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Nearly 500 arrested in G20 protests in Canada

konglanjiaowei

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Nearly 500 arrested in G20 protests in Canada
Posted: 27 June 2010 2232 hrs

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A protester kicks a burnt-out car as a police vehicle burns in the background during an anti-G20 demonstration.
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TORONTO, Canada - Police arrested 480 people over the weekend for burning four police cars and smashing bank windows and storefronts in violent protest against a G20 summit, authorities told AFP Sunday.

Several of the demonstrators suspected for leading the violence have been charged, said Gillian Van Acker, spokeswoman for the Integrated Security Unit responsible for securing the summit of the world's top economies.

But she could not say how many, so far.

Overnight AFP journalists came across dozens of young militants with their hands tied, squatting on downtown streets after clashes outside several locked down hotels where delegates to the G20 and G8 summits were staying.

Residents awoke on Sunday to find city crews sweeping up broken glass and wiping graffiti off buildings and streetcars, as packs of police kept a quiet vigil at intersections.

Dimitri Soudas, spokesman for Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, blamed the violence on "a bunch of thugs that pretend to have a difference of opinion with policies and instead choose violence to express those so-called differences."

- AFP/ir



 

konglanjiaowei

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Jun 27, 2010

G-20 march turns violent

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A police car burns during a protest against the G20 summit in downtown Toronto. -- PHOTO: REUTERS

<!-- story content : start --> TORONTO - MASKED protesters rioted across downtown Toronto on Saturday, setting police cars ablaze and smashing store windows in a violent show of opposition to the G-20 summit. Toronto police chief Bill Blair admitted police had struggled to control the crowds, and had used tear gas on one occasion, after warning people to stay away from trouble spots. 'We have never seen that level of wanton criminality and vandalism and destruction on our streets,' he told an evening news conference.

'There are limits to free speech, and these limits really end when it infringes on the rights and the safety of others.' At least 130 people were arrested, including some Mr Blair believed were ringleaders of the rioting that started when several hundred anarchists broke away from a large, peaceful demonstration against the top-level meeting. During an afternoon and night of rioting, police cars were set ablaze in at least two areas, including the city's Bay Street financial core, while protesters on hip Queen Street smashed storefronts and damaged media trucks.

By evening, some protesters had advanced to the metal fence sealing off the area where heads of state from the Group of 20 industrialised and developing countries were meeting. A downtown hotel was locked down, with riot police outside. Banks, coffee shops and small stores were also targets and protesters looted at least one retailer, storming out with both clothing and the white arms and legs of fashion mannequins. -- REUTERS



 

konglanjiaowei

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Police officers in full riot gear advance on anti-G20 demonstrators on Queen Street on Saturday in Toronto, Canada. Earlier in the day, violent protesters burned police cars, smashed shop fronts and confronted the force of approximately 20,000 police charged with keeping order during the first day of the
G20 Summit. -- PHOTO: AFP



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A protestor leaps on a burned out police vehicle during a demonstration against the G20 summit in downtown Toronto.
-- PHOTO: REUTERS



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Police officers detain protesters during a demonstration at the G20 summit in Toronto on Saturday. -- PHOTO: REUTERS



 

konglanjiaowei

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A protestor gestures during a demonstration against the G20 summit in downtown Toronto. -- PHOTO: REUTERS


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A police car burns during a protest against the G20 summit in downtown Toronto. --PHOTO: REUTERS


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Undercover police officers arrest a demonstrator protesting the G20 summits. -- PHOTO: AFP


 

konglanjiaowei

Alfrescian (Inf)
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07.jpg


A police car burns while protestors march along the streets of downtown Toronto. -- PHOTO: AP


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Police club a crowd of activists during the protest. -- PHOTO: AP


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A protester carries an imitation casket marked ?Democratie? through the streets in the midst of protests against the G20 summit in Toronto.
-- PHOTO: REUTERS



 

konglanjiaowei

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A demonstrator is arrested by Canadian police officers near the fence that surrounds the G20 Summit venue in Toronto.
-- PHOTO: AP



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A protester sings at riot police while marching along the streets of downtown Toronto.
-- PHOTO: AP



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Violent anti-G20 protesters, part of a group using the Black Bloc tactics, kick and hit a police car downtown in Toronto, Canada.
-- PHOTO: AFP




 

konglanjiaowei

Alfrescian (Inf)
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A shattered glass-plate window cascades down as violent anti-G20 protesters, using Black Bloc tactics, smash and loot their way through downtown in Toronto, Canada. -- PHOTO: AFP


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Police officers clash with protesters during a demonstration of the G20 summit in Toronto on Saturday. -- PHOTO: REUTERS


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Police officers surround the scene where anti-G20 protesters have set police cars on fire in Toronto. -- PHOTO: AP



 

konglanjiaowei

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Activists attack a police car in Toronto's financial district during the G20 Summit. -- PHOTO: AP


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A violent anti-G20 protester, part of a group using Black Bloc tactics, smashes the windshield of a police car as demonstrators wreak havoc
on downtown streets. -- PHOTO: AFP



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A protester lies in front of a line of riot police, who arrived to handle demonstrations, in Toronto as the G20 Summit got underway.
-- PHOTO: AP




 

konglanjiaowei

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G20 chaos as protesters rampage in Toronto


G20 chaos as protesters rampage in Toronto

<!-- phugc --> By Colin Perkel And Maria Babbage,
The Canadian Press


TORONTO - It was a day of unprecedented chaos in downtown Toronto as roving bands of G20 protesters set fire to police vehicles and smashed windows Saturday despite a $1-billion security tab and thousands of police at the ready. A core group of militant protesters, disguised with dark bandannas, wearing black bike helmets and using what's referred to as a Black Bloc tactic, remained at large after their campaign of violence. Still, police vowed to bring them to justice.

