Real politics in Italy
The following news item appeared on Indymedia UK today, and should serve as a reminder that real, active political struggle is alive and well in other European countries. Compare and contrast with the bland McPolitics of the Blairite era, in a nation where trades unions are toothless, 'politics' is shorthand for court intrigue in Westminster and Whitehall, and the populace has been hypnotised into immobility and docile submission by the Spectacle. For those of us who cut our activist teeth in the 70s and 80s, it's almost nostalgic.
In the early hours of Tuesday morning [6/12/05], Italian riot police violently broke up a protester camp at Venaus, in the Val di Susa near the Italy-France border. Hundreds of protesters had gathered to prevent work starting on the highly-controversial rail tunnel, for the high-speed TAV (treno ad alta velocità) train, to be blasted through the Alps to link Italy and France, which local residents and environmentalists have condemned as highly destructive to the environment and residents of this quiet Alpine valley, as well as inordinately expensive and unnecessary given the extensive rail and road links across the border. In scenes reminiscent of the infamous Scuola Diaz assault in Genoa, the cops waded in with riot shields and clubs on the unsuspecting protesters injuring dozens.
The action, sanctioned by the hard-line Interior Minister Giuseppe Pisanu, followed a peaceful anti-TAV demo on Monday, attended by over 50,000 protesters, and has drawn widespread condemnation from all Left organisations in Italy, inside and outside parliament. Activists have reacted by occupying and blocking the A32 autostrada (motorway) between Turin and Frejus, and calling for solidarity from all over Italy. Today (Thursday) there's been a 30,000-strong demonstration in Venaus which has attempted to re-occupy the building site, and which has led to more violent clashes with riot cops.
Further information:
ANSA: Police derail Alp tunnel protest (http://www.ansa.it/main/notizie/awnplus/english/news/2005-12-06_2053656.html)
ANSA: EC seeks to ease rail link protest (http://www.ansa.it/main/notizie/awnplus/english/news/2005-12-07_2060730.html).
All sites below in Italian:
La Repubblica: la lunga notte della Val di Susa (http://www.repubblica.it/2005/k/sezioni/cronaca/tavtolioneuno/lanotte/lanotte.html). Includes links to background stories.
La Repubblica: 50.000 alla marcia anti-tav (http://www.repubblica.it/2005/k/sezioni/cronaca/tavtolioneuno/susaschiavazzi/susaschiavazzi.html). Report on the massive anti-TAV demo on Monday.
NO TAV (http://www.notav.it/). Main site for anti-TAV campaigns.
Indymedia Italia: Resistenze no-TAV (http://italy.indymedia.org/archives/archive_by_id.php?id=2604&category_id=1)
Certi treni è meglio perderli (http://www.narcomafie.it/articoli_2005/art5_07_2005.htm). Background article.
(Indymedia UK, 8/12/05)
In the early hours of Tuesday morning [6/12/05], Italian riot police violently broke up a protester camp at Venaus, in the Val di Susa near the Italy-France border. Hundreds of protesters had gathered to prevent work starting on the highly-controversial rail tunnel, for the high-speed TAV (treno ad alta velocità) train, to be blasted through the Alps to link Italy and France, which local residents and environmentalists have condemned as highly destructive to the environment and residents of this quiet Alpine valley, as well as inordinately expensive and unnecessary given the extensive rail and road links across the border. In scenes reminiscent of the infamous Scuola Diaz assault in Genoa, the cops waded in with riot shields and clubs on the unsuspecting protesters injuring dozens.
The action, sanctioned by the hard-line Interior Minister Giuseppe Pisanu, followed a peaceful anti-TAV demo on Monday, attended by over 50,000 protesters, and has drawn widespread condemnation from all Left organisations in Italy, inside and outside parliament. Activists have reacted by occupying and blocking the A32 autostrada (motorway) between Turin and Frejus, and calling for solidarity from all over Italy. Today (Thursday) there's been a 30,000-strong demonstration in Venaus which has attempted to re-occupy the building site, and which has led to more violent clashes with riot cops.
Further information:
ANSA: Police derail Alp tunnel protest (http://www.ansa.it/main/notizie/awnplus/english/news/2005-12-06_2053656.html)
ANSA: EC seeks to ease rail link protest (http://www.ansa.it/main/notizie/awnplus/english/news/2005-12-07_2060730.html).
All sites below in Italian:
La Repubblica: la lunga notte della Val di Susa (http://www.repubblica.it/2005/k/sezioni/cronaca/tavtolioneuno/lanotte/lanotte.html). Includes links to background stories.
La Repubblica: 50.000 alla marcia anti-tav (http://www.repubblica.it/2005/k/sezioni/cronaca/tavtolioneuno/susaschiavazzi/susaschiavazzi.html). Report on the massive anti-TAV demo on Monday.
NO TAV (http://www.notav.it/). Main site for anti-TAV campaigns.
Indymedia Italia: Resistenze no-TAV (http://italy.indymedia.org/archives/archive_by_id.php?id=2604&category_id=1)
Certi treni è meglio perderli (http://www.narcomafie.it/articoli_2005/art5_07_2005.htm). Background article.
(Indymedia UK, 8/12/05)