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Call to Action
Against the Criminalisation and Repression of Our Movements
Activists
from different countries who are still together in Prague send you this
call for action to propose a global campaign against the criminalisation
and repression that is affecting our movements all over the world. It
is a long and dense document, but we think that it is important that it
is distributed and discussed locally, and we hope that these discussions
will result both in local actions and in collective reflexions about the
consequences of different forms of action, in a context of increasing
interdependency between autonomous collectives and activists.
The introduction presents
our perspective about the general process of criminalisation at a global
level of our movements. The next paragraphs explain what has happened
and is still happening in Prague, as an example of what we perceive as
a long term strategy, similar to the one used against the countercultural
movement about 30 years ago, and relating it to the increasingly hard
context that affects those who cannot or do not want to participate in
the dominant culture. Following that, and on that basis, we express in
general terms the call for global action, and as part of that general
formulation we clarify our opinion about 'violence'. The first part of
this document finishes explaining what we see as the long term aim of
this call. In the second part of the document we describe the concrete
action proposals and the short and medium term objectives of the actions
of civil disobedience that we will do in Prague.
If you think that the
document is too long, you are welcome to summarise it, but in this case
we would be thankful if you would include a reference to a web page or
publication where the complete original call can be found.
Salud y suerte.
* * *
"You do not become
a 'dissident' just because you decide one day to take up this most unusual
career. You are thrown into it by your personal sense of responsibility,
combined with a complex set of external circumstances. You are cast out
of the existing structures and placed in a position of conflict with them.
It begins as an attempt to do your work well, and ends with being branded
an enemy of society."
- Written by the Czech
president Vaclav Havel, many years ago...
We are people who struggle
for the life and freedom of all persons and peoples (1). In the process
we question the interests of the powerful, and as a result we are criminalised
all over the world by the state and by most of the media.
The states are criminalising
us through the false information that they spread in their declarations
about us, using the police (as brutalisation and intimidation tool) and
the judicial and penal system (as the executive arm of punishments whose
sole justification in many cases is only the evidence produced by the
state itself).
Most of the media contributes
to this process by showing in a sensationalist way only the part of what
happens in the street that fits the preconceptions that they have contributed
to generate, trivialising the motives and values that move us, presenting
us as a homogeneous mass (deliberately concealing the diversity of thought
and action, which for us is a value on itself) justifying the unleashed
repression and ignoring what happens in the jails.
These two processes
combine to create a vicious circle which provokes an increasingly negative
perception of those who struggle for positive values, resulting in a gradual
distancing of the sectors of society that are not directly involved in
processes of social change. This enables the state to harden the juridical
regime and to define as terrorism activities that have only the objective
of increasing the grassroots participation in political processes.
What is happening in
Prague in relation to the protests against the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) and the World Bank (WB) is an undeniable example of this phenomenon.
These initiatives taken to criminalise the protests started at the beginning
of the preparation process. They are reflected in declarations whose objective
was to demonize our movement and to construct a hostile social environment
dominated by fear, in order to prevent the Czech population from participating
in or supporting the protests. The Ministry of the Interior published
recommendations to the population to stockpile food and medicines, and
to the owners of small shops not to try to defend their business from
demonstrators. The schools were closed for one week and in many cases
families were asked to declare in writing that the students would spend
that week outside of Prague, in order to 'protect' young people from the
protests. The Major of Prague, Jan Kasl, declared that part of the people
who would go to Prague to participate in the protests 'will kill if possible,
if allowed' (2). The tension generated by all these declarations reached
such a level of intensity that the Czech president Havel, said that the
situation was 'As if we were preparing for a civil war and looked forward
for it being over' (3).
The stigmatisation
of the protesters aimed at preparing the best conditions for the repression
did not just take place at the level of declarations: a small local protest
in Prague in April, in parallel to the mobilisations in Washington against
the IMF and the WB, was attacked in a totally unjustified way by the police,
with the objective of providing to the press sensationalist graphic material
which would correspond to the public perception that the Ministry of Interior
was trying to create.
This defamation
campaign succeeded in turning the alleged dangerousness of activists into
one of the main issues of public discussion months before the protests.
