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Gedrucktes zum G8 2007

Roundtable on g8 Resistance: Perspectives for the Next Phase of Global Anti-Capitalist Uprisings (Interventions # 1, first appeared in Issue 6 of Upping the Anti: a Journal of Theory and Action)

“Chef, es sind zu viele” (Block G8, Mai 2008)

Dazwischen gehen – Texte zur Offenen Arbeitskonferenz der Interventionistischen Linken (ak-Redaktion April 2008)

Gewaltbereite Politik und der G8-Gipfel (Komitee für Grundrechte und Demokratie, Dezember 2007)

Feindbild Demonstrant (Republikanischer Anwältinnen- und Anwälteverein | Legal Team, Dezember 2007)

Move into the light? Postscript to a turbulent 2007 (Turbulence, Dezember 2007)

resistance inside – Einblicke in das Innenleben einer Mobilisierung 2.0 (R.O.S.A., November 2007)

Dokumentation zu Migration und G8 (G8-Büro im Hessischen Flüchtlingsrat, Oktober 2007)

Join the winning side – Nachbetrachtung des Antifa-KOK Düsseldorf (Juni 2007)

Turbulence: What would it mean to win? (Juni 2007)

Antikapitalismus für alle! (Mai 2007)

Guide to Resistance (Spontane Redaktionsgruppe, Mai 2007)

Guide to Protest (Hannover Kreis, Mai 2007)

Fußnote #4 (SOBI Rostock, Mai 2007)

Was ist G8? Eine kritische Betrachtung (SOBI Rostock, Mai 2007)

Make G8 History! (AG Globale Soziale Rechte, April 2007)

Stimmen von Anarchistinnen & Anarchisten zu den G8 (April 2007)

solidarität (Mai 2007)

alaska Sondernummer (März 2007)

protest. widerstand. perspektive. (April 2007)

PAULAs Manifest (März 2007)

“G8: Die Deutung der Welt. Kritik. Protest. Widerstand” (arranca! Nr. 36, April 2007)

“Göttinger Gipfelzeitung” zum G8-Gipfel im Juni 2007 in Heiligendamm (April 2007)

“Rostocker Stadtgespräche” Nr. 46/47 (April 2007)

“11. Ausgabe des Antiberliner” zum G8 Gipfel sowie dem Protest dagegen (April 2007)

“Autonomes G8-Info” (Hamburg, April/ Mai 2007)

“Junirevolte” – Zeitung gegen den G8-Gipfel (solid, März 2007)

Informationen und Positionen gegen den G8-Gipfel 2007 (Kieler Netzwerk gegen den G8-Gipfel, März 2007)

“Make capitalism history!” Positionen und Informationen zum G8-Gipfel in Heiligendamm (Avanti, März 2007)

“Widerstand ist fruchtbar. Analysen und Perspektiven für eine nicht-kapitalistische Landwirtschaft” (Aktionsnetzwerk globale Landwirtschaft, März 2007)

“Globalisierung und Krieg” (Informationsstelle Militarisierung/ attac, Anfang 2007)

“Politischer Reiseführer MV” (pdf, Januar 2007, 14 MB)

“dissent! Broschüre” mit (fast) allen Texten rund um die Mobilisierung (92 Seiten, pdf, August 2006)

Reader zu G8 2007 von badespasz (Herbst 2006)

attac Inforeader (2006)

“Inforeader Globalisierung”, Grüne Jugend Bundesvorstand

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2008-07-13

G8 protests expose repressive Japanese ‘Police State’

Report from this year’s summit protests

The protests that follow the annual G8 summit arrived in Northern Japan this year, as the leaders of the world’s eight wealthiest countries gathered at the Windsor Hotel, Lake Toya.

Japan spent a record breaking $280 million on maintaining security at this year’s summit, over double the $130 million spent by German authorities last year. Police were shipped in from all over the country, as a total of 21,000 law enforcers descended on Japan’s most sparsely populated island. With an estimated total of 1,000 protesters attending the demonstrations at this year’s summit, the police presence was described by one demonstrator as “overkill and a waste of public money.”

Pic: Japan

Activists arriving in Japan to protest were targeted by immigration officials at Japan’s borders, with at least thirty people reported to be have been deported upon arrival, many of those from neighbouring South Korea. Others were subject to lengthy questioning, and held for as long as twenty hours, during which time they were locked in holding cells and deprived of their basic human rights. One activist, who was stopped at Tokyo airport after disembarking a flight from Hong Kong, commented, “Two friends and I were stopped by immigration officials at 7.30pm and were only released at 1pm the next day. During this time, we were held captive, refused food and prohibited from making any phone calls.”

Activists were keen to highlight the repressive nature of the Japanese legal system, which allows arrested individuals to be held by police for twenty-three days without charge, during which time their homes are often raided and families harassed. After police arrested four people at a rally in Sapporo on 5th July, the organisers of protest camps closer to the summit turned their attention to avoiding clashes with police. Many activists felt effective protest against the G8 was rendered impossible by heavy-handed policing and the threat of twenty-three-day imprisonment. One Spanish activist, who requested not to be named, said, “we have seen from the demo in Sapporo that the Japanese police will arrest peaceful protesters at random. People are aware that there is a genuine threat of spending time in prison for peacefully protesting in this country.“

On 7th July, a group of fifty protestors were blocked by a hundred and fifty police as they attempted to travel to a protest near Lake Toya. The protesters, mostly made up of foreign nationals, were making their way towards a train station close to Toyoura campsite, before their progress was abruptly halted. They were ordered to return to their campsite or face arrest, after a police spokesman declared their gathering illegal. The activists, incensed at not being allowed to access local public transport, told the press that this show of repression was a clear violation of their human right to protest. “We are bring held prisoners in our camp”, commented a French protester, “I have never experienced being stopped from travelling to a protest before. The repression in this country is insane.”

The majority of protestors that had travelled from to Japan for the demonstrations felt disappointed by the actions that took place over the three days of the summit, feeling that they fell well short of what was achieved in Germany last year. However, this year’s protests are being seen as a building block for young Japanese social movements, which will have learnt many lessons from the past few days. As one Japanese protester put it, “Although we recognise the frustration of many of the European activists, if you had told me four years ago that we would be able to get this many Japanese people on the streets and host an international protest camp, I do not think I would have believed you.”

The main issue to come out of this year’s summit protests is not in doubt. With deportations, harassment, roadblocks and other forms of state repression the order of the day, Japan has exposed its oppressive policy towards activists. The fact that the state’s right to hold arrestees for twenty-three days without charge has been cast into the world’s spotlight will further dent its reputation. These factors, coupled with the staggering amount of taxpayer’s money spent on repressing such a small number of protesters, have led to the Japanese government being left red-faced and out of pocket, with the protestors looking on to Italy 09.

Source: http://japan.indymedia.org/newswire/display/4627/index.php