Good News - the police are being
charged
29.1.05
Court accepts activists' appeal.
Police will be sent to court for bodily harm through
negligence
The
Aubonne-Bridge Action against the G8 in 2003, in which two activists,
Martin Shaw and Gesine Wenzel, nearly lost their lives as the police
cut their climbing rope, has entered an exciting new phase. The High
Court has accepted their appeal and overturned the decision of the
examining magistrate Jacques Antenen. He had previously ruled that the
police were not to be charged declaring that the incident was produced
by the activists' own temerity. The Tribunal d'accusation du Canton de
Vaud has now announced that "the investigation has already produced
enough evidence to justify that Michael Deiss and Claude Poget will be
sent to trial under the accusation of simple and severe bodily harm
with negligence." Until now the criminal investigation has only been
carried out against M. Deiss, the policeman from Schaffhousen,
Switzerland, who cut the rope. Now the Court has acknowledged the
activists' complaint and declared that Claude Poget, the highest
ranking officer on the bridge "should have been interviewed as
accused."
The activists remain skeptical. "While we are very happy about
this decision, we have deep concerns that the judicial system really
wants to find out the truth." said Martin Shaw. "They work on the pure
assumption that no orders have been given although the phone calls
between the Poget and Christian Flueli, his senior officer in the
control center have never been examined. This is an obvious step which
we have been asking for since the incident happened." The Court
considers that the investigation supplements that the activists
requested in their appeal are not necessary. Gesine Wenzel says "There
is a definite refusal to find out about the implications of the
hierarchy. They aim to consider the two accused policemen as the black
sheep and the incident as an accident. But if one really wants to avoid
such dramas, the entire system of police intervention and internal
organization has to be looked at."
Of this opinion is also the local parliamentarian Yvan Rytz
who handed in a parliamentary question to the government of the Canton
de Vaud. He states: "The government can't ignore their responsibility
in this affair. The highest ranking officer on the bridge, a policeman
from the Canton de Vaud, did not follow official orders and it's the
governments' responsibility to react on those failures. They also need
to inform us which training the police have received concerning
different types of protest actions. For us it is clear that Shaw and
Wenzel have suffered enormously due to the actions of our policemen and
should be compensated." 29 parliamentarians from different
parties are openly supporting these concerns.
The climbers who have suffered severe physical and emotional
injuries have received no compensation, whilst considerable amounts
have been awarded to shop-owners whose windows were destroyed during
the protests. "This shows how the state protects property over people's
lives", concluded the activists. "The decision of tribunal is a first
step. But it is important to remember that this is absolutely
exceptional and that most complaints about police violence remain
uninvestigated and never lead to prosecution."
aubonne(at)no-log.org - -
text of the parliamentary question:
http://www.verts-vd.ch/yr_interp_aubonne.html |