It successfully generated fear, distanced the public opinion from the
protests, relegated its motives to the realm of triviality and prepared
the terrain to the state for high levels of repression. The effectivity
of these means of intimidation and oppression is particularly sad in the
Czech context, since it seems to demonstrate how short time the collective
historical memory remains alive. Protests of the same nature than the
ones that took place in Prague from the 26th to the 28th of September
enabled the Czech people to liberate itself from a Stalinist dictatorship
only 11 years ago, but state intimidation (more elaborate nowadays but
not for that reason less effective) seems to still work as a tool to prevent
higher levels of grassroots political participation.
In the
days just before the 26th of September the so-called 'black list' prevented
the entry into the Czech Republic of more than 200 people guilty of terrible
crimes such as cooking organic food or organising public meetings to discuss
about politics. The close collaboration of the Ministry of the Interior
with the specialists of the secret services of several Western countries
(sent to train the Czech police forces) probably helped to create this
list, one more evidence of the global character of repressive policies.
At the beginning of
the action on the 26th, the police had a tolerant attitude regarding the
actions of property destruction; the legal observers have witnessed situations
that make us conclude that at least part of these actions were previously
prepared by the police (4). In our opinion, this was done to cater the
expectations of the sensationalist press and justify the atmosphere of
fear created in relation to the protests, and in this way be able to repress
us violating our rights and freedoms without having to worry about the
reaction of the public opinion.
Once this state of
opinion was created, the repression came arbitrarily to anyone who dared
to go to the streets in order to express political opinions. As reported
by some foreign TV stations, even journalists and some people who were
not connected with the protests were beaten up. But the most serious aspect
of repression is what is still happening in the jails: as reported by
the team of independent legal observers, prisoners are being denied basic
human and legal rights, such as the right to food, to communicate and
to have a lawyer. A large number of people are being beaten up and object
of different degrees of physical and psychological harassment, which is
by itself inadmissible and will hopefully be object of investigations
and punishments that correspond to the gravity of the events. But the
most unexpected and significant phenomenon brought about by the repression
in Prague are the MASS DISAPPEARANCES.
Many people have been
missing for days and some are still missing since more than ten days,
and their friends haven't had any news or any opportunity to communicate
with them, which makes the work of legal assistance impossible. The database
of the legal observers has still 70 people with the status of 'arrested'
or 'missing', and we cannot know to what extent this is accurate since
the Ministry of the Interior still refuses to make available the lists
of people arrested during the protests. The first list, without names
and very incomplete according to our indications, was communicated by
the Czech embassy in London (which depends on the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs) to the British media due to the protests that have taken place
in that country; however, the Ministry of the Interior still maintains
an absolute lack of transparency, characteristic of dictatorial regimes.
The only institutions that seem to be able to receive information are
the embassies of the countries where the jailed persons come from, but
some of them (particularly the US, German, Spanish, Polish, Hungarian
and Rumanian embassies) have clearly proven their lack of interest in
human rights violations and in transparency. For instance, the reply of
the civil servant who replied to the call of friends of the two persons
from Madrid arbitrarily arrested in the street was 'it is your problem!'
(5). The lack of consideration on the side of several states for the basic
rights of those who are suffering this disproportionate repression has
enabled the brutality in prisons and hospitals to take place in absolute
impunity, and all this is being suffered by human beings, by flesh and
bones.
As a whole, the situation
in Prague is of total hypocrisy: the hot image given about the 'violence'
in the streets, incomplete and partially faked, is opposed to the cold
invisible reality of what happens out of the reach of the cameras, when
the detained remain at the mercy of police torture. Then comes, silently,
the true and terrible criminal violence.
The independent legal
observers are preparing a preliminary report with detailed information
about documented cases of human rights violations in police stations and
jails. Right now we will only report the well documented case of the atrocities
suffered by Chris Mach (whose official name is Sylvia Yolanda Mach), as
an example of how far the perversity and treachery of the state can go.
You will find a summary of her case in the appendix.
