Genoa and the Culture of Fascism

Nick Davies-

No Italian politician has been brought to book, in spite of the strong suggestion that the police acted as though somebody had promised them impunity. One minister visited Bolzaneto while the detainees were being mistreated and apparently saw nothing or, at least, saw nothing he thought he should stop. Another, Gianfranco Fini, former national secretary of the neo-fascist MSI party and the then deputy prime minister, was – according to media reports at the time – in police headquarters. He has never been required to explain what orders he gave.

Most of the several hundred law officers involved in Diaz and Bolzaneto have escaped without any discipline or criminal charge. None has been suspended; some have been promoted. None of the officers who were tried over Bolzaneto has been charged with torture – Italian law does not recognise the offence. Some senior officers who were originally going to be charged over the Diaz raid escaped trial because Zucca was simply unable to prove that a chain of command existed. Even now, the trial of the 28 officers who have been charged is in jeopardy because the prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, is pushing through legislation to delay all trials dealing with events that occurred before June 2002. Nobody has been charged with the violence inflicted on Covell. And as one of the victims’ lawyers, Massimo Pastore, put it: “Nobody wants to listen to what this story has to say.”

That is about fascism. There are plenty of rumours that the police and carabinieri and prison staff belonged to fascist groups, but no evidence to support that. Pastore argues that that misses the bigger point: “It is not just a matter of a few drunken fascists. This is mass behaviour by the police. No one said ‘No.’ This is a culture of fascism.” At its heart, this involved what Zucca described in his report as “a situation in which every rule of law appears to have been suspended.”

Fifty-two days after the attack on the Diaz school, 19 men used planes full of passengers as flying bombs and shifted the bedrock of assumptions on which western democracies had based their business. Since then, politicians who would never describe themselves as fascists have allowed the mass tapping of telephones and monitoring of emails, detention without trial, systematic torture, the calibrated drowning of detainees, unlimited house arrest and the targeted killing of suspects, while the procedure of extradition has been replaced by “extraordinary rendition”. This isn’t fascism with jack-booted dictators with foam on their lips. It’s the pragmatism of nicely turned-out politicians. But the result looks very similar. Genoa tells us that when the state feels threatened, the rule of law can be suspended. Anywhere.

Read the full article here, details of the torture regime, seem familiar?-

  • officers set upon her, beating her head so hard with their sticks that she rapidly lost consciousness. When she fell to the ground, officers circled her, beating and kicking her limp body, banging her head against a near-by cupboard, leaving her finally in a pool of blood. Katherina Ottoway, who saw this happen, recalled: “She was trembling all over. Her eyes were open but upturned. I thought she was dying, that she could not survive this.”
  • “In the space of a few minutes, all the occupants on the ground floor had been reduced to complete helplessness, the groans of the wounded mingling with the sound of calls for an ambulance.” In their fear, some victims lost control of their bowels. Then the officers of the law moved up the stairs. In the first-floor corridor they found a small group, including Gieser, still clutching his toothbrush: “Someone suggested lying down, to show there was no resistance. So I did. The police arrived and began beating us, one by one. I protected my head with my hands. I thought, ‘I must survive.’ People were shouting, ‘Please stop.’ I said the same thing … It made me think of a pork butchery. We were being treated like animals, like pigs.”
  • even as McQuillan stood up with his hands raised saying, “Take it easy, take it easy,” they battered them into submission, inflicting numerous cuts and bruises and breaking McQuillan’s wrist. Norman Blair recalled: “I could feel the venom and hatred from them.”
  • In one corridor, they ordered a group of young men and women to kneel, the easier to batter them around the head and shoulders.
  • the officer who stood spread-legged in front of a kneeling and injured woman, grabbed his groin and thrust it into her face before turning to do the same to Daniel Albrecht kneeling beside her; the officer who paused amid the beatings and took a knife to cut off hair from his victims,
  • “They seemed to be enjoying themselves and, when I cried out in pain, it seemed to give them even more pleasure.”
  • Some officers had traditional fascist songs as ringtones on their mobile phones and talked enthusiastically about Mussolini and Pinochet. Repeatedly, they ordered prisoners to say “Viva il duce.” Sometimes, they used threats to force them to sing fascist songs: “Un, due, tre. Viva Pinochet!”
  • they were marked with felt-tip crosses on each cheek, and many were forced to walk between two parallel lines of officers who kicked and beat them. Most were herded into large cells, holding up to 30 people. Here, they were forced to stand for long periods, facing the wall with their hands up high and their legs spread. Those who failed to hold the position were shouted at, slapped and beaten. Mohammed Tabach has an artificial leg and, unable to hold the stress position, collapsed and was rewarded with two bursts of pepper spray in his face and, later, a particularly savage beating.
  • Stefan Bauer dared to answer back. He was hauled out, beaten, given a face full of pepper spray, stripped naked and put under a cold shower. His clothes were taken away and he was returned to the freezing cell wearing only a flimsy hospital gown.
  • Men and women with dreadlocks had their hair roughly cut off to the scalp. Marco Bistacchia was taken to an office, stripped naked, made to get down on all fours and told to bark like a dog and to shout “Viva la polizia Italiana!”
  • Ester Percivati, a young Turkish woman, recalled guards calling her a whore as she was marched to the toilet, where a woman officer forced her head down into the bowl and a male jeered “Nice arse! Would you like a truncheon up it?” Several women reported threats of rape, anal and vaginal.

