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The
video "This is what democracy looks like!"
thematizes the events of 1 July 2001 which took place surrounding
a demonstration against the World Economic Forum - a private lobbying
organization of major capital - which was meeting in Salzburg at
the time.
"At those meetings, in the absence of the public, billion dollar
deals are set into motion by the self-appointed 'global leaders.'
These deals bring wealth and prosperity to a few, and exploitation
and poverty to many. To assure the orderly proceedings of economic
globalization, the conference facilities, located in the center
of Salzburg, are largely blocked off and all demonstrations are
forbidden other than a rally at the square in front of the train
station." (Excerpt from the introduction of the video)
This video
gives insight into the course of events of the first "anti-globalization
demonstration" in Austria, held subsequent to the demonstrations
in Seattle, Prague, Davos, Quebec, and Gothenburg, which all received
a great deal of media attention. In this demonstration in Salzburg,
which was forbidden by the police, 919 demonstrators were encircled
in a police blockade and detained for over seven hours
In the video
"This is what democracy looks like!" anti-capitalist demonstrators
take the role of active spokespersons, contrary to dominant media
representations that denigrate them as either naive or violent chaotic
rowdies. Conversations about the events in Salzburg were carried
out with six demonstrators. The central themes developed in the
video are; the limitation of basic democratic rights - which is
shown mainly in the ban on demonstrating and the detainment of hundreds
of people in police encirclement - and the tension between the limited
physical force of a few demonstrators and the structural violence
practiced by state power. Excerpts from the conversations are put
together with my own video recordings and those from (video) activists
in Salzburg. The camera angle corresponds with the perspective of
the demonstrators, thereby placing video viewers in direct confrontation
with the events.
Interviews with: Walter Baier, Tanja Jenni, Ingrid Popper,
Michael Pröbsting, Daniel Sanin, Irene Zavarsky
Video material from Indymedia Austria, Filmliga Linz, offscreen
- offenes film forum salzburg, UTV
Vienna, Oliver Ressler
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