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Europe |
Amnesty Slams 'Excessive' Force against Protesters in Europe |
2012-10-26 |
Anti-austerity demonstrators in Europe have suffered excessive police violence, ...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing... (EU) governments to protect the right to peaceful protest. The rights group said people rallying against government spending cuts, tax rises and job losses in countries hit by the eurozone crisis and elsewhere had sometimes been seriously injured by police or had had medical treatment withheld. "People demonstrating peacefully in EU countries have been beaten, kicked, shot at and maimed with rubber bullets and sprayed with tear gas," Amnesty said. "Yet excessive use of force by police goes uninvestigated and unpunished." The Amnesty report, entitled "Policing demonstrations in the European Union", described several cases where police had severely beaten protesters in Greece, Spain and Romania. Greek journalist Manolis Kypreos was left completely deaf in June 2011 after police threw a stun grenade at him, the report added. Kypreos has since recovered some hearing but his disability has effectively ended his career, Amnesty said. "Governments must spell out and reiterate that coppers may use force only when strictly necessary," said Fotis Filippou, Amnesty's campaign coordinator for Europe and Central Asia. "They must introduce strict guidelines on the use of potentially lethal riot-control devices such as pepper spray and tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets." The report warned that excessive force and arbitrary arrests of protesters could turn anger against governments into anger against the police, increasing the risk of violence at anti-austerity demonstrations. Under international law, police can only use force when it is required for them to perform their duty and they must be restrained in its use, Amnesty said. Police forces in several European countries have faced budget cuts themselves as governments seek to shrink their huge deficits, the report added. |
Posted by:Fred |
#5 Thanks for pointing that out, gromky. I've been methodically testing each link and fixing as needed. The queer thing is that Fred put the links in as normal, but for some reason the Naharnet links don't work until I copy and paste the exact same link over the one he'd pasted in. No doubt he and badanov will have fun figuring it out. |
Posted by: trailing wife 2012-10-26 11:06 |
#4 At least they (Amnesty) are consistent. The "human rights" loving EU elites, on the other hand... |
Posted by: g(r)omgoru 2012-10-26 03:17 |
#3 Broken link. |
Posted by: gromky 2012-10-26 03:12 |
#2 Well, as as a EU passport holder and awardee of the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize, I resemble the police brutality on my fellow Nobel Peace Prize recipients, even if they are delusional. |
Posted by: tipper 2012-10-26 01:37 |
#1 police can only use force when it is required for them to perform their duty So if a policeman's duty is to disperse a crowd impeding public passage and they do not do so when he asks them, he can further forcefully encourage them with his billy club. Etc. |
Posted by: Glenmore 2012-10-26 00:14 |