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Police violence shocks activists, others at Port of Oakland
protest
By Dana
Hull
Mercury News
An anti-war demonstration
at the Port of Oakland turned violent this morning when Oakland Police
opened fire with wooden dowels, ``sting balls,'' concussion grendades,
tear gas and other non-lethal weapons when protesters at the gates of
two shipping lines refused an order to disperse.
Scores of protesters ran
from a line of police or tried to hide behind nearby big rigs. At least
a dozen demonstrators and nine longshoremen who were standing nearby
were injured.
``Our guys were standing
in one area waiting to go to work, and then the police started firing
on the longshoremen,'' said Henry Graham, the president of ILWU Local
10. ``Some were hit in the chest with rubber bullets, and seven of our
guys went to the hospital. I don't want to imply that the police deliberately
did this, but it doesn't make sense.''
There have been so many anti-war
demonstrations in the Bay Area in recent months that they have almost
become routine, and most have been peaceful. Monday's events mark the
first time that local police have used projectiles to disperse crowds,
and many demonstrators said they were stunned that the projectiles were
fired at such close range.
``I was just marching in
a big circle and the police lowered their guns at us,'' said Scott Fleming,
29, who took off his shirt to reveal four large red and swollen welts
on his back. ``I turned to run and I started getting hit with wooden
bullets. They just kept shooting at us, and I kept running. I'm a lawyer,
and I'm serioulsy considering filing charges.''
The early morning mayhem
came as a shock to veteran activists and Oakland leaders alike. Oakland
was one of the first cities in the region to pass a resolution condeming
the U.S.-led war with Iraq, and the City Council has a progressive reputation.
Some well known public officials even turned out to participate in the
early morning protest.
``I got hit a few times with
rubber bullets,'' said Dan Siegel, an attorney and member of the Oakland
School Board. Siegel pulled a sting ball out of the pocket of his business
suit and said he was outraged that the police fired on a peaceful protest.
``The police totally overreacted. It's over the top. They were reckless,
and I also saw an officer on a motorcycle run over a woman's foot.''
The port protest was one
of several anti-war demonstrations held Monday in the Bay Area. Several
people were arrested at the Concord Naval Weapons Station, and seven
were arrested after they temporarily blocked an off-ramp from Interstate
280 in San Francisco. Other demonstrators walked in a circle in front
of the federal building in San Francisco, drumming wooden spoons together
as federal employees arrived for work.
The action at the Port was
the largest. Hundreds of demonstrators met near dawn Monday at the terminals
of Neptune Orient Lines Ltd.'s APL unit and Stevedoring Services of
America, shipping companies that activists say are profiting from the
war.
In late March, Stevedoring
Services of America won a $4.8 million contract from the U.S. government
to manage the Iraqi port Umm Qasr and ensure that urgent food assistance
and materials flow smoothly through the seaport. Critics are screaming
foul over the process, which excluded any foreign companies from bidding
on the lucrative contracts.
The demonstrations at the
port were planned with the quiet support of the ILWU, the International
Longshore and Warehouse Union.
Many rank-and-file members
of ILWU Local 10 oppose the war with Iraq, and the local has its own
Anti-War Action Committee.
Police fired into the crowd
after some protesters failed to clear the street in front of the terminals.
``At that point, we fired
non-lethal munitions,'' said Danielle Ashford, an officer with the Oakland
Police Department. ``There were a few agitators in the crowd. The majority
of them were peaceful.''
But others said they never
saw any evidence of ``agitators'' and urged any witnesses to come to
Tuesday's City Council meeting.
``I was there from 5 a.m.
on, and the only violence that I saw was from the police,'' said Joel
Tena, the constituent liason for Vice Mayor Nancy Nadel. ``What happened
today was very surprising. It seemed the police were operating under
the assumption that they were not going to let any kind of protest happen.''
Copyright 2003 Knight Ridder
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