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DC protesters released
Washington, DC, Apr. 21-- One hundred fifty-six people
arrested during the April 16-17 demonstrations at the spring
meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank
have been released from jail. By practicing "jail solidarity",
they were successful in obtaining release with only a nominal
fine to pay and no criminal record added to their names. Amid
scenes of jubilation and relief, prisoners were reunited with
their fellow protesters outside the DC Courthouse at 500 Indiana
Avenue jail where those protesters had maintained a 24 hour
vigil in support of those inside. The capitulation of the authorities
was the result of a pre-planned process of "jail solidarity",
whereby prisoners withheld their names through exercising their
Fifth Amendment right to remain silent, and overburdened the
system with their united noncooperation. For those prisoners,
cooperating in any manner, shape or form with what they considered
to be a "corrupt and oppressive police state" would
run counter to their conscience. ("War tax" resisters
act according to a similar principle.)
"This is total capitulation," says Katya Komisaruk,
attorney with the Midnight Special Legal Collective. "As
with the mass arrests made in Seattle, here in DC weve
demonstrated the genuine power wielded by people united. Solidarity
is virtually unstoppable. On to Philly and LA for the Republican
and Democratic National Conventions."
District of Columbia Chief Judge Eugene Hamilton had instructed
the team of prosecutors to resolve the stress on the DC jails
by today. The defense team, comprising the Midnight Special
Legal Collective (formed from the Direct Action Network legal
team that successfully won the dismissal of nearly all 600 Seattle
WTO charges), the National Lawyers Guild, the National Conference
of Black Lawyers, and the Court Appointed Panel negotiated with
the District of Columbia Corporation Counsel and the US Attorneys
Office, seeking the demands arrived at through a unique "consensus"
process (decision by unanimity) by the prisoners.
The plea bargain agreement included a reduction in charges
to jaywalking, with an accompanying $5 fine, the total sum of
which was raised by concerned local citizens within minutes.
The authorities have insisted that all released give a name,
but no identification will be checked for verification. In addition,
the terms apply retroactively to all arrested protesters who
have not yet paid a fine but who provided identification in
order to return to their family, work, or to flee the extensively
reported and soon-to-be thoroughly investigated physical and
psychological brutality of the US Marshals within the DC Courthouse.
Also covered are any prisoners "lost" within the District
of Columbia jail system, a legitimate concern say many familiar
with the DC bureaucracy.
Erin Fischer, a graduate student at Harvard Universitys
Kennedy School of Government, said shortly after her release,
"Those of us who just spent four days in jail have a much
deeper understanding of the oppression caused by IMF/World Bank
policies. Attempts by the prison system, and the US Marshals
in particular, to abuse and dehumanize us only show how seriously
they take us. Weve come out of this stronger, and with
complete confidence in our power as agents of non-violent change."
The original threats hurled at the detainees that they would
be sent to the general prison population and be assuredly beaten
and/or raped proved hollow. The male IMF/WB inmates established
a rapport with their fellow inmates, took testimonials from
them regarding institutional abuse, and pledged to work from
the outside for the correction and prosecution of heinous human
rights violations. "Their every attempt to intimidate or
to divide and conquer only helps us. You would think they would
learn," said a released demonstrator who identified himself
as Daniel Freiheit.
The IMF/WB activists will spend the evening celebrating their
total victory debriefing legal and medical teams, reuniting
with friends and family, some having their first meal since
Monday.
Clubs
and pepper spray for IMF protesters:
"Down
here there is no democracy"
Washington, DC, Apr. 19-- Although protesters were involved
in acts of peaceful civil disobedience, police, US Marshals
on horseback and national guardsmen attacked them with batons,
clubs, tear gas and pepper spray. Over 1,300 were thrown in
jail and scores were injured, including at least one demonstrator
who was hit by a police vehicle.
The nation's capital had the eerie feeling of a city under
military siege. The streets were virtually deserted as police
banned traffic from 90 downtown blocks surrounding the World
Bank and IMF headquarters and told non-emergency personnel not
to report to work. In the areas were the protests occurred,
police helicopters circled overhead, while armored cars and
mounted police and US Marshals patrolled the streets. Hundreds
of police officers in full body armor and shields, and armed
with long batons, manned steel barricades. National Guard troops
were deployed in the streets at the request of Mayor Anthony
Williams.
On Saturday night the police carried out a preemptive strike
by arresting 637 protesters. Demonstrators and tourists said
that police did not give any instructions to disperse and prevented
those who wanted to leave from doing so. A double line of riot-helmeted
police, pumping batons across their chests and stamping their
feet rhythmically, blocked off both ends of the street and moved
in on the crowd. The protesters were dragged into buses, handcuffed
behind their backs, and hauled off to jail. Many were held 20
hours or more. They were denied access to a phone, had little
or no food and were shuttled from one jail to another during
the night. They were not released until they paid a $50 fine
for "parading without a permit."
Among those injured or arrested were reporters and photographers
from Associated Press and the Washington Post. A consultant
to the World Bank who was arguing with demonstrators was also
arrested when the police moved in. When the consultant, a Bolivian
citizen, protested to the US Marshal that his rights were being
violated, he was violently slammed into a wall. The US Marshal
screamed in his ear: "Down here there is no democracy.
This place is a dictatorship and I am God. If you open your
mouth again I will kick your ass 'til you are sorry."
After the arrests on Saturday, DC Mayor Anthony A. Williams
acknowledged that police had tested the "boundary line"
of constitutional rights in dealing with the protesters but
said the city was determined to "prevent a replication
of what happened out in Seattle."
Source: World Socialist Website
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