Even the infirmary was dangerous. Richard Moth, covered in cuts and bruises after lying on top of his partner, was given stitches in his head and legs without anaesthetic – “an extremely painful and disturbing experience. I had to be held down.” Prison medical staff were among those convicted of abuse on Monday.

All agree that this was not an attempt to get the detainees to talk, simply an exercise in creating fear. And it worked. In statements, prisoners later described their feeling of helplessness, of being cut off from the rest of the world in a place where there was no law and no rules. Indeed, the police forced their captives to sign statements, waiving all their legal rights. One man, David Larroquelle, testified that he refused and had three of his ribs broken. Percivati also refused and her face was slammed into the office wall, breaking her glasses and making her nose bleed.

The outside world was treated to some severely distorted accounts of all this. Lying in San Martino hospital the day after his beating, Covell came round to find his shoulder being shaken by a woman who, he understood, was from the British embassy. It was only when the man with her started taking photographs that he realised she was a reporter, from the Daily Mail. Its front page the next day ran an entirely false report describing him as having helped mastermind the riots. (Four long years later, the Mail eventually apologised and paid Covell damages for invasion of privacy.)

While his citizens were being beaten and tormented in illegal detention, spokesmen for the then prime minister, Tony Blair, declared: “The Italian police had a difficult job to do. The prime minister believes that they did that job.”

I don’t doubt this was authorised from the top, by the same people now in power in Italy. By the same allies of Blair and Bush who also have prisoners tortured. And as ever The Mail pandering to fascists. Our media does not invite us to view the Italian fascists in the same internationally outraged tones of say Mugabe, the Chinese in Tibet, or the junta in Burma. But this shows the state forces have the capacity and desire for torture and state sanctioned persecution, as does the recent court decision legally slandering & discriminating against the Roma. The affection for Pinochet among the perpetrators also gives clues about the authoritarian mode that neoliberalism enters as the inequalities become unsustainable except by state terror. And of course this repression was under the auspices of a G8 conference. History is full of warning signs and recognisable patterns, just as it is also full of people who ignore them. The way this story has been covered and the impunity for the majority of the perpetrators is significant. But then every day I wake up in a country headed by war criminals, take a breath, step back, this is where we are.

4 Responses to “Genoa and the Culture of Fascism”

  1. korova Says:

    Caught this today, very interesting. What I find especially interesting is how there are those on the right who claim that all dictators/fascists are left-wing and draw support from the left, and yet they are noticeably quiet about the rise of fascism in Italy. Straw man anyone?

  2. ralfast Says:

    Disgusting!

    No surprise then that the Italian PM is best buddies with Nanny State Blair and Daddy Party Bush.

  3. RickB Says:

    Korova- for a lot of the right it is not so much a political position but a pathological condition requiring therapy. Most marked by the refusal for all and any self examination or criticism, hence rejecting any links to historical fascism while supporting its contemporary manifestations.

    Rafael- Yep, and rather ominously in Milan the state closed a mosque and the Muslims had to worship in a soccer stadium…
    http://www.islamophobia-watch.com/islamophobia-watch/2008/7/18/evicted-milan-muslims-pray-at-stadium-mosque.html

  4. This Is Fascism « Ten Percent Says:

    [...] Previously. Posted in Media. Tags: Fascism, G8, Genoa. [...]


Leave a Reply