‘Black bloc’ G20 rioters trace roots to Cold War

The far-left, black-clad anarchists are loosely organised with vague political demands but share a set of violent tactics

July 08, 2017 08:04 pm | Updated 08:04 pm IST - Berlin

Protesters throw stones at riot police using water cannon on July 7, 2017 in Hamburg, northern Germany, where leaders of the world's top economies gather for a G20 summit.
Protesters clashed with police and torched patrol cars in fresh violence ahead of the G20 summit, police said. German police and protestors had clashed already the day before at an anti-G20 march, with police using water cannon and tear gas to clear a hardcore of masked anti-capitalist demonstrators, AFP reporters said. / AFP PHOTO / Odd ANDERSEN

Protesters throw stones at riot police using water cannon on July 7, 2017 in Hamburg, northern Germany, where leaders of the world's top economies gather for a G20 summit. Protesters clashed with police and torched patrol cars in fresh violence ahead of the G20 summit, police said. German police and protestors had clashed already the day before at an anti-G20 march, with police using water cannon and tear gas to clear a hardcore of masked anti-capitalist demonstrators, AFP reporters said. / AFP PHOTO / Odd ANDERSEN

The balaclava-wearing radicals known as “black blocs” rampaging through the streets of Hamburg during the G20 summit trace their roots back to Cold War-era West Germany.

Known for disrupting major international meetings across Europe for three decades, the far-left, black-clad anarchists are loosely organised with vague political demands but share a set of violent tactics.

Germany’s Office for the Protection of the Constitution said in its annual report released this week that black blocs typically seek “direct confrontation with the political opponent or with the police”.

“They try to provoke the police with violence and by igniting fireworks or throwing bottles and rocks to bring about an escalation,” it said. “That happens in the hope that the ‘repressive capitalist state’ will be ‘unmasked’ with its reaction to this militancy.”

And that’s the case in Hamburg, where radical leftist demonstrators have laid siege to the city centre while Chancellor Angela Merkel convenes the leaders of the world’s top economies. In running street battles, a hard core of around 1,000 militants have ignored authorities’ demands to remove their masks — which are illegal at German demonstrations — as riot police move in repeatedly with water cannon trucks and tear gas.

Even before the talks on terrorism, climate change and trade could begin, the ‘black bloc’ claimed a propaganda victory with images that resembled an urban war zone captured by the world's media. Led by small commando units, the black blocs serve as provocateurs from within larger, often peaceful demonstrations, with young Germans, Italians and Spaniards among the most frequently detained. Some travel from event to event.

While leaders themselves gather in venues protected by a ring of steel, citizens of the host cities often bear the brunt of the riots, just as in Hamburg where dozens of cars parked on local streets were torched and shopfronts vandalised.

The German police officers’ union GdP accused them of “hijacking peaceful demonstrations by tens of thousands of people to deliberately attack” authorities.

From squats to summits

The shadowy groups, given the name black blocs by police, got their start in West German cities such as Hamburg and Berlin in the 1980s, and university towns such as Goettingen and Freiburg.

Initially focused on fighting local battles with police over squatter evictions and nuclear power, the targets in subsequent decades shifted to geopolitics, such as the 1987 visit by US President Ronald Reagan to West Berlin.

After the Berlin Wall fell, May Day workers’ holidays were repeatedly marred by pitched battles in German cities between far-leftists, resurgent neo-Nazis and police. In 1999, black blocs appeared on the fringes of massive anti-globalisation protests during the World Trade Organization ministerial conference in the U.S. city of Seattle.

The next year saw violent street fighting between anarchists and riot police during the annual assembly of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in Prague, and a European Union summit in the French city of Nice.

And in 2001, protesters using similar tactics clashed with police during the G8 summit in Genoa, northern Italy. The provocations sparked a police crackdown leading to the shooting death of one protestor.

Eight years later, black bloc demonstrators armed with iron bars infiltrated a peaceful demonstration outside a NATO summit in Strasbourg France and caused chaos outside a climate summit in Copenhagen.

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