Greek
police accused of using protester as human shield
Witnesses
say the young woman was frogmarched in handcuffs ahead of riot police
as protesters threw stones at officers
11
October, 2012
Greek
authorities have launched an investigation into allegations that riot
police used a female protester as a human shield during angry
demonstrations over a visit to Athens by the German chancellor,
Angela Merkel, this week.
Witnesses
told the Guardian the young woman, who has yet to be identified, was
frogmarched in handcuffs ahead of riot police as protesters threw
stones at officers.
News
of the investigation came as magistrates launched a separate inquiry
into a Guardian report that anti-fascist protesters, arrested after
clashing with extremists from the neo-nazi Golden Dawn party, were
subjected to torture by officers at the Attica General Police
Directorate. Human Rights Watch said accountability for police abuse
was urgently needed.
The
group said: "The scenes described by the victims to reporters
are deeply shocking. No one should be treated that way by police.
Greece needs to conduct a thorough and impartial investigation of
their allegations."
The
inquiry into the human shield allegations was opened after
photographs of the incident began to circulate on the internet,
triggering condemnation of the tactics law enforcement officials
stand increasingly accused of employing in Greece. "It is being
investigated," said Lieutenant Colonel Christos Manouras,
Greece's police spokesman. "We want to find out what these
pictures hide."
In
the pictures, a young woman, her faced daubed in white anti-teargas
solution, with a pink rucksack on her back, is seen being escorted by
riot police before being placed in front of the unit when it
encounters stone-throwing protesters. Witnesses said the woman
appeared to be disoriented and terrified as she was marched through
Athens in handcuffs.
Foula
Pharmacides, a shipping company employee, had participated in the
demonstration outside parliament, but fled down a side street off
Syntagma Square when police fired teargas to disperse the crowds. She
described terror on the woman's face. "As the squad moved down
Xenofontos Street with the girl, the protesters appeared," she
said. "Then when the protesters started throwing things, the cop
holding the girl takes her from the front of the unit to the back to
face them and he starts moving her like a shield from left to right.
"The
girl was falling down and he was picking her up. She was crying and
clearly terrified. I couldn't believe it. You only ever see this sort
of thing in the movies. Everyone started screaming 'Shame on you!
Shame on you!' I remember there were two women next to me and they
were crying, too, and screaming for the police to stop."
Sokratis
Michalopoulos, another witness, said the episode ended when the
"booing got so loud" and the riot squad decided to move on.
"I don't think I will ever forget her face," said the
36-year-old television technician. "It was as if she were an
object not a human being and I think she was in shock. She was
definitely being used as a shield. Thank God photographers were there
and we now have cameras on phones otherwise people would think we
were mad. No one would believe us."
Veteran
photographer Spyros Tsakiris, who also witnessed the incident, said
the riot policeman who had been holding the woman had written
"killer" in English on one of his bag straps.
As
Greece descends into further chaos amid mounting social and political
tensions, accusations of police brutality are growing. In recent
months, reports have multiplied of codes of conduct being flouted by
law enforcement officers.
The
heavy-handedness has been attributed to links between the police
force and the far-right Golden Dawn, whose popularity has surged on
the back of soaring crime and anti-immigrant hysteria.
"The
police are angry. They are overstretched and underpaid and becoming
increasingly anti-government and radicalised in this case to the
right," said Panos Garganas, a prominent leftist activist.
"Since
democracy was restored in 1974 [with the collapse of military rule] I
have attended hundreds of demonstrations and have seen police sit on
people and kneel on people, but never someone being used as a human
shield," he said.

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