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Letter bomb sent to EU catches fire

by #!@%%##@%#(+=)#&
a short but continuing AP wire re: mail bomb. search "Informal Anarchic Federation" for recent articles.
perhaps this story can be of use to all involved in the struggle here in the U.S. in this new year, may we keep the fires hot and fight to win...

Letter bomb sent to EU catches fire


Jan. 5, 2004 | BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- A letter bomb addressed to a senior German member of the European Parliament burst into flames on Monday, but the latest in a string of mail attacks on European Union targets again failed to cause injury.

A second suspicious package addressed to another member of the conservative group in the EU legislature was being investigated by bomb disposal experts.

The attack against German parliament member Hans-Gert Poettering was the fifth on EU institutions in the past two weeks. Poettering is the head of the conservative European People's Party, the largest faction in the European Parliament.

A padded envelope caught fire when a member of Poettering's staff opened it early Monday.

"Luckily she was not injured," said a party spokeswoman Fiona Kearns.

The second suspect package was sent to Jose Ignacio Salafranca, head of the Spanish conservatives in the parliament.

Party officials said the letter sent to Poettering appeared to contain a book like the incendiary package sent to the Italian home of European Commission President Romano Prodi on Dec. 27 at the start of the bombing wave.

Parliament spokesman Andre Riche said a third suspicious package at parliament headquarters appeared to be false alarm.

Investigators have zeroed in on an Italian anarchist group as the likely source of bombing wave. A group calling itself the "Informal Anarchic Federation" first took credit for setting two time bombs that exploded outside Prodi's house on Dec. 21, causing a small fire.

Besides Prodi, similar letters have also been sent to the head of the European Central Bank Jean-Claude Trichet, in Frankfurt, Germany, and the offices of Europol and Eurojust in the Hague, the Netherlands. None of the bombs have caused injury.

The woman who opened Poettering's letter did not notice if it was posted in Italy, like the other bombs, said Bob Fitzhenry, a spokesman for the European People's Party. The package was destroyed in the fire, he said.

Outside the Parliament's buildings, three firefighter trucks and bomb disposal squads were parked outside the legislature in central Brussels and plainclothes policemen were seen moving inside carrying metal boxes.

In a letter to left-leaning Italian daily newspaper La Repubblica on Dec. 23, the Italian anarchist group said it had planted the bombs to "hit at the apparatus of control that is repressive and leading the democratic show that is the new European order."

The EU said it had stepped up security since the attacks.

Four letter bombs have been sent to various European Union dignitaries throughout the Europe in the last week, all of them, according to government officials, originating from the Italian city of Bologna. A group calling itself the Informal Anarchist Front ("F.A.I.") has claimed responsibility in a letter printed by an Italian newspaper. Although no known Italian anarchist groups have ever heard of this association, the acronym matches exactly that of another above-ground, revolutionary organization in Bologna: the Italian Anarchist Federation (F.A.I.) The F.A.I. has denounced these attacks, and consider the Informal Anarchist Front "imaginary," invented to justify the repression of anarchists in Bologna and throughout Italy.

This suspicion harkens back to similar incidents in the recent past, such as 1997 in Milan when a series of letterbombs were used as a justification to raid squats, social centers, and make sweeping arrests. Anti-globalization activists may also recall the letter bomb scare in the days leading up to the 2001 G8 summit in Genoa, Italy. In fact, the use of such a tactic by fascist forces in Italy has been historically documented. During the 1970's, when electoral support for communists was at an all time high, Fascists engaged in a deadly bombing campagin they described as part of a "strategy of tension." By blaming the bombings on the communists, the Fascists hoped to incite a breakdown of public order to justify the imposition of military rule. The most horrific bombing took place in Bologna in 1980, in which a bomb was detonated at a rail station killing 85 people and injuring over 200. Bologna was a communist stronghold at the time. The Italian Secret Service was later implicated in the bombing and high ranking officials in the organization were made to stand trial ten years later. Their convictions were overturned.

One twist in the latest incidences is that the bomb addressed to European Commissioner Romano Prodi in Bologna was wrapped in a book by Gabrielle D'Annunzio, a supporter of Fascism in the 1930's. Prodi remarked that the choice of the author was probably meant to be ironic. Whether ironic or not, these incidents have created considerable tension among Italian anarchists in general, and members of the Italian Anarchist Federation in particular. As one reader on Infoshop commented, "Imagine if the 'casual repubican party' started claiming responsibility for bombings, how much heat would the Republicans get?"

The possibility remains, however, that such bombings have been carried out by self-proclaimed "anarchists" that are disconnected from groups such as the FAI, who struggle to promote autonomy, social and economic justice in Italy. It seems questionable whether anarchists working in communities of struggle would knowingly place their comrades in danger for such imperceptible gains. The letter bombs in question have been poorly made, causing no injuries even when detonating in the hands of their recipients. > The history of Fascism in Italy has demonstrated that the "strategy of tension" is served equally well by the brash actions of "useful idiots," whether their ideology is purported to come from the extreme Left or the extreme Right.

The Commission for the Correspondence with the Italian Anarchist Federation has issued a communique in which they suggest that, far from promoting revolutionary consciousness, "letterbombs are more useful for provokation and the criminalization of dissent." The arsenal of the F.A.I., on the other hand, includes the weapons of social organizing, local autonomy, trade unions, opposition to state terrorism and the creation of a new and free society.

There are reports that raids of squats have already begun taking place in Bologna, though no arrests have yet been made.

http://italy.indymedia.org/features/bologna/
http://www.federazioneanarchica.org/
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