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Victims

S., 24.02.2025. Mollested and pepper-sprayed – Copenhagen

February 24, 2025 – Cut Ties with Genocide, blockading Maersk Headquarters for Palestine – Copenhagen
18 to 30 years old. Mollested and pepper-sprayed

Cut Ties with Genocide, action in front of Maersk offices, Copenhagen – February 24, 2025

S.: “While still not being able to see because of teargas, the police yelled for me to get up and when I couldn’t right away they pulled me up and pushed me the hard way”

“We sat occupying the space for around 4-5 hours while the police was more calm, but when we in the end had just decided to leave, they put on gas masks and without any warning started pepper spraying us.

We tried to old on to each other in our friend group. I closed my eyes and put my head down to keep away the pepper spray while the police were trying to pull us apart.

They pulled off my hat and my glasses and finally managed to pull me away from my group. They pulled so hard that I fell to the ground and hurt my elbow. While still not being able to see because of teargas, the police yelled for me to get up and when I couldn’t right away they pulled me up and pushed me the hard way. I got a bit further away, eyes burning from pepper spray or tear gas or both. My elbow was hurting and I felt dizzy.

Elbow was not significantly hurt, but scraped, with some blood and a big bruise.”

Physical violence
 Kicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
 Blows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Painful armlock
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
XHair pulling
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
 Use of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
XUse of batons
XUse of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
XAggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
 Calls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

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F., 24.02.2025. Batonned and tear-gassed – Copenhagen

February 24, 2025 – Cut Ties with Genocide, blockading Maersk Headquarters for Palestine – Copenhaguen
18 to 30 years old. Molested, batonned, tear-gassed

Cut Ties with Genocide, action in front of Maersk offices, Copenhagen – February 24, 2025

F. : “I was beaten at least 10 times, in my back, arms and legs”

“We had a lockdown of the Mærsk headquarters. Police beat us with batons, used teargas and dogs to get us to leave the area.

I was never given a warning by the police that I had to leave, yet they used extreme measures to get us to leave, without attempting to peacefully remove us. All of us were peaceful.

I was just by the police barricade, and they regularly beat us with batons and pushed their knees in our backs while we were just sitting there. No attempt at moving us was made.

When they decided to get us to leave, they pushed us so much that we couldn’t move, and kept beating use en though we had nowhere to go. They then threw tear gas in the direction of the exit, essentially trapping us.

I was beaten at least 10 times, in my back, arms and legs, despite trying to yell that I was trying to get out. Many others had it way worse.”

 

Physical violence
X
Kicks, punches, slaps
 XFeet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
XBlows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Painful armlock
XFingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
XDog bites
 Hair pulling
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
XUse of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
XUse of batons
XUse of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
XCharge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
XAggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
XCalls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
XNo warning given
 Violence by fellow police officers
XPassivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
XLies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

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F., 24.02.2025. Pepper-sprayed and tear-gassed – Copenhagen

February 24, 2025 – Cut Ties with Genocide, blockading Maersk Headquarters for Palestine – Copenhaguen
51 to 70 years old. Pepper-sprayed and tear-gassed

Cut Ties with Genocide, action in front of Maersk offices, Copenhagen – February 24, 2025

F. : “The police had no legitimate reason to spray us or detonate tear gas on us”

“We had implemented a blockade of the Maersk HQ office and were about to leave.

The police put on gas masks and started beating activists, spraying pepperspray and detonating tear gas grenades. Some tear gas granades were thrown in front of the leaving activist crowd, which was completely unnecessary.

I got a lot of tear gas into my mouth, nose, eyes and throat. It was painful and difficult to breathe.

The police had no legitimate reason to spray us or detonate tear gas on us. We were acting completely nonviolent and the Maersk office was already closed. The police had no reason to implement the eviction request submitted by Maersk.”

