Giorgio Agamben über die neuen französischen 'Terroristen'
Dieser Text von Giorgio Agamben erschien am 19.11. in Libération. Update: jetzt auch auf deutsch.
"In Italy, trains are often late, but so far no one has dreamed of accusing the national railway of terrorism."
Mehr u.a. bei Indymedia New York City Anarchist arrest sweep in France (viele weiterführende Links) und im Cargo Blog Palling Around With Terrorists:
Das klingt fast wie aus Ulrich Peltzers Roman "Teil der Lösung": Die junge Schauspielerin Aria Thomas wurde am 11. November wegen Terrorismusverdachts inhaftiert (und inzwischen wieder entlassen).
Es gibt, vorläufig nur französisch(?) einen "Offenen Brief der Eltern der neun am 11. November Festgenommenen".
An was erinnert mich das alles? Jetzt wirklich Agamben:
TERRORISM OR TRAGICOMEDY?
On the morning of
November 11, 150 police officers, most of which belonged to the
anti-terrorist brigades, surrounded a village of 350 inhabitants on the
Millevaches plateau, before raiding a farm in order to arrest nine
young people (who ran the local grocery store and tried to revive the
cultural life of the village). Four days later, these nine people were
sent before an anti-terrorist judge and “accused of criminal conspiracy
with terrorist intentions.” The newspapers reported that the Ministry
of the Interior and the Secretary of State “had congratulated local and
state police for their diligence.” Everything is in order, or so it
would appear. But let’s try to examine the facts a little more closely
and grasp the reasons and the results of this “diligence.”
First
the reasons: the young people under investigation “were tracked by the
police because they belonged to the ultra-left and the anarcho
autonomous milieu.” As the entourage of the Ministry of the Interior
specifies, “their discourse is very radical and they have links with
foreign groups.” But there is more: certain of the suspects
“participate regularly in political demonstrations,” and, for example,
“in protests against the Fichier Edvige (Exploitation Documentaire et
Valorisation de l'Information Générale) and against the intensification
of laws restricting immigration.” So political activism (this is the
only possible meaning of linguistic monstrosities such as “anarcho
autonomous milieu”) or the active exercise of political freedoms, and
employing a radical discourse are therefore sufficient reasons to call
in the anti-terrorist division of the police (SDAT) and the central
intelligence office of the Interior (DCRI). But anyone possessing a
minimum of political consc
ience could not help sharing the concerns
of these young people when faced with the degradations of democracy
entailed by the Fichier Edvige, biometrical technologies and the
hardening of immigration laws.
As for the results, one might
expect that investigators found weapons, explosives and Molotov
cocktails on the farm in Millevaches. Far from it. SDAT officers
discovered “documents containing detailed information on railway
transportation, including exact arrival and departure times of trains.”
In plain French: an SNCF train schedule. But they also confiscated
“climbing gear.” In simple French: a ladder, such as one might find in
any country house.
Now let’s turn our attention to the suspects
and, above all, to the presumed head of this terrorist gang, “a 33 year
old leader from a well-off Parisian background, living off an allowance
from his parents.” This is Julien Coupat, a young philosopher who (with
some friends) formerly published Tiqqun, a journal whose political
analyses – while no doubt debatable – count among the most intelligent
of our time. I knew Julien Coupat during that period and, from an
intellectual point of view, I continue to hold him in high esteem.
Let’s
move on and examine the only concrete fact in this whole story. The
suspects’ activities are supposedly connected with criminal acts
against the SNCF that on November 8 caused delays of certain TGV trains
on the Paris-Lille line. The devices in question, if we are to believe
the declarations of the police and the SNCF agents themselves, can in
no way cause harm to people: they can, in the worst case, hinder
communications between trains causing delays. In Italy, trains are
often late, but so far no one has dreamed of accusing the national
railway of terrorism. It’s a case of minor offences, even if we don’t
condone them. On November 13, a police report prudently affirmed that
there are perhaps “perpetrators among those in custody, but it is not
possible to attribute a criminal act to any one of them.”
The
only possible conclusion to this shadowy affair is that those engaged
in activism against the (in any case debatable) way social and economic
problems are managed today are considered ipso facto as potential
terrorists, when not even one act can justify this accusation. We must
have the courage to say with clarity that today, numerous European
countries (in particular France and Italy), have introduced laws and
police measures that we would previously have judged barbaric and
anti-democratic, and that these are no less extreme than those put into
effect in Italy under fascism. One such measure authorizes the
detention for ninety-six hours of a group of young – perhaps careless –
people, to whom “it is not possible to attribute a criminal act.”
Another, equally serious, is the adoption of laws that criminalize
association, the formulations of which are left intentionally vague and
that allow the classification of political acts as having terrorist
“intentions” or “inclinat
ions,” acts that until now were never in themselves considered terrorist.
— Giorgio Agamben
Libération, November 19, 2008
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