[Resistance-precarity] Proletarian shopping in Italy

Lydia Molyneaux lydiamolyneaux at hotmail.com
Tue Nov 9 09:19:35 GMT 2004


Hii,

Here's an interesting article that appeared in yesterday's Guardian. It's 
interesting to note that the action took place in connection with a large 
march over "soaring prices, insecure work contracts, cuts in state benefits 
and overspending on the Iraq war."



Leftwing looters raid shops

Sophie Arie in Rome
Monday November 8, 2004
The Guardian

A group of 200 leftwing protesters wearing balaclavas, carnival masks and 
bandanas over their faces, went on a "proletariat shopping spree" in a Rome 
hypermarket at the weekend, carrying off goods and handing them out.

They swarmed into the Panorama hypermarket on the outskirts of the Italian 
capital on Saturday shouting "free shopping for all".

After failing to negotiate a 70% discount with the supermarket's manager, 
the group barged loaded trolleys past cashiers and distributed the goods to 
a crowd outside.

Police chose not to intervene but later claimed to have identified 87 
members of the group, who now face legal action.

The "proletariat shoppers", included a Communist town councillor, Nunzio 
d'Erme, and the leader of the Black Block, Luca Casarini, who led violent G8 
anti-globalisation protests in Genova in 2001.

Other "proletariat shoppers" went on to raid a Feltrinelli bookshop in 
central Rome.

The sprees hark back to similar, more violent protests in the 70s. They were 
condemned as looters led by Italy's most extreme anarchist groups. The 
stunts coincided with a march by more than 10,000 workers complaining of 
soaring prices, insecure work contracts, cuts in state benefits and 
overspending on the Iraq war.

The cost of living has shot up in Italy since the arrival of the euro but 
incomes have remained the same, and the economy has stagnated.

Italy's leading Catholic charity, Caritas, warned last month of a risk of 
increasing social discontent as 7 million young and old "new poor" - 12% of 
the population - live below the breadline in the seventh richest industrial 
economy in the world.

Italy's economy was hard hit by the post-September 11 slump in tourism and 
by losing the trade battle with cheaper clothes, car, domestic appliances 
and food and wine producers - notably in China and Australia.

With unemployment at 8.4%, and more than 26% of under-25s unemployed, the 
charity said it was alarmed by the numbers turning to it for help.

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