Chris is only one example,
there are still far too many people in jail. Besides the 70 persons that
are possibly missing, we can say with founded certainty that there are
at least 2 Czechs, 5 Rumanians, 5 Hungarians, 1 Ukrainian, 3 Germans,
2 Danish, 2 Spanish, 1 Polish and 1 Austrian in custody, but we don't
know how many more people are in the same situation without nobody knowing
about them. The Ministry of the Interior's only comment is that as far
as their information goes there have been no abuses and that the moment
they hear about one, they will act on it. But we are concerned, particularly
about the members of ethnic minorities, since there is enough evidence
about the symbiotic relationship between at least part of the Czech forces
of order and fascist organisations (6). What is happening in Prague is
clearly the continuation of the most detestable practices of authoritarian
regimes which we were hoping to be part of the past.
Sadly, most of the
media have until now faithfully responded to the propaganda of the Ministry
of the Interior: presenting the protest as quasi-terrorist acts, ignoring
their motives and the diversity that they embodied, reporting in a partial
and very limited way about the state violence, presenting it as necessary
and legitimate, and in the case of some media, even as insufficient. Most
media also took the information and statistics given by the Ministry for
granted. However, the case of Chris Mach demonstrates that there are more
than enough reasons to look at them as one more element in the state propaganda,
since at least the three policemen that she is accused of having injured
(and who are part of the statistics, we suppose) were never assaulted
by her: just the opposite took place, with terrible consequences for her
health.
Thirty years ago, secret
services from all over the world used criminalisation strategies that
were very similar to those used in Prague (along with the massive introduction
and illegal fostering of the use of drugs, especially on the side of the
FBI) to dismantle a living and participatory grassroots countercultural
movement that had become a serious challenge for the system. In Prague
there has been in the last months an extraordinary concentration of secret
services and 'intelligence' of diverse Western countries, working closely
together with the Czech Ministry of the Interior. If the final aim of
this large security set-up (in which the Czech Republic and several other
countries invested time and resources) really was to maintain law and
order in this city during the meeting of the IMF and the WB, we have to
conclude that they failed at all levels, both in the streets and in the
police stations, prisons and hospitals.
But given the amount
of time and resources that they devoted to prepare for the 26th, we don't
believe that this is the case. We cannot prove it, but in our opinion
the objective of the police operation in Prague was to carefully manage
the public opinion (with the active help of some media), with the purpose
of legitimising hard and illegal methods of control and repression during
the protests, and advance in the preparation of the conditions for the
global criminalisation of our activities. As part of this, we believe
that the repression in Prague has been used as a laboratory to test how
far it is possible to take hard and openly illegal methods of oppression
such as mass disappearances, a very sad memory that all those who suffered
them will take from this city.
The very same process
is taking place all over the world in diverse local contexts, but due
to the same reasons and using the same strategies. In the next days we
will send out more information about concrete and much harder examples
than what happened in Prague, for instance what is happening in Bolivia,
where the actions organised by peasant movements against the privatisation
of water and land ended with 11 death and hundreds of wounded, and in
Colombia, where the already appalling levels of state and parastatal violence
will soon be complemented with the military help and direct intervention
of US troops, recently approved by the Congress under the name of Plan
Colombia.
At a more general level,
one of the concrete results of criminalisation of the processes of social
change is the hardening of the juridical systems of the whole world, which
results into the progressive elimination of the rights and freedoms obtained
after centuries of social struggle. The new British antiterrorism bill
recently approved by the labour government, a great step towards the silent
and slow institutionalisation of a 'permanent state of emergency', exemplifies
this tendency which can be observed all over the world.
At a deeper level,
the global criminalisation of social change is clearly associated to the
criminalisation, also at global level, of poverty. More and more people
all over the world see themselves immerse in a vicious circle of poverty
and 'criminality' provoked by the lack of alternatives, by a system that
feeds itself on destroying the livelihoods of millions of people in order
to concentrate more and more wealth in a few hands. But capitalism has
demonstrated that it has enough flexibility to take advantage even of
this kind of situations. For instance, the two million persons in the
jails of the USA (mainly blacks and latinos) provide the main 'raw material'
of the private prison industry, one of the most rapidly expanding economic
branches due to the conditions under which the prisoners work. For these
human beings, the processes of 'liberalisation' imposed by the global
economy through the IMF, the WB and other illegitimate institutions express
themselves in the destruction of their livelihood, in the pseudo-slavery
that they are subjected to due to the obsession to manage prisons with
entrepreneurial criteria and in the structural racism that is openly exposed
as soon as one looks at who is being exploited and who benefits.
