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NO TAV movement again under attack

NO TAV | 14.08.2013 09:12

NO TAV movement again under attack

For twenty years in mountains of North West Italy, not far from Torino, a powerful movement has grown that has resisted the Italian government’s plan to build a high velocity railroad, which in addition to being very costly and economically useless would certainly destroy the mountain environment. Over and over, the NO TAV movement, now well-known throughout Europe, has come under attack by the police and the army, besides being the object of a smear campaign by politicians of almost every political stripe. However, so strong has been the determination of the people of Val di Susa and their many supporters to resist this assault on their land and their lives that so far no real construction has taken place and all that the companies in charge of the project have achieved has been to surround thousands of acres of land, belonging to the local population, with barbed wires and cops.

NO TAV movement again under attack

For twenty years in mountains of North West Italy, not far from Torino, a powerful movement has grown that has resisted the Italian government’s plan to build a high velocity railroad, which in addition to being very costly and economically useless would certainly destroy the mountain environment. Over and over, the NO TAV movement, now well-known throughout Europe, has come under attack by the police and the army, besides being the object of a smear campaign by politicians of almost every political stripe. However, so strong has been the determination of the people of Val di Susa and their many supporters to resist this assault on their land and their lives that so far no real construction has taken place and all that the companies in charge of the project have achieved has been to surround thousands of acres of land, belonging to the local population, with barbed wires and cops.

It is now generally recognized, even at the EU level, that the construction of the high velocity railroad is unnecessary, so that some participant countries have already withdrawn from the project. Nevertheless, the Italian government has even further intensified its attack on the resistance to the TAV trains, with the full militarization of Val di Susa. As the villagers of this beautiful historic valley, near the border with France, the center of the partisan resistance to Fascism and Nazism in the ‘40s, have repeatedly denounced, no effort has been spared to repress ideologically and physically the legitimate protest of the residents of the valley who would bear every day the consequences of the TAVS. Already the land of Val di Susa has been drenched with tear gas, and many have been arrested, wounded, and some have even died because of the government’s outrageous determination to complete this work regardless of its devastating consequences for the people of the valley.

Now a new violent assault on the No Tav movement is unfolding that demands a clear response by all those in and out of Italy who believe that the systematic destruction of our environment and the violation of people’s most basic needs and demands are crimes that affect us all and we should not tolerate.

On Monday morning, July 29, the DIGOS – the political branch of the police – has raided dozens of homes in Torino and in Val di Susa. Twelve comrades have been forced to open their houses to its agents, who have then proceeded to search for incriminating materials, presumably related to their protest against the enclosure of the land of the valley with hedges of barbed wire. Instructed to look for explosives and cutters, the police have failed in this goal, but they have confiscated all the audio-visual and telecommunication materials they could find, clearly the real objective of the search. As one of the activists raided put it: “They came for weapons, they left with computers and phones”.

The raid has included the restaurant La Credenza – a name that in Italian significantly means both ‘faith’ and ‘pantry’ – a public place of meeting and aggregation for No TAVS in Val di Susa, where workers’ unions and political associations are also located. This is a place where every day people meet to discuss current events, mostly relating to the struggle, as well as share some food and a glass of wine. Whoever goes to Bussoleno, the heartland of the NO TAV struggle, passes through it, to have a chance to talk to local people, check on current events, and have a great dinner. But the magistrates paint it as a place of conspiracy, to support the charge that motivates the raid: involvement in “attacks with terrorist and subversive intent.”

Anyone who has been in Val di Susa, or has followed the long history of the protest its people have mounted against the TAV knows this charge is false, outrageous, and is a classic example of blaming the victims. Not surprisingly the “proofs” are manufactured.

At one of the houses raided, a map of the valley was found with marker-signs on it. The young woman living there is a member of the Legal Team for the movement, and the map is part of the material that she was to submit to the defense in trials that are already taking place against some of its members. On it, the sites are marked where in 2011 several people were brutalized by the police. But according to the investigators, the map proves the existence of a militarily organized guerrilla movement.

Similarly, beer bottles presumably found on the construction site are presented as evidence for the presence of Molotov cocktails, no proof given that they ever contained anything but beer. Black T Shirts too were confiscated, though it is hard to imagine what they could prove. But the meaning of the police operation comes forth most blatantly where the magistrates state that those raided are investigated as suspects of “attacks with terrorist intent.”

In sum, the goal of this new operation is to escalate the assault on the movement by representing it, legally and through the media, as a ‘terrorist’ movement – a move obviously intended to scare its supporters, turn public opinion against the people of Val di Susa, and legitimize any violence the state will deem fit to unleash against them.

