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The
International Federation of Journalists condemn
police and demand probe into Genoa violence against media
The
International Federation of Journalists today accused
Italian police of violence against media staff and
heavy-handed tactics that "have put reporters at
risk and show contempt for press freedom" in the
confrontation with protestors at the G8 Summit over the
weekend.
"We have had numerous reports of reporters and news
teams caught up in the crossfire of some brutal
policing," said Aidan White, General Secretary of
the IFJ, the world's largest journalists' organisation.
"We demand a full investigation into how the police
have acted and particularly how they have compromised
journalists' rights and put reporters at risk."
The IFJ said that subterfuge on the part of the police
had contributed to problems for reporters on the spot.
"We understand that some police dressed up as
journalists using media tabards. Such a tactic is
reprehensible. It inspired fury among protesters and put
honest journalists at risk of violence from all
sides," he said. The IFJ joined the Italian
Journalists' Federation (FNSI) in condemning the police
tactics and supported FNSI protests over police raids on
a Genoa school housing protesters in which journalists
were also hurt.
The IFJ further backed a protest by its British affiliate
the National Union of Journalists over injuries inflicted
by police on John Elliot, a reporter for The Times
of London.
The IFJ also condemned a raid by police on the Genoa news
centre of the alternative news network Indymedia.
"This raid was a deliberate attempt to seize
photographs and video footage of earlier police actions
and is a serious violation of journalists' rights to
gather information without interference," said
White.
The Indymedia network was established after Seattle to
provide news and information to a global community about
globalisation developments. "It appears that this
news team has been deliberately targeted," said the
IFJ.
"Journalists' throughout Europe and around the world
are horrified by the scale of the violence and the
complete disregard by the authorities for the safety of
media people," said the IFJ, "These incidents
must be fully and independently investigated."
The IFJ
represents more than 450.000 journalists in 100 countries
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