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Protesters Dispersed After G-20 Meeting

Pittsburgh : PA : USA | about 1 month ago  
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Saturday, September 26, 2009
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By COLIN MOYNIHAN Published: September 26, 2009 PITTSBURGH — Hours after the Group of 20 meeting ended, the protests did not.
Skip to next paragraph Enlarge This Image Damon Winter/The New York Times There was a heavy police presence downtown as the march wound through the planned route. More Photos »
Multimedia Slide Show G-20 Protest Turns Peaceful Enlarge This Image Damon Winter/The New York Times Protesters marched to downtown Pittsburgh in protest of the G20 Financial Summit on Friday. More Photos >
The police here had to disperse hundreds of students and young protesters near milling near the University of Pittsburgh on Friday night with pepper spray and smoke canisters in a scene reminiscent of the previous night’s clashes that took place on the eve of the economic summit.
The group, estimated at close to 500 people, gathered near Schenley Plaza around 10 p.m., with students saying they were drawn because they were angry over Thursday’s protests and how the riot police treated students. Some students say their curiosity was piqued by a university message warning them to stay off the streets.
The police used a loudspeaker to announce that the plaza assembly was unlawful and ordered the crowd to disperse about 11 p.m.. Soon afterwards, plumes of white smoke could be seen rising near Bigelow Boulevard and officers beating cadence on plastic shields with long batons marched down Forbes Avenue, driving back students, onlookers and journalists. A block north, as people scattered, officers fired projectiles at a young man riding a scooter down Fifth Avenue, knocking him to the ground and arresting him.
It was the second consecutive night of turbulence in the bustling streets surrounding the university, where crowds of bar-hoppers were largely displaced by fleets of police vans, armored vehicles and phalanxes of officers wearing helmets, padded vests and shiny plastic shin guards.
On Friday morning a flier had circulated instructing people to gather again at the university to protest the previous night’s events. The police then had confronted students in a dormitory courtyard and squirted pepper spray after black clad protesters dashed though nearby streets, smashing the windows of a University of Pittsburgh police sub station and several restaurants. Those protestors had ignited a dumpster, which they rolled into the intersection of Forbes Avenue and Oakland Avenue before fleeing into the university campus.
The nighttime disturbances around the university was in stark contrast to the peaceful and permitted march in downtown Pittsburgh on Friday
There, protesters with Iraq Veterans Against the War, wearing fatigues, marched alongside Tibetans chiming cymbals, chanting denunciations of China and waving signs, like one that read “G20 Let’s Talk Tibet.” Students for Justice in Palestine assembled on Forbes Avenue and called for an end to “the Israeli occupation.” Others held up signs like “We Say No To Corporate Greed,” and “We say yes to human needs.”
One group held aloft with bamboo poles a giant fabric replica of a dove. A marching band with a French horn, several snare drums and a trombone played amid a sea of black, American and Palestinian flags.
The People’s March, as it was called, was sponsored by the Thomas Merton Center, a Pittsburgh peace organization. It came a day after the first raucous confrontations between the police and protesters resulted in 66 arrests. At least five people needed medical attention, and about 19 businesses sustained damage.
Observers put the crowd at Friday’s march at 3,000 to 4,000. Speakers urged demonstrators to fight for an array of social issues they felt had been largely ignored in global economic policy.
“We need to show the world that G-20 is not welcome in Pittsburgh,” Pete Shell, the director of the Merton center’s antiwar committee, said from the steps of the city-county building, just blocks from the David L. Lawrence Convention Center, where the G-20 meeting was under way.
It was as close as the protesters were able to get to the meeting of world leaders.
“The city has rolled out the red carpet for them,” Mr. Shell said. “But we need to show them that you are the ones we welcome.”
Nathan Smith, 31, a wine seller from Williamsport, