ITALY: Rubbish tip riots rattle Terzigno town
a | 23.10.2010 03:50 | Climate Chaos | Ecology | Repression | World
RIOTING residents threw rocks at police and destroyed garbage trucks during violent skirmishes near Naples on Thursday that injured 20 officers as the region's waste disposal crisis escalated.
The skirmishes prompted the government to call an emergency meeting for Friday.
Demonstrators in the small town of Boscoreale "assaulted 20 policemen and damaged 16 vehicles including eight police cars" during running battles with officers in riot gear wielding truncheons, a Naples police spokesperson said.
There was no word from officials on the numbers of protesters injured.
Five garbage trucks and a police car were set alight as officers attempted to gain control of the town by firing tear gas, setting up road blocks and calling for reinforcements.
The revolt followed the government's decision to go ahead with plans to open a vast garbage tip in the region.
The Cava Vitiello tip is planned to be the biggest garbage dump in Europe with a three-million-tonne capacity.
Thursday's violence followed a night of clashes between residents and police in the nearby town of Terzigno as hundreds of masked demonstrators took to the streets with women and children to protest the opening of the new dump.
The inhabitants of Terzigno and several other municipalities in the area are planning to bring their case to Rome on Friday, where they are to hold a rally.
Domenico Auricchio, mayor of Terzigno, travelled to Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's residence in Rome and said he hoped to persuade the Italian leader to do something about the crisis.
"Twenty days ago Berlusconi told me he would have found a solution to the second tip," he said.
"He promised he would come to Terzigno but he still hasn't," he said.
The leader of Italy's Green party, Angelo Bonelli, who had gone to Terzigno to meet residents, said the crisis was caused by "Berlusconi's lies" and called for the prime minister to resign.
"Italians have been deceived by the Berlusconi government that not only lied about resolving the garbage crisis but still doesn't have a plan to resolve the problem," he said.
Tensions have been rising in the Naples region on this flashpoint issue, which helped Berlusconi to his election victory in 2008 after he promised to stamp out the waste disposal problem in the area.
The European Court of Justice earlier this year criticised Italy, saying it had no adequate system for waste disposal in the Naples region and warning that the problem was a risk to human health and the environment.
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20 police hurt during Italy protests
Rome, Italy (CNN) -- At least 20 police in southern Italy were hurt in clashes with protesters angry over the planned opening of a controversial landfill, authorities said Friday.
The confrontation occurred in the town of Terzigno, near Naples, Thursday night.
Residents are up in arms about the stench wafting from the current dump in the area and don't want another landfill.
Protesters hurled rocks, firecrackers and Molotov cocktails and police used tear gas to put down the demonstrations.
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi is discussing how to deal with the protests with federal and local officials.
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http://napoli.indymedia.org/
http://youtu.be/p-MGMnVw7nk?a
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-11583008
http://twitter.com/#search?q=terzigno
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Restore the matriarchy, elect woman equally at all levels.
23.10.2010 07:39
Do they think that the male domination of democracy is normal? The Italians need to solve the man, woman question for their own good. That is more important that doing cops and garbage fighting in the streets. Everyone knows the garbage need reducing, reusing, and re-cycling. Viva socialist liberation. End useless garbage wars of pollution, not endless wars for more and more pollution.
Tommy