Showing posts with label US military bases. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US military bases. Show all posts

October 8, 2008

Vicenzi Say NO MORE US Bases

The people of Vicenza are fed up with the status quo playing games with their rights, and they have taken matters into their own hands.

Try to imagine: What would it take for the "officials," our PUBLIC servants, to allow a referendum on, oh, say the practice of rendition or maybe a completely unbiased investigation into the failures of 9/11 and who should be held accountable for letting it happen? Could it happen and how far would it go?

Big shout out to our cousins in Italia!!! This is what democracy looks like. Read and be inspired:

“Unofficial” Referendum in Vicenza, Italy:

95% Opposed to New U.S. Military Base

On October 5, 2008, Vicenza overwhelmingly said no to a second U.S. military base. In a referendum that had officially been suspended just four days before it was to take place, 24,094 voters, determined to express themselves, showed up to cast their votes. The referendum asked local residents if they agreed with the City of Vicenza taking up measures to purchase the Dal Molin area, the site of the proposed base, in order to designate its use in the public interest and to protect the environmental integrity of the site. With a resounding no to the new base, 23,050 voters, or 95.66%, voted in favor of the referendum.

The people of this city in northern Italy had been asking to have a say in this issue that has dominated local politics since May of 2006, when news of the proposed base first began to leak out. More than two years later, it had finally been called following a vote by the newly-elected city council this past June. Vicenza's mayor, Achille Variati, had been elected in a runoff vote in April of this year on a platform that opposed the base and supported a local referendum.

As the date of the referendum neared, a campaign against this expression of democracy began. The Special Commissioner appointed by the government, Paolo Costa, called the referendum “anti-democratic” and Italian Prime Minister Berlusconi went so far as to write an open letter to Mayor Variati, in which he described the referendum as “seriously inopportune.”

A legal battle against the referendum was lead by Roberto Cattaneo, an official in Berlusconi's Forza Italia party, member of the Vicenza Provincial Council and a former employee of the existing base of Camp Ederle. Cattaneo is also the leader of the Committee Si Dal Molin, which is in favor of the base, but judging by the lack of any public events, has a rather small popular following. Cattaneo presented a case before the TAR, a regional administrative court, in early September calling for the referendum to be blocked. His case maintained, as the national government had been doing for some time, that the city had no authority to purchase the area and the referendum was therefore inappropriate.

[...] On the evening of October 1, as they learned of the court's decision, the people responded with outrage and over 12,000 poured into the main square in Vicenza for a demonstration that had been organized just hours before.

Vicenza's mayor took to the stage and said “If they won't let us vote inside the polling places, then we'll vote outside the gates.” And so it was, with new meaning given to the term “popular referendum.”

Despite this being an “unofficial” vote, it was organized with strict adherence to the rules. City residents were required to go to their normal polling place and identification was required. Some city council members also served as polling place supervisors and a committee to guarantee the results, including a notary, was nominated.

[,,,] Voting started at 8am. By noon, nearly 10,000 people had already voted, including a man who had just celebrated his 100th birthday. Voter turnout at times overwhelmed some of the 32 polling places [my bold] throughout the city, with long lines forming.

[...] In addition to the local referendum, other cities throughout Italy also organized symbolic votes in solidarity with the people of Vicenza, from Val di Susa in the north to Cagliari in Sardinia, an island that has seen the devastating effects of military bases.

Aware that the impact of this base is hardly limited to the city of Vicenza, an online vote was also organized allowing people all over the world to participate symbolically in the referendum. Over 30,000 people voted, with 80.7% against the base.

[Let us not forget the horrific accident caused by Marine hot shot fly boys who flew under commuter cable cars, causing the deaths of 20 people. See CNN’s Marine memo warned of'dire events' before cable car disaster, http://www.cnn.com/US/9806/16/marine.cablecar/index.html for another reason why Italians don’t want our bases.]