In the light of these
connections, we see clearly the multiple relations between the repression
that we experienced in Prague and the everyday plight of emigrants whose
economies have been destroyed by economic globalisation, and who are illegalised
by the system when they seek refuge in the countries that concentrate
their wealth. They are criminals by juridical definition, although the
only thing that they are looking for is an exit to the desperate situations
created by global capitalism. They are confronted on a daily basis with
the violence and the racism of rich states whose main concern seems to
be maintaining their privileged classes immersed in an empty and meaningless
consumerist banquet, which can only be sustained as long as the access
is limited to those who have the right passport and were lucky enough
not to be among those without place in the table.
The main reason why
we have been criminalised in Prague is that we reject the banquet and
are not ready to discuss about this rejection with the organisers. We
were not surprised by the fact that we have been repressed, since we are
used to it, but the levels of perversion, state violence and manipulation
of information reached in Prague are going far beyond our expectations.
We are concerned about
the long-term consequences that would derive from allowing another chapter
in the process of criminalisation of those who struggle for life to happen
without an adequate response to the nature of the problem. We think that
we are still in time to stop this process, but if we take too long time
to react, it is quite probable that we find the same end than many people
who participated in movements which seemed unstoppable, from the Italian
autonomia operaria to the US counterculture: jailed, exiled, dead or in
madhouses.
We hence make a global
call to reassert the legitimacy of our actions and to act against the
criminalisation by the state and the media of the poor, the emigrants
and those who struggle for life and freedom; a campaign of global action
for the dignity of all those who cannot or do not want to participate
in the dominant culture.
We propose that those
who identify with the problems described in this call act at local level,
on their local problems of criminalisation, but globally coordinated so
that our voices get stonger. We propose a global chain of actions of civil
disobedience and denounciation against criminalisation and the manipulation
of information by states, international institutions and most of the media.
The actions can be as diverse as creative are our movements, but we propose
that they all make reference to a common slogan to give them unity and
coherence. We propose that this is:
"If struggling for
life and freedom is a crime, I am also a criminal"
Since we are calling
for action, the people who have formulated this document believe that
it is necessary to make our position on 'violence' very clear, for this
is the excuse given by the system to criminalise us. We are against any
aggression against life and health, wherever it comes from and whoever
it is directed against. Some of us believe firmly in the legitimacy of
actions of property destruction, if these actions are aimed at reducing
or denouncing the structural violence imposed with the help of the property
to be destroyed, and if these actions are realised in such a way that
they do not put at risk the life or health of anyone. But we all agree
that the main objective and criterium behind our actions is to struggle
for the freedom, identity, autonomy and peace of the persons and peoples
of the whole world. This is why we struggle against the violence imposed
by global capitalism, respecting the diversity of methods that share this
objective and try to advance towards it in a coherent way.
What the media hype
on smashed McDonalds windows and other symbolic actions has clearly achieved
was to distract the attention from the clear and transparent fact that
genocidal violence does not come from social movements, but from massive
poverty and destruction imposed by global capitalism with the help of
tools such as the IMF and the WB. We will not describe this violence in
detail in this call, but we would like to underline once more that the
concentration of power in the hands of the enterprises and institutions
that regulate the global economy have taken the world to a totally absurd
and unsustainable situation, exemplified by the fact that the world's
three richest men have together more wealth than the combined GNP of the
43 poorest countries (7). The level of exploitation, oppression and suffering
provoked by this injustice of historically unknown dimensions manifests
itself in a structural, genocidal and ecocidal violence that is so prevalent
that it has become part of everyday life and hence invisible. It is ironic
that those who want to denounce it and make it visible get criminalised
using 'violence' as excuse.
We hope to be able
to continue fighting this violence and to count with the support and active
participation of ever growing sectors of the population. But if we let
the unjustified criminalisation of our activities continue, it will not
be possible to maintain them for a long time without suffering too hard
consequences for our health and our freedom.
