Trieste: the police clear gate 4 of the port, occupied by no green pass demonstrators
The police have cleared gate 4 of the port of Trieste, blocked since last Friday by dockers and demonstrators who contest the obligation of the green pass. When the police vans arrived, about three hundred no-green pass demonstrators and about thirty workers sat on the ground, chanting chants and slogans. “You have to free the port please, I want to prevent you from getting hurt,” said a police officer, before the intervention of the police, who loaded the demonstrators, also operating the fire hydrants. During the evacuation operations, the officers arrested several occupants.
The eviction comes three days after the start of the mobilization that threatened to block one of the most important ports in Italy, launched with the entry into force of the obligation of the green pass for all public and private workers. Over the weekend, the union that promoted the protest, declared illegitimate by the strike guarantee commission, had announced the end of the blockade and the return to work of the dockers. An announcement strongly contested by the demonstrators, who pushed Stefano Puzzer, one of the leaders of the protest, first to retract and then to announce his resignation. “It is right that I take on my responsibilities”, said in a post on Facebook the former spokesman of the Coordination of Port Workers of Trieste (Clpt), who took part in this morning’s sit-in.
Over the weekend, the president of the Port Authority Zeno D’Agostino had launched an ultimatum calling for an end to the blockade. CGIL, CISL and UIL also asked that “the port be freed” from those who are protesting against green certification.
Trieste: the police clear gate 4 of the port, occupied by no green pass demonstrators
The police have cleared gate 4 of the port of Trieste, blocked since last Friday by dockers and demonstrators who contest the obligation of the green pass. When the police vans arrived, about three hundred no-green pass demonstrators and about thirty workers sat on the ground, chanting chants and slogans. “You have to free the port please, I want to prevent you from getting hurt,” said a police officer, before the intervention of the police, who loaded the demonstrators, also operating the fire hydrants. During the evacuation operations, the officers arrested several occupants.
The eviction comes three days after the start of the mobilization that threatened to block one of the most important ports in Italy, launched with the entry into force of the obligation of the green pass for all public and private workers. Over the weekend, the union that promoted the protest, declared illegitimate by the strike guarantee commission, had announced the end of the blockade and the return to work of the dockers. An announcement strongly contested by the demonstrators, who pushed Stefano Puzzer, one of the leaders of the protest, first to retract and then to announce his resignation. “It is right that I take on my responsibilities”, said in a post on Facebook the former spokesman of the Coordination of Port Workers of Trieste (Clpt), who took part in this morning’s sit-in.
Over the weekend, the president of the Port Authority Zeno D’Agostino had launched an ultimatum calling for an end to the blockade. CGIL, CISL and UIL also asked that “the port be freed” from those who are protesting against green certification.
Trieste: the police clear gate 4 of the port, occupied by no green pass demonstrators
The police have cleared gate 4 of the port of Trieste, blocked since last Friday by dockers and demonstrators who contest the obligation of the green pass. When the police vans arrived, about three hundred no-green pass demonstrators and about thirty workers sat on the ground, chanting chants and slogans. “You have to free the port please, I want to prevent you from getting hurt,” said a police officer, before the intervention of the police, who loaded the demonstrators, also operating the fire hydrants. During the evacuation operations, the officers arrested several occupants.
The eviction comes three days after the start of the mobilization that threatened to block one of the most important ports in Italy, launched with the entry into force of the obligation of the green pass for all public and private workers. Over the weekend, the union that promoted the protest, declared illegitimate by the strike guarantee commission, had announced the end of the blockade and the return to work of the dockers. An announcement strongly contested by the demonstrators, who pushed Stefano Puzzer, one of the leaders of the protest, first to retract and then to announce his resignation. “It is right that I take on my responsibilities”, said in a post on Facebook the former spokesman of the Coordination of Port Workers of Trieste (Clpt), who took part in this morning’s sit-in.
Over the weekend, the president of the Port Authority Zeno D’Agostino had launched an ultimatum calling for an end to the blockade. CGIL, CISL and UIL also asked that “the port be freed” from those who are protesting against green certification.
Trieste: the police clear gate 4 of the port, occupied by no green pass demonstrators
The police have cleared gate 4 of the port of Trieste, blocked since last Friday by dockers and demonstrators who contest the obligation of the green pass. When the police vans arrived, about three hundred no-green pass demonstrators and about thirty workers sat on the ground, chanting chants and slogans. “You have to free the port please, I want to prevent you from getting hurt,” said a police officer, before the intervention of the police, who loaded the demonstrators, also operating the fire hydrants. During the evacuation operations, the officers arrested several occupants.
The eviction comes three days after the start of the mobilization that threatened to block one of the most important ports in Italy, launched with the entry into force of the obligation of the green pass for all public and private workers. Over the weekend, the union that promoted the protest, declared illegitimate by the strike guarantee commission, had announced the end of the blockade and the return to work of the dockers. An announcement strongly contested by the demonstrators, who pushed Stefano Puzzer, one of the leaders of the protest, first to retract and then to announce his resignation. “It is right that I take on my responsibilities”, said in a post on Facebook the former spokesman of the Coordination of Port Workers of Trieste (Clpt), who took part in this morning’s sit-in.
Over the weekend, the president of the Port Authority Zeno D’Agostino had launched an ultimatum calling for an end to the blockade. CGIL, CISL and UIL also asked that “the port be freed” from those who are protesting against green certification.