[Fresh Ink] London and Berlin march against G20
Richard Menec
menecraj at shaw.ca
Sun Mar 29 22:33:08 CDT 2009
<http://www.etaiwannews.com/etn/news_content.php?id=905732&lang=eng_news>
London protesters march in 1st of many G20 rallies
By DEAN CARSON Associated Press
2009-03-28 11:01 PM
Tens of thousands of people marched across central London Saturday to demand
jobs, economic justice and environmental accountability, kicking off six
days of protest and action planned in the run-up to the G20 summit next
week. More than 150 groups threw their backing behind the "Put People First"
march. Police said around 35,000 attended the demonstration, but there were
large gaps in the line of protesters snaking its way across the city toward
Speaker's Corner in Hyde Park.
The marchers are pushing for a more transparent and democratic economic
recovery plan.
"The whole economic meltdown ... There's a really good opportunity for
governments to get together and invest in a sustainable future," said
unemployed Steve Burson, 49, marching with the protesters.
The biggest groups backing the demonstration include the Stop The War
Coalition, whose supporters marched under the slogan "Jobs Not Bombs,"
Friends of the Earth, and the Trades Union Congress, an umbrella group of
British trade unions, which is calling for Britain's crisis-hit
manufacturing base to share in country's banking bailout.
"They should be solving (the crisis) in the interest of working people,"
said Andy Bain, the president of Transport Salaried Staffs' Association.
"All the money is going to the rich."
Protesters whistled and booed British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's 10
Downing Street office _ with one shouting: "Enjoy the overtime!" as they
filed past.
Security was tight around a small group of people waving anarchist flags
Saturday. Anarchists and others have promised violence before the G20
meeting Thursday, and the British capital is bracing for a massive police
operation as representatives of the world's 20 leading economies fly in for
a summit on the financial crisis. More protests are planned Wednesday and
Thursday, while left-leaning teach-ins, lectures, and other demonstrations
are scheduled throughout the week.
Other demonstrations aimed at the G20 summit took place in Europe on
Saturday.
Berlin police estimated that around 10,000 people gathered in front of the
capital's city hall and more than 1,000 in Frankfurt, Germany's banking
capital, for similar demonstrations under the slogan: "We won't pay for your
crisis."
Some demonstrators in Berlin sported headbands reading "pay for it
yourselves" and carried placards demanding: "make capitalism history."
___
Associated Press Writer Julia Rech in Berlin contributed to this report.
More information about the FreshInk
mailing list