To conclude we would
like to point out that although the mobilisations proposed in this call
have as their immediate objective to decrease the pressure and aggression
inflicted on us by authorities and media, its final objective is a different
one. What we really wish is to encourage people all over the world to
think about the role that they play in this system, which is based in
death and destruction, and about what they can do for life and freedom.
Because if we would have to take one single conclusion from the experience
in Prague it would be that holding elections regularly to determine the
composition of the parliament, and the existence of mass media which are
not controlled by the state, are not enough to guarantee the respect for
human rights and a true democracy. Freedom and justice are only possible
in a context where the direct participation in political processes is
a reality, articulated from the grassroots, independent from power structures,
and this can only happen if broad sectors of society accept the individual
and collective responsibility of actively participating in grassroots
political processes with the objective of reaching increasing levels of
self-governance and control over our own destiny.
It is our commitment
with this broad and emancipating understanding of democracy, with the
idea that only from the grassroots it will be possible to construct a
world increasingly free of exploitation, discrimination and oppression,
that moves us to ask people all over the world to think about the way
they live their own lives. It is because of this commitment that we are
part of a global movement whose unity is rooted in the respect to diversity,
a struggle that fortunately is not defined, controlled or led by anyone
or anything, that is nothing more than the continuity, in times of global
control, of the process of resistance to power that has always existed
and will always exist.
* * *
The actions that we
will do in Prague under this slogan, and in which we encourage people
from all over the world to participate, are the following:
* Some persons will
enter the jail in Prague voluntarily after doing a previously announced
arrestable action. They will refuse to leave the jail until a number of
demands are fulfilled (see below).
* We propose that people
who want to practice civil disobedience but cannot or do not want to go
to jail destroy their identity documents (ID card, passport), to show
that they refuse to belong to a repressive state, anywhere in the world.
* Signatures will be
collected under the slogan mentioned above. This will enable also those
who cannot or do not want to practice civil disobedience express that
for them it is more important to struggle for life and freedom than to
be accepted in the dominant system.
* We will ask the media
to reflect about the role that they are playing in this process of unjustified
criminalisation and about the clear relation that (from our point of view)
it has with their own past of social struggle to obtain freedom of the
press. We will confront them with the fact that far too often it has proven
impossible to get a space in the media for people who express opinions
radically different from those of the dominant discourse, unless they
resort to forms of action that the media considers spectacular enough
to be covered. We hope that they will accept the challenge to discuss
publicly how issues of representation affect the political praxis of grassroots
movements, especially of the movements that, in order to be coherent with
their ideas about power, do not want to delegate the role of representation
to spokespersons. We will ask them to publish integrally this call to
action, to give at least another point of view about what is happening
in Prague and in the rest of the world to the people like us, who do not
subordinate themselves to the dominant culture.
The immediate demands
of those who will practice civil disobedience in Prague will be:
* The unconditional
release without charges of all the prisoners who are still in jail due
to the actions in Prague and the return of all their material belongings.
* That the Czech Ministry
of the Interior publicly acknowledges and apologises for the criminalisation
and the manipulation of information that we have been object of.
Until these immediate
demands are fulfilled, the people who go voluntarily to jail will refuse
to leave it. Besides these immediate demands, we hope that a broader process
of public discussion will make sure that in a short time, the Czech state
will compensate all the people who deserve it (due to the unjustified
violation of their rights and in too many cases, also of their health)
and that a deep and serious adjustment of responsibilities at the Ministry
of the Interior and the police takes place, including the dismissal of
the Minister. We think that this would be positive for the development
of democracy in the Czech Republic, and it would also encourage the authorities
and the 'forces of order' of other countries to think about it twice before
violating the basic human rights of dissidents.
We encourage the movements,
activists and organisations that feel identified with the contents of
this call to do their own actions of civil disobedience (8) in order to
give visibility to the local cases of criminalisation. Given that what
has happened in Prague has a global character, we think that it would
be very positive if the local actions would incorporate elements that
link them to the repression that is still happening in this city. We hope
that our two immediate demands to the Czech state will have an echo in
other countries, and that local demands relevant to the each context are
added to them. We propose that all groups and movements involved in this
campaign adopt the demands of all the other local mobilisations, so that
we all participate in all of them. To make this happen, we ask all local
movements and groups involved in this campaign to inform about their demands
to <stop.repression@gmx.net>. We will do a list to inform about
the demands, actions and results obtained in different parts of the world.