[...] As Mayor Variati said following the vote on Sunday, “This wasn't an official referendum, but a referendum obstructed and denied by public officials.” Some were afraid to take part in the vote, many others, instead, felt they had to participate. 24,000 “conscientious objectors”, aged 18 to 100, took to the polls. They paid no heed to what had been said or written by everyone from Prime Minister Berlusconi, to Defense Minister La Russa, the Council of State, Governor of the Veneto Region Galan, all the way down to Cattaneo. They cast their votes to say we don't want to see further militarization of our city.

This wasn't a “normal” referendum, with so many public authorities against it. And for that very reason, the result was exceptional.

It was an extraordinary example of citizens taking democracy into their own hands, a victory over apathy. And it wasn't the first time it had happened in Vicenza, where for over two years the people have not only succeeded in blocking construction of a base they don't want, but also in creating a community which takes an active role in the politics that affect their lives and the lives of others around the globe.

Viva la democrazia!

Enzo Ciscato
Presidio permanente No Dal Molin

Stephanie Westbrook
U.S. Citizens for Peace & Justice – Rome
http://www.peaceandjustice.it/vicenza-referendum.php


December 17, 2007

Three Days of Solidarity In Italia!

Terrific coverage of this demo, including background info and news of the spread of activism to Germany, the Czech Republic and other places in Europe that are occupied by our military. I emphasis text in bold:
Italians Block Construction
of U.S. Base
By David Swanson
The people of the northern Italian city of Vicenza, with help from activists around Italy, the rest of Europe, and even in the United States, are continuing to block the proposed construction of a new U.S. military base on their soil. When a company laid underground fiber-optic cables at the site of the proposed base, activists fill a junction box with cement. When another company tried to begin the work of removing World War II era U.S. bombs from the site, activists camped out in the cold for three days and nights while allies in Florence and a small town near Naples conducted simultaneous protests in front of the company's offices. The company backed off and has suspended the work. And a small town outside Vicenza has now refused to allow the United States to construct a residential village for troops.
[…] Saturday, December 15th, 2007, was predicted to be the coldest day Vicenza had seen. It snowed lightly in the morning.... But as the march proceeded ... it became clear that, without any advertising, and with negative or nonexistent media coverage, over 80,000 people had turned out in this conservative city with no university and no protest tradition. And there was no counter-protest whatsoever.
At the end of the march, the crowd poured into a piazza to hear speeches from playwright Dario Fo, Catholic priest Don Gallo, event organizer Cinzia Bottene, American Code Pink activist Desiree Fairooz (famous around the globe for holding blood-colored hands up to Condoleezza Rice) and others. Desiree was wonderful despite being moved to tears by the thought of whose fault it was that Italians and others around the world must hold these protests.
[…] citizens maintain a 24-7 presence on the edge of the site in their "permanent" fort, consisting of large white tents and trailers. The tents have heat, electricity, light, a sound system, a kitchen, and a store selling every possible article with the anti-base label "No Dal Molin." A trailer has a radio station. There are not, however, places for large numbers of activists from out of town to sleep. So, in addition to hosting guests in homes, the No Dal Molin movement, in preparation for Saturday's march seized an abandoned Italian military barracks. Activists then contacted the police offering to pay the utility bills for three days and give the place a major cleaning. The police left them alone.
[…] Citizens of the Czech Republic learned that a base was being planned in their area. The absurd U.S. line is that this base is needed to protect against attacks from North Korea and Iran. But, in a public vote, 99 percent of residents of the area opposed the construction of a base. A group of town mayors in the area formed an alliance to speak out against the base. It has not been built.
[…] When I asked Cinzia what she would do if they chose to build the base in Romania, she replied "We'll go train the Romanians."
[…] ONE THING YOU CAN DO:
One of the biggest local backers and profiteers of the proposed base at Dal Molin also profits when anyone buys a bottle of wine with the name Zonin on it. Don't buy any! You can find a list of brands not to buy at http://www.nodalmolin.it/
http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/29388