We do not think this operation will succeed. The people of Val di Susa have fought the fascists, have fought the Nazis, and for twenty years they have been able to push back the attempt of the Italian government to destroy their mountains, already traversed by many railroad lines and a recently constructed highway. However, we should not underestimate the will of the government to crush this movement. This in fact appears to be the primary objective of the present operation, as reports indicate that, even from a capitalist viewpoint, the TAV project is turning out to be economically unfeasible. Why to pursue it then with so much obstinacy, to the point of stomping over the lives of thousands of people? Is it because the Italian government cannot admit that when people struggle in a unified way they can win? Or is it that the profits that private companies would make would outweigh the failure of the project to bring any benefit to the country as a whole and outweigh as well the immense agony and loss inflicted on the people of Val di Susa?

Politics these days has a surreal character. Lies, distortions, arguments motivated solely by the narrowest of private economic motives are the order of the day. But the fictitious character of the charges brought against the victims of the raid should not deceive us about the damage they can inflict. At the very least these attacks are forcing a movement to re-channel its energies from the struggle against the TAV to the defense of those under attack.

This is why we need to support the NO TAV activists under investigation, we need expand our support for the NO TAV struggle, and send a clear message of protest to the Italian government, demanding it ends the persecution of the No TAV activists and put an end to the TAV project itself.

Please sign the following statement –affiliation for identification purpose only:

We urge the Italian government and judiciary to:

*End its arbitrary use of the law to persecute No TAV activists;

*Cease the investigation against the twelve people whose homes have been raided;

*Stop the militarization of Val de Susa;

*Listen to the legitimate protest of the people of Val de Susa and abandon the TAV project, which has already caused so much suffering to so many people

Alexander Anievas, Research Fellow, Cambridge University, Uk

Dr. Dario Azzelini, Johannes Kepler Universität, Linz (Austria)

Erika Biddle-Stavrakos, York University, Toronto. Canada

Prof. Dusan Bjelic, University of Southern Maine

Werner Bonefeld, University of York, UK

Michaela Brennan, Ann Harbor, USA

George Caffentzis, Professor Emeritus, University of Southern Maine, USA

Chris Carlsson, Shaping San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

Irina Ceric, Osgoode Hall Law School, York University, Toronto

Harry Cleaver, Emeritus, University of Texas, Austin, USA

William T. Cleaver, Austin, Texas, USA

Mitchel Cohen, Brooklyn Greens, Green Party, Former Chair WBAI Radio. N.Y., USA

Laura Corradi, Universita’ della Calabria

Dan Coughlin, New York, USA

Laurence Cox, National University of Ireland Maynooth, Ireland.

Patrick Cuninghame, Sociology Lecturer, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico City

Massimo De Angelis, The commoner.uk, London, UK

Federico Demaria, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain

Dagmar Diesner, The commoner.uk, London, UK

Salvatore di Mauro, editor, Capitalism, Nature and Socialism. USA

Anna Dohm, Interventionist Left Germany

Sara R. Farris, Goldsmiths, University of London

Silvia Federici, Emerita, Hofstra University, Hempstead, N.Y.

Jim Fleming, Autonomedia, New York

Michael Hardt, Duke Univerity, Durham, North Carolina

Dr David Harvie, University of Leicester, UK

Conrad M. Herold, Dept of Economics, Hofstra University, Hempstead, N.Y.

Yaiza Hernández Velázquez, CRMEP, Kingston University, London

John Holloway, Professor, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Mexico

Brian Holmes, art and cultural critic, Chicago

Andrej Hunko, MP for the German Bundestag

Fiona Jeffries, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada

Lewanne Jones, Autonomedia, New York. USA

Nancy Kelley, HIRC of Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachussetts

Sabu Khoso, New York. USA

Peter Linebaugh, Toledo, USA

Federico Luisetti, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Mari Lukkari, journalist, Finland

Caitlin Manning, California State University, Monterey Bay.

Barry Hamilton Maxwell, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., USA

Massimo Modonesi, Coordinador del Centro de Estudios Sociológicos, Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociales

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

Donald Monty Neill, Boston, USA

John Malamatinas, Cologne-Germany

Pablo Mendez, University of British Colombia, Vancouver

Cristina Rousseau, Doctoral Candidate, York University, Toronto.

Stevphen Shukaitis, University of Essex, UK

Marina Sitrin, CUNY Graduate Center, N.Y. USA

Konstantine Stavrakos, environmental lawyer, Toronto.

Alberto Toscano, London, UK

Kevin Van Meter, Team Colors Collective & University of Minnesota (Graduate Student), Minneapolis, MN

Chris Vance, Vancouver, Canada

Dr Peter Waterman Institute of Social Studies, The Hague (retired)

John Willshire-Carrera, HIRC of Harvard Law SchoolCambridge, Massachussetts.

NO TAV