As possible ideas for
actions, besides civil disobedience (going to jail or destroying identity
documents) we propose to collect signatures on the slogan of the campaign
in order to inform about it; camping in front of the Ministries of the
Interior of your country; collective fasts; occupations of Czech (and
possibly other) embassies and consulates, many of which are already taking
place; visible actions such as banner drops linking local cases of repression
to what is happening in Prague; non-violent direct actions against the
multilateral institutions accomplices of the repression (like the occupation
of the IMF office that took place recently in Geneva); parties; etc.
We have received the
news that the movement in the USA has presented a collective demand against
the city of Seattle because of the repression of last year. A similar
idea would be that organisations from all over the world explore the possibility
to do the same thing against the Czech Ministry of the Interior, using
fora such as the Human Rights Commission of the United Nations, the International
Court of Justice of The Hague, the Human Rights Tribunal of Strassbourg,
etc. This would enable us to acquire a collective experience as movement
in the use of these instruments, which would help using them against other
flagrant cases of human rights violations, even if the only outcome is
to question the states responsible for them.
We also encourage persons
and organisations that do not agree with all the political contents of
this call to action, but who consider that it is necessary to do something
against the bulldozing of democracy and basic human rights that we are
still experiencing in this city (and all over the world), to participate
in whatever way they consider convenient. A possibility would be to support
publicly at least part of our demands.
In solidarity,
some people in Prague
(and other places)
_______________________________________
Appendix: the case
of Chris Mach
**************************
Chris Mach is an artist
who, according to her many friends from all over the world, personifies
freedom within love and respect. This is the summary of her declaration,
done by herself:
'I was violently assaulted
by the police on September 26th at about 14:00, while I was completely
alone, hiding from the warzone where I had just previously been filming
the police brutality against the pink samba band (9). After being beaten
and dragged and thrown into the police van backwards and head first, I
was taken to the police station in total delirium, remaining till the
evening on the floor of my cell. In the police station, like everyone
else, I was refused the right to a phone call, the right to know the ID
numbers of the policemen mistreating me (although I asked for them several
times), the right to receive food, the right to know the reason for the
arrest nor a translation for the comments made about me by the police,
which surely didn't fall under the obligation of 'respect, regard or dignity'
defined by the law. In the night of the 26th I was told that I would be
released one hour after paying a fine of 500 Kc, which I did immediately,
but the supposed release was just a lie. Excessive force needed no translation,
like being handcuffed to benches and walls in completely immobilising
positions (as punishment for singing to protest further illegal detainment),
being threatened with toxic gases (if I dared to continue) and generally
being treated with excessive and totally unjustified violence. The next
morning, after going to the toilet I refused to return to the cell and
held tight to different objects in order to prevent the police from taking
me back to the cell, because I considered my detention illegal since one
hour after paying the fine. I was brutally taken back by several policemen,
who twisted different parts of my body, bruised me and kicked me around.
When they were about to push me back into the cell, I tried to see and
asked the badge number of the policeman who was visible to me in that
moment, but he quickly covered it, which is why I tried to rip off his
number badge. This was the only pro-active move that I made on a policeman,
until then I had only offered passive resistance by holding on to objects
in order to make it at least harder for them to lock me up again, and
this action alone was later to become the twisted accusation of assaulting
and injuring the police, although it was only me who received 9 stitches
on my hand for trying to get that badge. After 23 hours of cruelty and
completely unjustified lack of freedom, I was taken to an interrogation
where I was informed of my accusation and further confinement until being
sentenced to prison. Out of desperation and fear of further illegal detainment
with no means of communication and noone knowing about me, a thought that
I could not deal with, I jumped out of the window and smashed my foot
to remain irreparable for life, broke my leg (in many pieces), damaged
pelvis and hip and broke one vertebra of my spine. I was brought to a
hospital where I was inhumanely treated and under constant police observation
and severe abuse. I received no pain relieving medicine despite screaming
for it, and when the nurses thought that I was screaming too much, they
held my mouth shut and shook my seriously injured leg for punishment.
