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The
Committee to Protect Journalists condemns attacks on
journalists at G8 conference in Genoa
August 2,
2001
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi
Presidenza del Consiglio dei Ministri
Palazzo Chigi
Piazza Colonna, 370
00187 Rome, Italy
Via Facsimile: (06) 6798648
Your Excellency:
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), an
independent organization dedicated to the defense of
press freedom around the world, strongly condemns the
brutal attacks by police officers and demonstrators on
journalists covering the Group of Eight (G-8) summit of
the world's industrialized nations in Genoa from July 20
to July 22.
We are also gravely concerned that official Italian
orders compelling media outlets to turn over photographs
and audio/video tapes of the violence will further
jeopardize the safety of journalists and the integrity of
the profession by forcing them to act as police
informants.
According to international press reports and CPJ's own
research, police officers were responsible for the
greatest number of attacks on journalists covering the
anti-globalizations protests during the summit. Police
officers beat a number of journalists on July 20:
- Sam Cole, a
Rome-based producer for The Associated Press (AP)
Television News, was clubbed and suffered a head
injury;
- Timothy Fadek of the
GAMMA Press photo agency was flung to the ground
and beaten extensively, AP reported;
- An AP Biscom news
agency journalist, whose name has not been
disclosed, was beaten even after he showed
officers his press credentials and identified
himself as a member of the press.
We continue
to investigate a number of reported attacks on Italian
journalists that have surfaced in the European press.
At around midnight on July 21, police raided two
buildings occupied by the Genoa Social Forum, an umbrella
group of anti-globalization organizations. The
Independent Media Center (IMC www.indymedia.org),
which helped many independent journalists file
stories about the demonstrations, was based in one of the
buildings. The police, who were allegedly seeking violent
demonstrators, ransacked the IMC and searched the
premises for film and photographs, Agence France-Press
reported.
Along with numerous activists, Italian police beat
several independent journalists and IMC members who were
in the buildings at the time of the raid. Michael Gieser,
a Belgian journalist, suffered facial cuts when he was
beaten as he lay on the ground, and Philipp Stein, IMC
member and journalist from Berlin, was struck when he
implored officers to stop the violence, according to
Agence France-Presse.
Violent demonstrators were also responsible for a number
of assaults on journalists during the summit, according
to international press reports. On July 20, for example,
Jérome Delay, a Paris-based photographer for The
Associated Press, sustained a fractured rib when a
demonstrator struck him with a metal bar. On July 21, a
group of militant anarchists attacked journalists and
television crews from Germany and Japan, the London-based
Independent reported.
CPJ has also received troubling reports that police
officers masqueraded as journalists during the summit,
thereby endangering all journalists. We strongly
encourage a thorough investigation into these
allegations.
Initially, Your Excellency dismissed domestic and
international calls for investigations into the
incidents. But on Monday, July 30, the Italian government
agreed to open a parliamentary inquiry into allegations
of police misconduct. In addition, British foreign
secretary Jack Straw has received confirmation "at
the highest level" that the Genoa Public Prosecutor
will investigate allegations of police brutality,
according to the The Times of London.
The Interior Ministry also opened an internal
investigation, consisting of three parts: allegations of
police brutality during the protests; the raid on the
Genoa Social Forum; and alleged abuses in the detention
cells of the Bolzaneto police station.
CPJ remains very concerned that Italian authorities have
not specifically addressed reports of police brutality
against journalists.
Moreover, CPJ is troubled that prosecutors have ordered
media outlets to turn over photographs and audio/video
tapes of the Genoa street violence. Reuters, The
Associated Press, Agence France-Presse, and Italy's RAI
state television network have all received such orders
during the last 10 days, Reuters reported.
Italian law, which allows prosecutors to issue such
mandates, does not allow for appeals to the judiciary and
imposes stiff penalties on journalists who do not comply.
By forcing journalists to act as police informants, the
law severely jeopardizes journalists' safety and
credibility.
As a nonpartisan organization of journalists devoted to
defending press freedom worldwide, CPJ is deeply
disturbed at this arbitrary and brutal treatment of
journalists covering the Genoa summit. We call on Your
Excellency to ensure that any demonstrators and police
officers found to have attacked journalists are
prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
We hope you will keep us informed about the progress of
the investigations. Thank you for your attention to this
urgent matter. We await your reply.
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