Police in riot gear marched through city streets for hours, pounding their shields in warning as they tried to restore order in a city under siege. The violence came as leaders of the world's G20 nations met behind the steel and concrete barrier that has earned the city the moniker "Fortress Toronto." With protesters seemingly running free through the streets, Toronto Mayor David Miller defended how police responded to the splinter groups that broke off from a larger, peaceful protest march.

"A small group of people essentially runs in a deliberate pattern away from that demonstration, a very difficult task to immediately redeploy everybody," Miller said. "The police have to protect the site where the G20 leaders are." That appeared to be the strategy, as police held their lines just north of the G20 security zone, metres away from a chaotic scene that saw bank windows smashed with hammers and storefronts destroyed by hurled rocks. When reinforcements did arrive the protesters were long gone, leaving officers the task of driving back non-violent demonstrators.

"Our streets!" the protesters chanted in response. As night fell hundreds of protesters mounted a futile campaign. Chanting "To the fence," the group made several attempts to approach the security barrier, but was blocked by riot police at every turn. Police said more than 300 arrests had been made by mid-morning Sunday, and that they expected that number to rise as they continued processing suspects. Earlier, a newspaper photographer was shot with a plastic bullet in the backside, while another had an officer point a gun in his face despite identifying himself as a member of the media.

The Integrated Security Unit confirmed police fired plastic bullets during the protests. The chaotic situation saw Toronto police use tear gas for the first time in the city's history, said Chief Bill Blair, who added the city has never seen that level of violence in its streets. Some 5,100 officers from forces across the province have been tasked with protecting the summit. Security has been pegged at $1 billion. A thick plume of dark grey smoke hovered above the city's financial district at Bay and King streets after three police vehicles were set ablaze.

When the skies cleared, the damage was laid bare — at least one cruiser was completely gutted by fire and the other two badly scorched. Graffiti was scrawled on bank towers. Hours later another police car was set on fire — and then another. The Prime Minister's Office condemned the violence.
"Free speech is a principle of our democracy, but the thugs that prompted violence earlier today represent in no way, shape or form the Canadian way of life," spokesman Dimitri Soudas said in a statement. Miller made his remarks from the Direct Energy Centre, where international reporters covering the summit are stationed.

Four massive screens suspended from the ceiling showed a live shot of Toronto's silhouetted cityscape dominated by the CN Tower, but not a sign of the chaos in the streets. "That's what they're showing in here?" he wondered aloud. The hospitals on University Avenue, where the march began, and the Eaton Centre shopping mall were put under lockdown. There were reports of looting at the mall, a popular tourist attraction. Downtown subway lines and commuter trains were shut down at the request of police at the height of the violence.

At the Ontario legislature riot police formed a line, three deep and began moving forward en masse to push back the crowd of a few hundred people.
Several times a group of about seven or eight officers would suddenly break out of the line, grab one of the protesters, handcuff them and drag them back behind the line. The group chanted "shame" and "the world is watching," while police told them it was an unlawful assembly. Throughout the city officers had corralled groups of protesters, but there was no sign of the balaclava-clad protesters who caused the carnage.

That renegade group of about 50 people left a trail of destruction down Queen Street West in the heart of the city as they targeted symbols of power, authority and capitalism. Bank windows were smashed with hammers. Rocks were thrown through several Starbucks coffee houses. TV vans were smashed. Mailboxes were flipped and chucked at windows. One protester threw a pickaxe through the window of a bank tower like a tomahawk as his posse roared its approval. "Bomb the Banks," was spray painted on walls. Another protester was seriously injured after suffering a head injury and was carried away by others.

Store owners were moved to tears on the sidewalks outside their vandalized shops, and parents hurried away carrying crying children. An eclectic group of about 4,000 people ranging from greying seniors to families with strollers and tattooed hipsters had gathered at 1 p.m. to protest the summit. Things turned violent about 90 minutes later when the smaller group dressed in black broke away. Black Bloc is often mistaken for an organization, but it's actually a protest tactic according to websites devoted to the method.

Protesters dressed normally infiltrate peaceful demonstrations, then change into black clothing and cover their faces in balaclavas or ski masks.
The uniform look makes it difficult for police to identify who perpetrated an act of violence, such as smashing a window or spray-painting a building. Protesters can change back into regular street clothing and go unnoticed by police. James Ruehle, a 49-year-old contractor from Pickering, a half hour's drive from Toronto, saw the burning of the three police cruisers.

Ruehle was stopped in his truck at the lights at the corner of King and Bay streets in the city's financial district as the protesters approached. Three police vehicles zipped past the line of traffic into the intersection, where they stopped with lights flashing. A group of about 20 to 30 police then began to congregate but an officer Ruehle thought was a police captain ordered them back. "The cop was yelling at them 'Back up!' 'Put your batons down!'" said Ruehle. The police in the cars, he said, then amazed him by backing off, leaving the cruisers running in the middle of the intersection with their lights flashing and doors open.

"It was like an invitation G(to the protesters)," said Ruehle. "One kid with a helmet and a black suit jumps on the trunk lid of the police car and jumps up and down like a madman." Ruehle said three or four others in similar garb quickly joined in.


 
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