ominous thud of live ammunition. The air heaved. The protesters stopped, reeled around, and fled.


Carlo Guiliani was 23 years old. A rebel. The papers belittled him, called him a "ne'er do well," a bum, a hobo. But we know him as a comrade and a revolutionary. He fought the paramilitary police bravely, fearlessly, pitting the little streets against the great. He was involved in the Zapata Social Center of Genoa. Zapata lives! Carlo's death was not heroic, nor tragic. It was the consequence of his life, how he lived, how he resisted. Moments before he was shot in the face, Carlo probably felt the extraordinary rebel joy of this spontaneous uprising against power in the little side streets of Genoa. He died instantly, or else when the police drove over him, not once but twice, as if to make sure he was dead, really dead. For the police, Carlo had to die. Now they must kill us, because we are beginning to really threaten their power.  Carlo was murdered. We are all Carlo.


The Ghost of Pinochet. Saturday 21 July.


This is how the police work. It is Saturday afternoon and there are as many as 200,000 people marching on Genoa against the Eight most powerful economic powers in the world. It is not a combative march.  As they swing onto the sea front, a group of agent provocateurs began throwing stones at the police. These are undercover cops, or secret police, or mercenaries or fascists. They are used by the police the same way the paramilitaries are used by the state in Chiapas or in Belfast, or even how they used them in Italy in the 1970's. The police want to pick the time and place of the confrontation.  They are ready and prepared. This was planned.  This is how the Police works: a few stones fall harmlessly into their ranks and they open up with tear-gas. The canisters fly deep into the multitude, immediately creating panic and chaos. People flee, young and old, parents with babies in their arms.  But there are too many people, nowhere to run, they are hemmed in and poisoned from the gas. It is horrific.


This is how the people resist. The militants stream through the crowd to the front. There they attempt to build barricades, hold back the advancing cops. The sky fills with stones. They hold the police and those behind them have a few moments more to retreat. Those who needed to get away from the zone could. Communist party stewards directed people away, but many people stayed, indignant that the demonstration could be so brutally dispersed even before it could get to the piazza. This could have been a dignified march of 200, 000. Now it was in chaos, and the battle once more rages on the streets of Genoa. Now is the hour of the Black Bloc and the insurrectionary anarchists. All afternoon the streets were mad with tear-gas, with stones, with burning banks, burning cars, barricades. The air was shrill with screams, of beatings, violence and fear.


Eventually the rioters were driven back. The police advanced ferociously, beating people randomly, indiscriminately. In a most surreal scene, cops in gray overalls beat up people on the beach, the Italian Riviera, while bathers looked on. Police in small boats launched tear-gas onto the beach. A helicopter overhead fired gas into the fleeing hordes. Further up, people jumped off the rocks into the sea. The demonstrators were beaten back every inch to the edge of town. The huge march ended in absolute mayhem. Let it be recorded- 200,000 overtly peaceful protesters were not allowed to demonstrate. "The Genoa Social Forum favored and covered the Black Bloc," said Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi by way of explanation the next day. We are all guilty. We are all Carlo Giulliani.


Attacking Indymedia


At midnight, the next police operation began. We were eating in a restaurant near the Indymedia Center. The quiet residential street was silent, the neighborhood sleeping.  A long line of heavily armored men rushed by, masked and with their batons swinging. In single file, silent but for the thumping of their boots on the pavement. A young women collapsed into the restaurant, hyperventilating from the shock of having been pushed over by the cops as they stomped by. The next moment, a fleet of armored police vehicles rushes by. Then a helicopter shattered the night sky. Finally, a long line of ambulances blasting their sirens passed by.  All this in a couple of minutes, a surgical strike on the movement's offices. The police were extracting revenge. They crashed through the front gates of the Indymedia Center in an armored truck, then smashed up the computers, confiscated files and film and broke cameras, terrorizing the journalists inside.


Across the road in the school building being used by the GSF as offices and a dormitory for people who felt unsafe in the camping grounds, the real horror occurred. Police and plain-clothes cops reportedly from the special paramilitary police unit called GOM, entered and attacked everyone inside. Most were sleeping on the floor. 93 people were horribly injured, as the police closed the door and inflicted heavy punishment. Scores of people were eventually carried out on stretchers. Pools of blood remained on the floor, streaks of blood across the walls. Attacks on property cannot be equated to the legions of broken limbs, broken teeth, broken ribs and damaged craniums that a squad of police men inflicted on a somnambulant group of weary protesters as they lay on the floor of a school.


State Sponsored Terror


These men were following orders. Those who gave the orders get their general directives from a higher authority. The blame for this state terror lies at the feet of Berlusconi's regime, and ultimately, the G8.  This is why we protest the G8. This is why comrades move from protest to resistance.  The midnight attack on the school and Indymedia, the ensuing torture of the prisoners afterwards, was an attempt to terrorize the movement, to inflict extra judiciary punishment on activists, and to instill mind numbing fear within the hearts and souls of protesters. In many ways, it was successful-
Saturday night in Genoa was one of widespread fear and terror.


At the Carlini Stadium, bastion of the Ya basta movement, the officials
ordered an immediate evacuation. "Like Saigon" reported one eye-witness. Hundreds of other activists not present at the time were left stranded. Plain clothes police swarmed in, and criminals were allowed in to rummage through peoples' belongings. That night, all over Genoa people fled from camping sites to roam the streets and alleys and back lanes of the city in fear, hunted like escaped convicts. It was the longest night. Eventually dawn came, but everything had changed.


Genoa was gutted. No city will host the G8 for a while. 34 banks burnt. 83 vehicles both police and civilian, destroyed, 41 businesses torched or looted, 6 supermarkets, 12 government offices illustrating the belief that some protesters have that targeting the economic organs of the enemy is the most effective tactic. (No buses were burnt, apparently because the bus drivers union was in solidarity with the protesters, ferrying everyone around for free the whole week).  With Genoa in ruins, the G8 left quietly with a few promises to give some money to Africa. Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi blamed, not just the Black Bloc and the anarchists, but the whole movement, rendering any distinction obsolete.


The GSF has since uncovered damning evidence of police collusion with agent provocateurs, and the inquiries into the night of terror at the school and the denunciations of torture afterwards continues, unrelenting.  200 people were arrested, 600 injured. In the jails, the protesters were tortured while police mocked them with pictures of Mussolini and Nazi's. They tortured them, as they have done in Seattle, Prague and Quebec. They tortured them as they did in Pinochet's Chile, in Argentina, everywhere.  They have terrorized activists whose movement has begun to unsettle power. They will attempt to destroy the movement by spreading panic and fear and horror. To break the back of the militants of this totally unarmed global protest movement.


A Summers Day


A lovely tree filled piazza deep in the heart of Genoa. A pile of flowers. An endless flow of citizens pass by to pay their respects at the site of Carlo's murder. A memorial across the road beside an old church is overflowing with little gifts and offerings. Che Guevara images dominate amidst black flags and red flags and green flags, candles and flowers, cigarettes, beer bottles, tear gas canisters, zapatista scarves, sunglasses, gloves.  Lots of notes and poems and good-bye letters from his friends. A photo of Carlo with his school class. He is the one with the shoulder length hair and the Fuck
Nike t-shirt. Politically conscious at 16. People weep gently. Two squatter girls tie up a banner with the help of a posh older lady. A Mexican woman offers clasps from her coat to secure the banner. We with our hands, it read, they with their guns.


Someone else leaves a poem, Shakespeare's Sonnet No. 18. Shall I compare thee to a summers day?  On a summers day in Genoa, July 20, Carlo fell. Let the July 20 Movement flourish.
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