Journalists denounce police attacks during Catalan revolt

  • At least 65 journalists identified with vests and armbands have been injured, mostly by police charges and shots

VilaWeb
VilaWeb / Catalan News Agency
24.10.2019 - 08:53
Actualització: 24.10.2019 - 10:53

At least sixty-five journalists have been injured while covering protests against the verdict and sentence of the Catalan referendum trial so far, with statistics showing that roughly 75% of those incidents have come from police officers, according to Media.cat. The Catalan jurnalist association Grup de Periodistes Ramon Barnils has also expressed its protest.

In most  cases, the writers, photographers, and presenters were attacked despite being easily identifiable by the bright orange coloured vests and armbands that signify accreditation. Rubber bullets have been fired and rocks thrown at identifiable journalists, as well as various police charges have been reported. A journalist for the Catalan News Agency was bruised from a rubber bullet but avoided more serious injuries thanks to the gas mask he had been wearing that reduced the impact.

On Tuesday, a demonstration took place in Plaça Catalunya in the center of Barcelona to denounce the attacks against journalists. On the organisers’ website, they argue that attacks from police are intended to intimidate reporters to distance them from the “abuses” the police forces can commit. “Without journalism, there is no democracy,” a joint statement from journalists’ associations in Catalonia read. “Every time someone blocks the work of a journalist they are going against the system of democracy.”

Foam and rubber bullets

Sira Esclasans was covering the chaos on the streets of Barcelona last week when she was shot in the leg with a foam bullet. “I was with a group of journalists clearly identifiable in between the line of police and protesters,” she explained. “They shot a foam bullet directly at my leg. A colleague helped me out of the risk area, and from there I went home because I couldn’t stand properly on my leg,” she said.

Sergi Alcácer was another photojournalist covering last week’s riots when he was hit by police. “The police started hitting a colleague of mine, I took out my phone to begin recording it,” he told. “Then another officer saw me and started hitting me. Thankfully I had my backpack on which protected me from the blows otherwise, I would have really hurt my back.”

Human rights group Amnesty International denounced the “excessive use of force” that police have been employing, and published a report that describes scenes of excessive use of force “including inappropriate and unjustified use of batons and other defensive equipment against people who posed no risk, including journalists.”

Amnesty International’s director for Europe Marie Struthers spoke to the Catalan News Agency, calling the high number of people, demonstrators as well as journalists, injured at protests”worrying” and said that the “Spanish and Catalan police’s excessive use of force was not acceptable.”

The Council of Europe has also expressed its concern regarding the ”disproportionate use of force and inappropriate use of anti-riot weapons by police” during last week’s protests.

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