Physical violence
 XKicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
 Blows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Painful armlock
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Tirage par les cheveux
 Painful tightening of colson ties or handcuffs
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
XUse of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
 Use of batons
XUse of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
XCharge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
 Aggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
 Calls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

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A., 24.02.2025. Batonned and tear-gassed – Copenhagen

February 24, 2025 – Cut Ties with Genocide, blockading Maersk Headquarters for Palestine – Copenhaguen
51 to 70 years old. Batonned repeatedly and tear-gased : multiple bruises and pain on the top of left arm and shoulder

Cut Ties with Genocide, action in front of Maersk offices, Copenhagen – February 24, 2025

A. : “A police officer started hitting my left arm and my back with baton while I was sitting on the ground”

“I was sitting on the ground non violently occupying the space in front of Maersk Headquarters. I had many people sitting in front of me. We were sitting there passively resisting police attempts to remove us.

Then the police were ordered to put on gas masks and a police officer started hitting my left arm and my back with baton while I was sitting on the ground. I still had a lot of activists in front of me, so did not really have anywhere to go. But I got up on my knees and started to slowly move forwards. The police officer was still hitting me, even if it was obvious from the situation that physically I had nowhere to go because of activists in front of me.

Then fellow activists helped me on my feet and we started slowly moving forwards as a group. Then they tear-gasing us and I could not see well and had a hard time breathing normally. Then I moved slowly towards the park on the other side of the road from Maersk. Due to not seeing so well I had two fellow activists helping me out of the area where the teargas was.

I have big marks today on the top of my left arm and my left shoulder where I was beaten with police baton.”

 

Physical violence
 Kicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
 Blows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Painful armlock
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Painful tightening of colson ties or handcuffs
 Use of Gloves
 Use of Firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
XUse of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
XUse of Batons
XUse of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
 Aggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
 Calls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

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N., 24.02.2025. Batonned and gassed – Copenhagen

February 24, 2025 – Cut Ties with Genocide, blockading Maersk Headquarters for Palestine – Copenhagen
31 to 50 years old. Batonned, pepper-sprayed and tear-gassed : open wound and swollen forearm

Cut Ties with Genocide, action in front of Maersk offices, Copenhagen – February 24, 2025

N.: “What I gather from this hell and from my experience of police violence in Belgium and France is the total lack of preparation of the Danish Police, the incompetence of their chiefs, and the feeling that this could have resulted in a very very serious situation where people might easily have died within this compressed pack, stuck between a line of batons and pepper spray and a line of tear-gas grenades”

Acting as a Street medic during the action, I was going around the sit-in making sure participants were comfortable, had enough water to drink and asking whether they’d need some help or medical supplies, while at the same time keeping an eye on the police. Protesters were really peaceful and the action kept joyful and happy.

The cops were obviously unaccustomed to such a large action organized by so many activists (600+), they were overwhelmed and acted like they had no boss, changing strategy every once in a while, from trying to remove activists from around the mast where some had climbed to hang a Palestine flag then deciding to leave them be, to surround the seated activists then withdraw then surround them again, putting on their riot equipment (helmets, gloves etc.) to taking them off then on again, to moving squads around then back to where they were before etc.

All this funny disorganized moves lasted for a few hours. The only permanent move from the police was to place cops in a line between the sitting activists and the glass wall of the headquarters office entrance, to prevent demonstrators from entering the building.

As far as i know, the cops were acting very disciplined and I did not hear any racist, sexist or homophobic slur nor insults. I noticed that because I remember having thought at the time: “They act quite as professionals ” compared to cops in Belgium.

Some times they did try to remove some of the people sat-in, rather brutally i’d say but not really violently, and giving up when resistance was too strong or when activists were forcibly stood up but managed to sit down again. One of such incident though resulted in one person being injured to his/her arm (did not witnessed that myself), and a fellow medic immediately came to his/her rescue but was vehemently taken aside by the cops, dragged away onto the lawn to a parked van and arrested, although he was clearly identified as a medic and shouted “I’m a medic, this person needs help!“.

Another incident involved an activist cheering up the crowd shouting slogans through a loudspeaker was arrested at some point and resisted the arrest quite vehemently and vocally. This person was taken out of the scene to the police van on the parking lot. Also from time to time, I saw cops from the lined-up police barring the entrance of the building trying to push on people with their knees or bending the head of people sitting just in front of them, resulting in the crowd shouting at them “no violence” or stuff like that and tension rising for a few minutes. In those moments, a cop (always the same) came closer to film what was happening, always protected by a huge Robocop fellow, and in some instances a small squad of cops would come over to backup their fellow uniforms, push some activists around trying to remove some of them, but then the situation would calm down quickly and they would move away. In spite of such punctual and quite short escalation, everything kept quite and the action went on peacefully with people singing and mocking the police.

