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Police violence against a demonstrator
21 • 10 • 2022

A police officer reportedly strikes a protester in the head in Athens, Greece, on October 20, 2022.

At a student rally tensions between police and protesters had escalated, with police using tear gas. As captured on video, a riot police officer approached a protester and hit her in the head with his shield while she was on the ground. The protester subsequently fled.

See more here  1, 2.

The Manifold is compiling a file of allegations of excessive police violence. Check it out here.

Where is the problem with the rule of law?

The right to assembly is enshrined in both the Greek Constitution (Article 11) and the European Convention on Human Rights (Article 11). Although the police have the legal authority to attend public gatherings and to disperse them for specific reasons such as a threat to public order, the measures they take must be proportionate. The indiscriminate use of violent means that threaten the life or physical integrity of citizens is illegal in a state that adheres to the rule of law.

In addition, the ability of police officers to use violence is governed by the same guarantees as in any other case, as reflected in the Code of Criminal Procedure (Article 256), Presidential Decree 141/1991 (Article 120), Presidential Decree 254/2004 (Code of Police Ethics) and in the 2005 Circular issued by the Headquarters of the Hellenic Police Force.

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