German police clear out famous Berlin squatters' building
Police in heavy riot gear are clearing out a notorious Berlin leftist squatters' building, encountering only passive resistance from residents as they carried them individually down a firetruck ladder
Police in heavy riot gear began clearing out a notorious Berlin leftist squat on Friday, encountering only passive resistance from residents as they carried them individually down a firetruck ladder.
A police spokesman at the scene, Thilo Cablitz, said 1,500 police had been called out to aid in clearing the Liebig 34 squat in the capital's Friedrichshain neighborhood, named after its address, Liebigstrasse 34.
An armored car sat out front of the graffiti-festooned building and police kept onlookers at a wide distance. Police entered the building after residents refused to open the door for a court employee to deliver their eviction notice.
Some residents pumped their fists in the air as they were led down a ladder from an upper level by police, others forced police to carry them out.
On the distant peripheries, supporters of the residents threw firecrackers and bottles at the police. Cablitz said other protests had been peaceful.
The building has been partially occupied for 30 years and subject to many court battles before the residents were finally ordered out of the apartments they had taken over.
As one of Berlin's best-known squats, it was a symbol for the left-wing scene in the German capital, and police were braced for possible violence throughout the city.
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