ARMED HOUSE SEARCHES AND ARRESTS IN GRAZ FOLLOWING PROTEST AGAINST RIGHT-WING
STUDENT ASSOCIATIONS’ BALL
~ Rob Latchford ~
Police in Graz, Austria have arrested seven anti-fascists over the past two
weeks on orders of the public prosecutor’s office. The operation began in the
early morning of 14 March, when an apartment in the city was stormed by around
30 heavily armed officers, including members of the Cobra special unit, who
pointed weapons at the residents and forced a half-naked woman to the floor.
Cell phones and clothing were confiscated.
The police were particularly looking for people who organised a counter-action
against the annual Academic Ball. The ball brings together student associations
(“Burschenschafts”) which are conservative or far-right. Some of these
associations advocate the unification of Austria with Germany and restoration of
the German Reich—which is explicitly forbidden by the Austrian constitution and
was one of the conditions for ending the occupation of Austria by the Allied
forces after World War II.
The Czech Anarchist Federation expressed solidarity with the arrestees
Every February, the Burschenschafts celebrate the Academic Ball in a building on
the main square of Graz, protected by the Austrian police while protesters take
to the streets. The recent crackdown followed the seemingly bizarre case of one
60-year-old member of the Burschenschafts claiming to have had a hat stolen and
being pushed to the ground. No hat has come to light and it seems likely that
the member is question may have been drunk.
This hasn’t prevented the Austrian police from charging at least two of the
arrested anti-fascists with ‘aggravated robbery’ in association with a ‘criminal
organisation’, which could carry a 15 year prison sentence. This is despite the
former charge requiring an intent to enrich oneself, which is blatantly not the
case.
Their defence lawyer, Florian Dablander, sees the action as a “criminalisation
of anti-fascism.” Using the construct of a ‘criminal organisation’—a law
otherwise used against organised crime—authorities in Austria can order special
surveillance measures and expand investigations to include the suspects’
circles.
This could also be the purpose of the harsh repression, Dablander suspects.
Burschenschafts are a very prominent element on the Austrian right-wing scene.
More than 30 top politicians of the right-wing FPÖ party, which won the Austrian
elections this year, were former members of Burschenschafts. In Styria, the
Austrian State in which Graz is located, the governor is a member of the FPÖ.
“One has to ask whether certain internal groupings have formed within the
security apparatus”, said the defence lawyer.
The arrestees remain in custody.
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