Also some times the police tried to pass the message on a loudspeaker they were about to evict us from the place, but activists with loudspeakers would immediately come close to them and start shouting slogans or sing just next to them, so that their message got lost in space and nobody ever heard it 🙂

Then somewhere around noon or 1PM, some of the activists standing on the roof of the entrance holding banners talked to the people at their feet as they wanted to come down, and a ladder was brought upright against the roof. I think this is what started the shit show, the cops must have thought some more people intended to go up on the roof. The police boss talked through his walkie-talkie and suddenly all cops started to put on their equipment again, including their gas-masks this time. Shortly after, the cops on the left side of the entrance pepper-sprayed the activists sitting in front of them and immediately after pushed and shoved people to make them stand up and move away, quite brutally this time. Some activists had no choice bu to move but came back sitting as soon as they were let go. Some were thrown on top of others. Batons were flying repeatedly with no regard for what they hit (backs, arms, shoulders, heads, legs etc.), and the scene had turned in a second from a passive resistance to a superactive aggression. The same shit started on the right side of the entrance a few seconds after, and shortly after the lined-up cops have pushed people forward while activists were both suffocated by the pepper-spray and painfully hit by batons.

Presently the cops were making a line away from the entrance and keeping a more or less 1 meter gap in front of them where none was allowed.

I myself was standing in the middle of the line and in the gap, clearly identified as a medic with my armband, my medical supplies visible in my bag in front of me (and all cops had identified me as such since the beginning I guess, due to my constantly walking around and everywhere and talking to people and making sure nobody was hurt), so they kind of let me be as long as I did not try to force their line.

Then came another order from the boss, and all hell broke loose: I saw the cop faces in front of me twisting with rage behind the plastic visors of their helmets and batons rained down on us while the police line moved up and pushed us back, closing the gap and pressing us backward. The thing is that behind us was a low wall and we were being pushed against it, so that the crowd was compressed to the point that we were standing upright and people in the middle could not move at all (as I was myself. I remember having thought “Shit if somebody loses consciousness, one might die here and now without any possibility to get them out“.

At this moment I was holding someone unable to stand up, clearly on the brink of going unconscious, and the cop in front of me was still pressing me backward. I was shouting at him “Medic! Medic! I need to evacuate this person! Emergency!” but he kept on pushing and hit me 4 times on the arm I was raising in front of my face to protect my head, exactly at the same spot… At the time the adrenaline was so high in my blood I just felt the shot, not the pain inside my forearm…

Simultaneously, the cops started to throw I-don’t-know-how-many tear-gas grenades behind the crowd, on the lawn behind the low wall we were getting compressed again, so that the activists at the back (behind us) who managed to step over the low wall and onto the lawn received the pellets on their head and/or were getting suffocated by the gas, their vision blurred, their throats on fire and their lungs unable to breathe.

At first people escaping from the trap helped release the compression of the crowd, and more people could step over the low wall and onto the lawn, but quickly the air got so full of nasty smoke that everyone lost all sense of orientation and had no idea how to escape from this nightmare.

I myself finally stepped over the low wall and onto the lawn, where some comrades from the person I was helping (who was starting to regain their brains again) came over and took over, leading them out towards the park. As soon as I was on the lawn and stopped to have a look at my forearm (there was an open wound at the spot where I got repeatedly hit by the baton), a teargas canister just landed between my feet and the smoke went right up into my face. Realizing what was about to happen (I would get incapacitated and unable to flee before long), I started to run away towards the park but too late, the gas burned my eyes and my throat despite my goggles and COVID mask and I had to really push me to my limits not to throw up and to stay conscious. I kind of walked/stumbled/fell/stood up and walked again in cycles, just following people and grabbing at arms to feel my way until I was in the park and was able to breathe and open my eyes again and the pain in my lungs became bearable…

I then saw the cops in lines on each side of us walking fast with their batons out, and I thought: “Shit, if they follow us in the park and start beating on us again, with no outside witness from the press or passers-by around, this is gonna turn into a slaughterhouse“, and this is when I got really scared. I helped people around me with saline solution for their eyes and passed some around, made some bandages to someone’s bleeding head, came across some comrades from my affinity group with whom we stated to walk away to the big boulevard with the rest of the demonstrators.

