Steve Cisler on 31 Jan 2001 06:55:51 -0000 |
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<nettime> Davos as armed camp |
Dan Gillmor is a very good tech. journalist here in San Jose. He does a web log from which he draws material for his San Jose Mercury columns. From Saturday: 1/27 http://weblog.mercurycenter.com/ejournal/ Police Village Last year, protesters at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum here got a bit violent, breaking windows in a local McDonald's and throwing punches at several policemen. This year, the police and army tried to keep them entirely out of the Davos village proper. The authorities didn't entirely succeed, and they've used force (Reuters) in putting down even moderate demonstrations today. To what end? The police presence has become such an overwhelming presence here that it's almost overshadowed the events inside the World Congress Centre, site of the meeting's primary events. Even some of the local hotels are armed camps. The Seehof, near the railway station, is favored by some political leaders who come here each year. Getting into the place is almost as rigorous as at the World Congress Centre itself. You have to go through metal detectors while cold-eyed security forces eye your badge. There are three different checkpoints on the way through. The Swiss have been taking security to paranoid extremes. They even blocked a speaker (Newsweek) who was coming in by train and was scheduled to speak at a counter-gathering nearby the Congress Centre. The desire of authorities to keep people safe is more than understandable, given the stature of some of the people here. But I wonder if the Swiss and the Forum understand how much this police-state stuff is fueling the outrage. Some of the people who are part of the Davos meeting -- that is, they were specifically invited to be here -- are expressing deep unhappiness about what's going on, and they've issued a press release. I have only a paper copy and don't know if it's online anywhere. So here's a key quote from the release, which is signed by Jeremy Rifkin and Esther Dyson among others. "Unfortunately, Davos has become a fortress with ominous consequences for the future of global dialogue," it says. I hope the corporate and political leaders here are listening. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net