Stasi Lives!
anarchoteapot | 23.05.2007 08:35 | G8 Germany 2007 | Repression | Social Struggles
Anyone who has seen the Oscar-winning film "The Lives Of Others" recently (was showing at the Dukes and Zepherelli's) may be chilled by a story in today's Guardian. In the recent raids on people's houses and social centres (and art galleries/artist spaces) across Berlin and Hamburg, the police ordered a 68-yr old anti-nuclear protester to hold onto metal poles in order to obtain a 'scent sample' from his sweat. Similar sampling was done with other potential protesters. These samples can then be used by tracker dogs to identify or follow the subjects. The police have said that they are trying to use the samples to identify the author of a letter claiming responsibility for arson attacks on cars....
1984? Or earlier? The same techniques are shown as a key tactic of the Stasi (secret police) in the former DDR (East Germany) as intinidation as well as a method of keeping tabs on suspects.
1984? Or earlier? The same techniques are shown as a key tactic of the Stasi (secret police) in the former DDR (East Germany) as intinidation as well as a method of keeping tabs on suspects.
anarchoteapot
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The Lives of Us
23.05.2007 14:26
An obvious police lie, they could just use DNA swabs for the same purpose. I'd be guessing at the real reason for this latest sweat-test, perhaps just to make us sweat.
The Lives of Others is the best film ever to win an Oscar. The academy obviously don't have the wit to realise the UK secret police were a direct mirror of the Stasi back then. Of course, both countries continue to have secret police, they are just better equipped.
Danny