The cops had pushed us out of the park and had just intended to keep us out of the Maersk headquarters area, they were not intended to brutalize us, just to threaten us…

What I gather from this hell and from my experience of police violence in Belgium and France is the total lack of preparation of the Danish Police, the incompetence of their chiefs, and the feeling that this could have resulted in a very very serious situation where people might easily have died within this compressed pack, stuck between a line of batons and pepper spray and a line of tear-gas grenades. They offered no way out as they should have when they kettle people. Kettling is meant to push people towards a way out while forbidding the crowd to either stay where they are or move in a direction the cops do not want them to go. Here, people split in every direction, not seeing anything, having no instructions as to where to go, and it’s just luck they managed to find a way out. I’m wondering if ultimately I do not prefer the usual but predictable and planned violence of the Belgian cops to this incomprehensible and stupid disorderly demonstration of violence… I guess next time we’ll have to be better prepared for this, as the Danish police will most likely take advice from their counterparts on the other side of the borders.

My forearm got so swollen the next days I could barely move it or do any thing with my left arm for over a week, but doctors said it was not broken.”

Physical violence
 Kicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
 Blows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Painful armlock
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
XUse of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
XUse of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
XUse of batons
XUse of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
 Aggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
XCalls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
XRefusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
XAbsence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
XKettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

 

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M., 24.02.2025. Batonned and tear-gassed – Copenhagen

February 24, 2025 – Cut Ties with Genocide, blockading Maersk Headquarters for Palestine – Copenhaguen
18 to 30 years old. Batonned and tear-gassed: couldn’t walk the day after

Cut Ties with Genocide, action in front of Maersk offices, Copenhagen – February 24, 2025

M. : “Teargassed and hit by police multiple times, can’t walk with my right leg the day after “

“Teargassed and hit by police multiple times, can’t walk with my right leg the day after.”

Physical violence
 XKicks, punches, slaps
XFeet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
 Blows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Painful armlock
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
XUse of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
XUse of batons
XUse of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
 Aggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
 Calls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
XIntimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

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O., 24.02.2025. Batonned, pepper-sprayed and tear-gassed – Copenhagen

February 24, 2025 – Cut Ties with Genocide, blockading Maersk Headquarters for Palestine – Copenhaguen
18 to 30 years old. Batonned, pepper-sprayed and tear-gassed

Cut Ties with Genocide, action in front of Maersk offices, Copenhagen – February 24, 2025

O. : “Worst of all was the way they beat me repeatedly”

“While blockading the main entrance 3-4 police officers tried to pull me with them. I held fast to my comrades and being between two bollards my body was twisted and squeezed painfully. They also used a pain grip on my right hand.

Worst of all was the way they beat me repeatedly. They hit me mostly in my head as my backpack shielded my back. They also pressed down on my head and slammed it to the concrete underneath me. In the end they gave up and I was left curled up on the ground gasping for air.

Later in the protest, without provocation, they started to use pepper-spray and later tear gas. I was mostly victim to the tear gas. This happened while they beat and pushed protestors around us causing people to fall on each other and people being buried by the mass of people, myself included.

When I got free I fumbled through the pepper spray and barely dodged one that tried to spray me point blank. After that I got wet wipes from medics and escaped the area.

After the protest my whole body, especially my head hurt. The day after my neck is excruciatingly painful.”

