Politicians and protesters in the French city of Strasbourg are up in arms over police efforts to stop the display of anti-NATO flags days ahead of a summit of the alliance.
"Scandalous and intolerable," says Daniel-Cohn Bendit, co-president of the Greens in the European Parliament and a well known figure in both French and German politics.
"Completely illegal," says Patrick Wachsmann, a law professor at the University of Strasbourg and a specialist in civil liberties.
Even the local authority for the eastern Bas-Rhine region has distanced itself from the police action. In a statement issued late Monday, it denied having issued orders to the police to take down banners displayed from householders' windows.
The battle of the flags started when police officers started visiting the homes of local citizens who were flying flags bearing a rainbow logo and the slogan "No to Nato" from their windows.
Officers turned up at Christian Grosse's house at the beginning of last week and told him they had received orders to ask people to take the flags down.
"It was my son who saw them," Grosse told AFP. "They told him 'Either you take it down, or we take it down.'"
His son did as he was told, said Grosse, "but I put it back up the very next morning".
Grosse, a member of the local communist party, said several other local residents had received similar visits from the police.
Marie-George Buffet, the secretary general of the French communist party, has used Grosse's experience as a rallying point, appealing to people to hang out the same flag all across France.
The police visits -- and the resulting controversy -- come against the background of moves to tighten security in the city ahead of the NATO summit planned for April 3 and 4.
But Buffet accused the French government of wanting to transform the city into a bunker.
Francois Bayrou, leader of France's centrist Democrat Movement, has also condemned the police measures as an unjustified attack on freedom of expression.
"It is wrong not to respect peaceful freedom of expression," he said.
"I don't see what is wrong with reminding people that not everybody favours France being in NATO," he added.
For law professor Wachsmann the measures are "shocking" and all the more surprising because they were not covered by any existing law.
If the authorities had in fact forcibly removed one of the flags in question it would have been a "grossly illegal" and liable to legal redress in the courts, said the academic.
Tens of thousands of protesters from around the world are expected at an alternative gathering and some of the organisers of that event have called for the right to hold peaceful protests during the summit.
Malaysia" festival in Kuala Lumpur. REUTERS/Zainal Abd Halim
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NATO summit flags controversy
Monday, March 23, 2009 at 9:14 PM Posted by Beijing News
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