The Anarchist Violence

Published: 2 May 2003 y., Friday
Anarchists tipped over a number of cars and set them ablaze on Thursday night and threw rocks, bottles and fireworks at police and journalists. But police spokesman Karsten Graefe said a small number of assailants were to blame for the violence. "It's depressing when a small number of violent assailants ruins celebrations for everyone else," said Graefe, the chief Berlin spokesman. After years of fighting open street battles with protesters on May Day, police switched tactics last year to a more passive approach in hopes of lowering tensions and preventing violence. Police said "a good number of people" were detained and several injured people were seen being carried away from street battles between the left-wing anarchists and helmet-clad riot police. Berlin police tried to prevent any escalation and initially made no moves against demonstrations that turned violent in the Kreuzberg district. Some 2,500 riot police in the quarter stood by at first as a few stones and bottles were thrown. But authorities later fired tear gas and water cannons when the number of flung bottles and stones increased and the attackers began toppling cars and setting them on fire.
Šaltinis: abc.net.au
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

How much security is too much?

Since 9/11, and with the terrorist attacks in Madrid in 2004 and in London in 2005, security has become a top priority for the EU. more »

Obama apologizes for remark

Obama made a "joke" about his bowling skills being bad, comparing it to the Special Olympics. more »

Energy and climate change: A look back and a time to decide our future

Energy policy and climate change have raced up the political agenda in the last few years. more »

Water – 71% of the Earth's surface, but still scarce

A desolate planet where the most prized asset is water - that is the scenario in Frank Herbert's science fiction novel “Dune”. more »

London's first vertical rush

More than 600 people turned out for London's first verticle rush. Winner took just four minutes and 57 seconds to get from bottom to top – 920 steps. more »

Consumer protection - look back at some EP measures

In an ideal world, the consumer would be king. Today's consumer is alas often a victim - left feeling helpless and frustrated. more »

China makes tainted pork arrests

China arrested fifteen people for selling pigs fed with banned growth chemicals, which sickened 70 people in the country's southern Guangdong province. more »

China offers Taiwan two white tigers

China offers Magnificent white tigers to a city in Taiwan as an act of goodwill. more »

Europe's Roma - stuck in a “vicious circle” of despair

Europe's estimated 10-12 million Roma are its largest minority and most of them live in abject poverty. more »

Global recession hits moon sales

To boost sales, the Czech Republic lunar embassy has cut prices down by 20 percent, offering land patches for 799 Czech Crowns (39 U.S. dollars). more »