Physical violence
X
Kicks, punches, slaps
XFeet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
XBlows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
XStrangulation / chokehold
XPainful armlock
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Tirage par les cheveux
 Painful tightening of colson ties or handcuffs
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
XUse of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
XUse of batons
XUse of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
XCharge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
XAggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
XCalls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
XPassivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

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Categories
Victims

Franco Serantini, 05.05.1972. Died from cerebral hemorrhage in prison – Pisa

May 5, 1972. In prison – Pisa
21-year old. Beaten up during his arrest, remained untreated : died from cerebral hemorrhage

Franco Serantini was born in Cagliari in 1951 and was abandoned at birth at the city’s children’s home. When he was two years old he was entrusted to a Sicilian couple, but soon after his adoptive mother fell ill with cancer and died; the widower, left alone, was not allowed to finalize the adoption paperwork. When Franco was nine years old, he returned to the brefotrophy in Cagliari, where he remained until 1968, when the management of the institution informed the juvenile court that it was unable to follow the boy, who was not applying himself to his studies. The judge felt that the best solution to solve Franco‘s adolescent crisis was to lock him up in a reformatory, and so the boy was sent to the Men’s Re-education Institute in Pisa, “under a regime of semi-freedom,” meaning he had to eat and sleep in the institution.

In Pisa, however, Franco discovered political commitment, which, while on the one hand allowed him not to fall into the trap of common delinquency (which happens all too often in situations like his), on the other hand marked his death sentence. He was active in solidarity movements that organized low-cost markets, approached the anarchist movement, but also frequented the political milieu of Luciano Della Mea, a libertarian Marxist who represented for him the family he never had.

It is to Serantini‘s research that we owe the discovery of the well-known proclamation signed by Giorgio Almirante when he was chief of staff of the PS Office in Paganico (GR), in which he communicated

Pisa after 1968 was a city rich in political life. The “Pisan Workers’ Power” group (not to be confused with the Workers’ Power of Piperno, Negri and Scalzone) was founded in Pisa, which later gave birth to Lotta Continua, led (among others) by Luciano Della Mea and Adriano Sofri. In Pisa in those years the leaders of the communist youth were Massimo D’Alema and Fabio Mussi. Enrolled at the University of Pisa were many Greek anti-fascist students who were in exile because of the dictatorship of the colonels. Pisa was the scene of numerous clashes between fascists and police, between fascists and antifascists, and between antifascists and police, and it was at an antifascist demonstration that Franco Serantini, who had meanwhile become a militant anarchist, was beaten to death by police.

On May 5, the closing day of the election campaign, a rally was planned by the Missino deputy Giuseppe Niccolai, against whom Lotta Continua and the anarchists had called a protest demonstration.

Mayor Lazzari, taking into account the small size of the square and its location in the middle of narrow, winding streets, and fearing incidents (as had happened in previous days in other cities in Tuscany) asked the authorities together with the council and representatives of some parties (PCI, PSI and PSIUP) to move the rally to a less central area, but to no avail. On the other hand, 800 men of the I celere grouping, 500 carabinieri and 100 carabinieri paratroopers were rushed to the city to support the city’s PS units.

The Missino deputy speaks in a square surrounded by shields, helmets, visor helmets, tromboncini with tear gas in the barrel, machine guns aimed. The fascists numbered perhaps two hundred, they shouted “Italy, Italy,” the deputy spoke for an hour and a half, a woman, Morena Morelli, came all the way under the stage, mocked the speaker, called him a fascist and was arrested.

Around 6:30 p.m. police charges against the protesters began, and the historic center of Pisa experienced more than three hours of urban guerrilla warfare. The police threw tear gas not only on the protesters, but also inside the doorways of houses and even against the city hall.

Mayor Lazzari looks out a window of the Gambacorti Palace and shouts at the policemen to stop targeting the municipality. “I said I was the mayor, that a council meeting was in progress (…) no one from above was threatening the police. They were pointing their guns up, firing one stick after another, giving the impression that they were drugged. It’s not as if they were listening to my words, they kept throwing sticks at the mullioned windows.’

Dozens were beaten and battered protesters; some, hit by tear gas, had to be hospitalized. Some witnesses claimed to have seen police officers firing guns at eye level among the protesters.

Franco Serantini was on the Lungarno Gambacorti, but inexplicably, instead of fleeing into the alleys, he lingered in the street. Thus recounted a resident of the Lungarno, Moreno Papini.

… I saw that they were grabbing one (…) about fifteen celerini jumped on him and started beating him with incredible fury. They had circled over him so that he could no longer be seen, but you could tell from the gestures of the celerini that they had to hit him both with their hands and feet and with the kicks of their rifles. All of a sudden some of the celerini got out of the trucks there in front and intervened (…) “Enough, you’re going to kill him!” (…) one who looked like a graduate entered the middle and with another celerino they pulled him up. Only at that moment I could see his face, because he was holding his head dangling on his back….

