> In the end Andrew Gilligan did not write about incident himself infact he published
> nothing directly from his experainces in Edinburgh durring the G8 as far as I know.
> I don't think he came specifically for that meeting it was just one of many things
> he was checking out with his time.
Actually, he wrote about it the next day in the Evening Standard:
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The howling mob set on me, grabbed my bag, then said sorry
Evening Standard (London), Jul 4, 2005 by ANDREW GILLIGAN
[...]
If there is anywhere that represents the dark heart of residents' fears for a repeat of the riots of Seattle, Gothenburg and Genoa, it is probably the university union building on Bristo Square, meeting- place for some of the hardcore activists and protesters, or at least the hardcore activist and protester wannabes.
What's believed to be the first violence of the G8 summit took place there yesterday - an extremely localised outbreak, against me, as it happens.
The venue was the debating chamber of the union building, a sizeable, vaguely Gothic room and the political cradle of one Gordon Brown, a former Edinburgh student. The event was a large planning meeting for the Dissent anarchist network, which includes many of the same people involved in past disturbances at Seattle, Gothenburg and Genoa, but definitely not evil, capitalist journalists.
"On a technical point, chairman," said the anarchist who'd been to university with me and unfortunately recognised me loitering in the audience.
"There is a journalist in the corner!" Have you ever been denounced in front of hundreds of hard-line G8 protesters, who then turn nasty and assault you?
Not an experience I would necessarily recommend, but it happened to me yesterday.
The meeting instantly descended into chaos, with a mob of dozens of people screaming at me, grabbing me, tearing at my clothes and trying to take my bag. My glasses were snatched and kindly reconfigured into a pince-nez. I lost the bag after a struggle.
I had, as a precaution, put myself quite close to the door, but it was still quite an unpleasant couple of minutes before I could extricate myself, with the help of some people in the crowd who wanted to protect me.
(Later, when I was talking to people outside, some came up and apologised, and my bag was returned.) This could be the cue for one of those "I saw the true face of anarchist menace" pieces; but, in fact, having sat through the preceding 45 minutes, what struck me about the whole business was the sheer unlikelihood of this particular group of would-be revolutionaries being able to cause any major bother for anyone better protected than a solitary hack.
" We have a confrontational agenda," promised the man in charge of the meeting, who introduced himself as a member of the Wombles, a group particularly active at Genoa. But not all the gathering seemed to have the basic facts at their disposal.
"What Ordnance Survey map is Gleneagles on?" asked one lad.
" You've been talking about blockading the red zone," said another fellow.
"Where is that, exactly?"
"Gleneagles," said the chairman, with a slight air of bemusement.
There was a fierce discussion about whether the anarchists should go to the summit venue itself - ringed with police and security fences - or concentrate on " blockades" in Edinburgh and Glasgow, where many of the delegates and support staff are staying.
Edinburgh's Sheraton hotel, home to at least one delegation, was mentioned as one priority target.
In the end, it was sort of decided that they would do both Edinburgh and Gleneagles, but, as one member of the meeting said, to general laughter, "I've been to this movie before. We all decide to go somewhere a long way away. And the next day nobody turns up."
It would, of course, be unwise to take this gathering as the complete story of the attempts to disrupt the summit violently. More serious, better-organised people may be waiting in the wings. The real planning is done in much smaller groups. But several of the core activists did seem to be present; and their aims seemed remarkably modest. "We blockaded the EU-US summit [in Ireland] last year," said one Irish delegate. "We took 20 minutes out of George Bush's life and it's one of the things I'm most proud of."
The G8 summiteers can take comfort not just from this, but from the way in which Bono and Geldof have taken the sting from much of the peaceful part of the anti-G8 protest.
[...]
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4153/is_20050704/ai_n14682280