Luckily one woman who felt sorry for me (probably one of the nurses from
emergency section who saw me before I was taken to the surgery section
where the mistreatment happened) replied to my requests to phone a friend,
although at that time there was an 'information embargo' on me. This friend
tried to visit me and got himself arrested in front of a Danish TV cameraman
as a protest because they did not let him see me, and the next day there
was plenty of media and more friends at the hospital, which was probably
the main reason why I came out of police custody and I was allowed again
to communicate again with the outside world. The entire time until just
before this happened I was locked into a supply cabinet instead of a hospital
room, until just before I finally came out of custody.'
This was the version
of the same case given by the Ministry of the Interior on the 28th (a
day after Chris' friend got himself arrested in front of a camera):
'Yesterday, 27 September,
an extraordinary event happened at local police department of Prague 4.
The USA citizen detained because of active participation in demonstrations
and questioned of the attack against the public authority, attacked the
policemen which were present in the service room. She kicked several times
one of him and she smashed his uniform; she was trying to tear the insignias
with the service-numbers off the uniforms of the others policemen. That
alien was refusing to submit to investigating acts especially to the communication
of accusation as well. During the conflict she jumped down off the window
in the first floor of the buliding. According to the preliminary information,
her leg and spine were wounded. Consequently the medical help and the
hospitalisation in one of the Prague hospitals were given to her. The
event is investigated by the supervision bodies of the Police presidency.
Major Jiri Suttner, Ministerstvo vnitra - Bezpecnostní opatrenr
k zasedani MMF a SB 2000'.
What Mr. Suttner does
not say is that there is evidence in the police records that Chris was
illegaly held by the police in the moment when the 'extraordinary event'
took place. Chris' lawyer has had access to these records because she
still has to face a court case since she is accused by the Czech state
of attacking and injuring several policemen. People from all over the
world who have been fortunate enough to meet her know that this is a totally
absurd accusation, since Chris loves life and cannot deal with violence
and aggression.
Chris' van, which is
also her house and the place where she keeps the drawings of a whole life,
is still in the possession of the police for absolutely no reason. This
proves that the respect that they claim to have for property is only valid
for those who adhere to the dominant culture.
_______________________________________
(1) We use the term
'peoples' to mean indigenous peoples, gypsies, black communities and other
groups of people who have a collective identity that makes them different
of the dominant culture, and who have suffered oppression because of that
difference in values and worldview. We do not mean with it ethnic or national
features, which in our opinion are anyhow quite artificial constructions
which end up becoming instruments for domination.
(2) Quoted by the Prague
Post, August 2, 2000.
(3) Quoted in Hospodarske
noviny, August 1, 2000.
(4) For instance, one
of the persons who participated in the destruction of a McDonald's (one
of the actions that gathered a lot of attention on the side of media)
later crossed the lines of riot police in a moment when nobody, not even
the press, was allowed to cross them. The organisation of independent
legal observers has pressed charges against this person in order to find
who he is, since there is graphic material which could lead to his identification.
There are testimonies about people involved in actions of property destruction
who crossed the police lines showing some kind of ID cards, and there
is graphic evidence of how the plain clothes police arrested people without
identifying themselves, which is illegal in the Czech Republic.
(5) See http://www.sindominio.net:9673/ACP/970229351/index_html
(in Spanish)
(6) In October 99 a
fascist demonstration took place in Prague with active protection of the
Czech police. The antifascist that tried to block the bridge where the
neonazis wanted to cross the river were brutally repressed by the police.
There are pictures of the 26th of September where police can be seen chatting
in a relaxed mood with skinheads which have slogans about the war and
the skin color in their t-shirts.
(7) Index of Human
Well-being, UN Development Programme (UNDP)
(8) These proposals
emphasise civil disobedience since we believe that the best way to confront
an unjust, oppresive and violent power system is to define ourselves in
the same terms in which it defines us (in this case, as criminals) and
to challenge it to accept the consequences of the public debate that we
hope this debate will generate. But this is a subjective judgement which
we have no desire to impose on anyone, although we would be very encouraged
if people would decide to use it in other parts of the world.
(9) The pink samba
band was one of the four clusters of affinity groups that blockaded the
conference of the IMF/WB on September 26th.
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