Franco was arrested and taken to the PS barracks. All those who saw him in the large room where the arrestees were put testified that it was clearly seen that he was very sick: he was unable to hold his head up, he could not speak, he had a yellowish color in his face. Nevertheless, no one thought of having him admitted to the hospital, or even of having him seen by a doctor; they took him to the jail, where he was interrogated by the magistrate on duty, who claimed to have asked for a medical examination for him, a detail that the public defender said he did not remember. Franco was examined only four hours after the interrogation, but the doctor merely prescribed an ice pack, did not measure his blood pressure, and did not have any X-rays taken. Taken back to his cell, his comrades became concerned as they saw him deteriorate but throughout the night on Saturday no one took any action. Only on Sunday morning was Franco taken to the prison emergency room, but by then it was too late: his heart stopped beating at 9:45 a.m. and the prison doctor wrote in the certificate “cerebral hemorrhage.”

The news of his death spread, and only because of the mobilization of friends and the stubbornness of the registrar’s clerk, who refused to sign the authorization to transport the body, because, since it was a violent death, authorization from the Public Prosecutor’s Office was necessary, Franco Serantini‘s murder would not be covered up. It is Luciano Della Mea who is the first to take action and contacts lawyer Bianca Guidetti Serra to make a complaint. The lawyer tracks down an old law of popular action “which allows any citizen to constitute himself as a civil party in protection of a person assisted by a charitable institution who is without parents or relatives” (remember that for the laws of the time Franco was a minor at the time of his death, having not yet turned 21). This will allow the investigation to begin.

he outcome of the necropsy examination is a frightening report. Thus stated lawyer Sorbi, who had attended the examination.

It was a trauma to watch the autopsy, to see that boy I knew being dissected. A butchered body, chest, shoulders, head, arms. There was not even a small surface untouched. I had a long night of nightmares.

But in the end the investigation will not lead to the punishment of any perpetrator. The policemen responsible for Franco‘s death could not be identified (they had helmets); none of those who did not have the boy examined would be prosecuted.

In May 1972 Commissioner Giuseppe Pironomonte, who tried, by arresting him, to remove Serantini from the fury of the officers, resigned from the police force. (…) after the death of the young anarchist, he undergoes a profound crisis, realizes that that of the policeman, as it is done in Italy, is not the job for him, realizes that it is difficult to try to change the system from within, and abandons the PS.

Finally, a brief mention of the figure of the then quaestor of Pisa, Dr. Mariano Perris: he had previously served as an executive of the political squad in Milan and Turin, and his name was found, during a search in the offices of FIAT on 5/8/71, ordered by Praetor Guariniello, among those of the PS executives who allegedly collected bribes from FIAT for controlling the political activity of the company’s employees (on this see the publication edited by Lotta Continua in 1972, Agnelli is afraid and pays off the police headquarters).

After Pisa, Perris was appointed quaestor in Milan; but we must remember that during the period of the Germanic occupation of Trieste he had been one of the leaders (he was in charge of the “judicial squad”) of the Special Inspectorate of PS, better known in the city as the “Collotti gang,” a collaborationist body that distinguished itself by the ferocity with which its members conducted anti-partisan repression. Perris’s squad was in charge of arresting common criminals to be blackmailed or intimidated (during the trial of the “gang,” a witness asserted that the torture apparatus with electricity “also passed through Perris’s office”) in order to infiltrate them into the partisan movement or to be used directly in roundup operations.

Perris avoided being tried for collaborationism along with the other corps leaders by availing himself of an affidavit provided by the Triestine CLN (of nationalist and anti-communist persuasion): a witness asserted that his team did not deal with political issues (and its role was not investigated in depth), so that the commissioner continued his career in the PS of the “republic born of the Resistance,” with the resume we have seen.

Fact sheet edited by Claudia Cernigoi from La Bottega del Barbieri

Translated with DeepL.com (free version)

 

Physical violence
X
Kicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
XBlows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Painful armlock
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
XUse of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
 Use of batons
 Use of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
XAggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
 Calls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
XRefusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

No conviction, no prosecution, no trial

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