Fifteen
people arrested in Athens
says they were subjected to what their lawyer describes as an Abu Ghraib-style
humiliation
Fifteen
anti-fascist protesters arrested in Athens
during a clash with supporters of the neo-Nazi party Golden Dawn have said they
were tortured in the Attica General Police Directorate (GADA) – the Athens equivalent of
Scotland Yard – and subjected to what their lawyer describes as an Abu
Ghraib-style humiliation.
Members of
a second group of 25 who were arrested after demonstrating in support of their
fellow anti-fascists the next day said they were beaten and made to strip naked
and bend over in front of officers and other protesters inside the same police
station
Several of
the protesters arrested after the first demonstration on Sunday 30 September
told the Guardian they were slapped and hit by a police officer while five or
six others watched, were spat on and "used as ashtrays" because they
"stank", and were kept awake all night with torches and lasers being
shone in their eyes.
Bruising on
the protester's leg
Some said
they were burned on the arms with a cigarette lighter, and they said police
officers videoed them on their mobile phones and threatened to post the
pictures on the internet and give their home addresses to Golden Dawn, which
has a track record of political violence.
Golden
Dawn's popularity has surged since the June election, when it won 18 seats in
parliament; it recently came third in several opinion polls, behind the
conservative New Democracy and the leftwing party Syriza.
Last month
the Guardian reported that victims of crime have been told by police officers
to seek help from Golden Dawn, who then felt obliged to make donations to the
group.
One of the
two women among them said the officers used crude sexual insults and pulled her
head back by the hair when she tried to avoid being filmed. The protesters said
they were denied drinking water and access to lawyers for 19 hours. "We
were so thirsty we drank water from the toilets," she said.
One man
with a bleeding head wound and a broken arm that he said had been sustained
during his arrest alleged the police continued to beat him in GADA and refused
him medical treatment until the next morning. Another said the police forced
his legs apart and kicked him in the testicles during the arrest.
"They
spat on me and said we would die like our grandfathers in the civil war,"
he said.
A third
said he was hit on the spine with a Taser as he tried to run away; the burn
mark is still visible. "It's like an electric shock," he said.
"My legs were paralysed for a few minutes and I fell. They handcuffed me
behind my back and started hitting and kicking me in the ribs and the head.
Then they told me to stand up, but I couldn't, so they pulled me up by the chain
while standing on my shin. They kept kicking and punching me for five blocks to
the patrol car."
The
protesters asked that their names not be published, for fear of reprisals from
the police or Golden Dawn.
A second
group of protesters also said they were "tortured" at GADA. "We
all had to go past an officer who made us strip naked in the corridor, bend
over and open our back passage in front of everyone else who was there,"
one of them told the Guardian. "He did whatever he wanted with us –
slapped us, hit us, told us not to look at him, not to sit cross-legged. Other
officers who came by did nothing.
"All
we could do was look at each other out of the corners of our eyes to give each
other courage. He had us there for more than two hours. He would take phone
calls on his mobile and say, 'I'm at work and I'm fucking them, I'm fucking
them up well'. In the end only four of us were charged, with resisting arrest.
It was a day out of the past, out of the colonels' junta."
In response
to the allegations, Christos Manouras, press spokesman for the Hellenic police,
said: "There was no use of force by police officers against anyone in
GADA. The Greek police examine and investigate in depth every single report
regarding the use of violence by police officers; if there are any
responsibilities arising, the police take the imposed disciplinary action
against the officers responsible. There is no doubt that the Greek police
always respect human rights and don't use violence."
Sunday's
protest was called after a Tanzanian community centre was vandalised by a group
of 80-100 people in a central Athens
neighbourhood near Aghios Panteleimon, a stronghold of Golden Dawn where there
have been many violent attacks on immigrants.
According
to protesters, about 150 people rode through the neighbourhood on motorcycles
handing out leaflets. They said the front of the parade encountered two or
three men in black Golden Dawn T-shirts, and a fight broke out. A large number
of police immediately swooped on them from the surrounding streets.
According
to Manouras: "During the motorcycle protest there were clashes between
demonstrators and local residents. The police intervened to prevent the
situation from deteriorating and restore public order. There might have been
some minor injuries, during the clashes between residents, protesters and
police."
Marina
Daliani, a lawyer for one of the Athens
15, said they had been charged with "disturbing the peace with covered
faces" (because they were wearing motorcycle helmets), and with grievous
bodily harm against two people. But, she said, no evidence of such harm had so
far been submitted. They have now been released on bail of €3,000 (£2,400)
each.
According
to Charis Ladis, a lawyer for another of the protesters, the sustained
mistreatment of Greeks in police custody has been rare until this year:
"This case shows that a page has been turned. Until now there was an
assumption that someone who was arrested, even violently, would be safe in
custody. But these young people have all said they lived through an
interminable dark night.
Dimitris
Katsaris, a lawyer for four of the protesters, said his clients had suffered
Abu Ghraib-style humiliation, referring to the detention centre where Iraqi
detainees were tortured by US soldiers during the Iraq war. "This is not just a
case of police brutality of the kind you hear about now and then in every
European country. This is happening daily. We have the pictures, we have the
evidence of what happens to people getting arrested protesting against the rise
of the neo-Nazi party in Greece .
This is the new face of the police, with the collaboration of the justice
system."
One of the
arrested protesters, a quiet man in his 30s standing by himself, said:
"Journalists here don't report these things. You have to tell them what's
happening here, in this country that suffered so much from Nazism. No one will
pay attention unless you report these things abroad."
No comments:
Post a Comment