Police Non-Violence a Break From the Past
September 2003
Joel Stonington Utne.com
The police at this ministerial in Cancun have been incredible
about keeping protesters in their place and avoiding any type of
scandal. Remarkably, the lack of police violence has probably been
the most shocking thing to many activists here. In Seattle, in
1999, the WTO was clearly established as an organization so
contrary to the interests of so many that protests, always
passionate and often violent, would follow it to the ends of the
earth.
RELATED ARTICLES
A new wave of protests incites extreme measures...
According to the police blotter...
Media Missing New Evidence About Genoa Violence January 22, 2003 Issue By Fairness and Accuracy in ...
Here in Cancun the police have used methods that have virtually
shut down the ability of the large-scale protests in nearby Cancun
City to have any direct contact with the delegates at the fifth
ministerial. And unlike Seattle, the police here have done it with
remarkable restraint.
Today was the last major march against the WTO in Cancun. Many
of the same groups came together in what was a significantly
smaller protest than the one on Monday, with upwards of three
thousand people. Once again, the protesters met the barricade at
kilometer 0 of the road to the hotel zone, roughly 8 kilometers
from the convention center.
The barricade, made of three layers of ten-foot fences and
cement blocks, was rapidly torn apart with ropes, wire cutters, and
battering rams fashioned from shopping carts. Once the protesters
faced the police everyone quieted down for speeches. Amazingly,
everyone sat down to listen to announcements by the South Koreans.
'We have come here to oppose the WTO... we pulled down this fence
together...' They offered flowers for Kyung-hae Lee, the leader who
killed himself on Wednesday, and burnt an effigy representing the
WTO.
These symbolic actions, however, are all that is necessary.
There is no hope of getting through the barricades and making it
all the way to the convention center. It would take two or three
hours just to walk there, not even counting the fact that there are
a further dozen barricades the police could fall back on in that
distance. Thus, just as the death of the South Korean farmer was a
symbolic act, so too have the protests been forced to become
largely symbolic.
The thousands that came to the wall of police here today were
dressed ready for battle. Most had gas masks, bandanas, and some
form of goggles. Many had gloved hands for throwing gas canisters
back at the police. Most everyone had some sort of message against
the WTO on their shirt or hat. The police, for their part, were
dressed in full riot gear and as immovable and ready for violence
as the activists.
In Seattle, Genoa, and in other places around the world, police
have violently repressed peaceful protesters. This violence has
galvanized many at the grassroots of the global justice movement.
If police beat people up, if they arrest people who have peacefully
protested, if they shoot people in the face as they did to Carlo
Giuliani in Genoa, then activists take a sort of pride in being
part of a brutally repressed movement that is on the side of truth
and justice. Protesters came prepared for police violence. Breaking
with the past, police have answered by keeping the peace.