DOSSIER OF "DIRTY TRICKS

May Day organisers: government "inciting a riot"

Buying onions in Moore St. is now suspicious behaviour


PRESS RELEASE and DOSSIER OF "DIRTY TRICKS"

Dublin Grassroots Network

April 29th, 2004

One of the groups organizing Mayday protests this weekend has expressed concern that the government are attempting to incite a riot. Dublin Grassroots Network said that Garda harassment of activists is designed to raise tensions in advance of the protest. Comments by Taoiseach Bertie Ahern that protestors are "mindless hooligans" were intended to justify police attacks on demonstrators in advance, according to the network.

Laurence Cox of Dublin Grassroots Network said, "Over the past two weeks we have seen a sustained campaign of Garda harassment of people in our network, including stopping people distributing leaflets, visits by Special Branch detectives, and trailing activists through the streets of Dublin. On Tuesday, the Guards felt the need to stop two members of the network who had gone to Moore St. market to buy food. The excuse offered was that ‘onions could be used as missiles’."

Speaking as DGN released a dossier of security and media "dirty tricks" (attached), Cox said "Arrests of activists on Tuesday and detention of others on Wednesday mark a continuation of this ratcheting up of tensions, along with a constant drip-feed of misinformation, off-the-record briefings and straightforward misrepresentation to the media. Bertie’s comments this week, attacking protestors as such, make it clear that this strategy comes from the top level of the government."

Aileen O’Carroll of DGN said "We are particularly concerned by media reports that up to 1,200 Gardai disguised as demonstrators intend in infiltrate our protests. The Gardai have admitted that Italian police have helped with their planning, but the Italian police force has a notorious record in using police officers disguised as demonstrators to instigate riots. The organizers of the Genoa G8 protests believe that police officers disguised as demonstrators started much of the Genoa rioting.

"After Genoa, individual police officers admitted not only that this had happened but also that petrol bombs had been planted by police during their violent raid on the indymedia centre when dozens were hospitalized. This is why 8 of the 9 enquires launched after Genoa were into police behavior. Perhaps the same Italian police responsible for these actions are the ones advising the Irish Gardai? Previous protests in Dublin when uniformed but unnumbered Gardai went on the rampage against peaceful protesters illustrate the very real danger here."

Dublin Grassroots Network is hoping for see large and peaceful protests over the May weekend and has released detailed plans on its web site at www.geocities.com/eufortress stressing its peaceful intentions. By contrast, O’Carroll said, Garda plans were not officially released until yesterday despite weeks of hints, threats and misrepresentations of protestors.

O’Carroll said, "We believe that this strategy of advertising a riot originates in the government rather than the Gardai. Therefore, we are demanding the following guarantees from the Minister of Justice:

1. That no Gardai, foreign police or other parts of the Irish security forces will infiltrate any of the protests disguised as demonstrators.

2. That all security forces deployed to police protesters be in uniform with clearly visible individual identification numbers.

3. That the rules of engagement for the day be made publicly available so that everyone can know under what conditions the Gardai can use water cannon or guns against peaceful protesters.

These are reasonable requests. If the government is unable to give these guarantees, our suspicion that this unpopular government intends to incite a riot will strengthen. We ask the citizens of Dublin to turn out peacefully and in large numbers to prevent this happening."

ENDS

DOSSIER OF "DIRTY TRICKS"

 

Introduction

We are releasing this dossier in order to place on record some of the police and media response to Dublin Grassroots Network. We set out openly our intention of organising peaceful protests in Dublin around the issues of Fortress Europe, privatisation, EU militarism and social justice. What we got was a sustained campaign of intimidation, dirty tricks and misrepresentation.

This dossier is a very brief list of events, all of which can be readily documented from obvious sources (media archive, Indymedia web page). We hope after the events to develop a more detailed history in order to hold those responsible to account. This will be all the more necessary if, as we fear at present, the Government is attempting to advertise a riot.

The security forces: "dirty tricks" and the militarisation of policing

Aisling Reidy of the Irish Council for Civil Liberties noted earlier this week that they were " very concerned that gardai, through stories fed to the media, is [sic] trying to soften up public opinion for a show down, by talking of potential violence and well planned attacks by subversives". She observed that the Garda Siochana is in fact legally obliged to allow and protect peaceful protests.

These comments do not appear to have been heard by senior levels of the security forces, or by the Minister for Justice. We have to ask who ultimately benefits from the climate of tension which such activities have created. Political responsibility certainly lies with an unpopular government which lost the last free vote on European affairs (the first vote on the Nice Treaty, which faced protests of 100,000 people last year over its support for war and which has been facing widespread direct action in response to its attempts to impose bin charges?

"Dirty tricks": behaviour in bad faith

The militarisation of policing

This amounts to a virtual suspension of the constitution. We also note that the security forces are clearly acting in bad faith: if half of their allegations were justified, we would have expected charges to be brought against the organisers. Instead we have seen very few ministers or official spokespeople willing to appear in public, but widespread use of crime correspondents, ex-policemen, representatives of garda trade unions GRA and AGSI, "security consultants" etc. to represent the view of the security forces and ultimately of the Government.

 

 

Unscrupulous media: scare stories and silly stories

Harry Brown, in the Evening Herald (23.4.04), wrote that we have seen "some of the most atrocious journalism in living memory" around the May Day protests. We have seen widespread collusion between unsavoury elements of the security forces (quoted as "garda source", "security sources" etc.) and lazy journalists out for a quick sensation at the expense of the truth. (There have also been some excellent, and brave, pieces of fair reporting in the face of a "moral panic" about the protests.)

Again, we have to ask who benefits from ignoring the key issues the protests are focussing on — "Fortress Europe", privatisation, militarisation and social injustice — and from reducing all the events of a complex weekend down to a single march. We leave the answer to this particular conundrum up to the specialists in media studies, and to the honest colleagues of those who have treated political protest as a way to fill column pages.

Scare stories

Silly stories and wrong ones

As a number of saner voices have commented recently, such behaviour involves those media who engage in it in advertising a riot. It raises tensions among protestors and police alike. We believe that poor-quality reporting, by consistently focussing on the hypothetical (or invented) possibility of violence, will bear a real responsibility for potential incidents this May Day weekend.

Dublin Grassroots Network

29.4.04

In case their are site problems we have created three mirror sites. The URL's for these sites are below, please make sure you bookmark/link them. http://struggle.ws/eufortress
 
http://www.anarchomedia.org/eufortress
http://geocities.com/eufortress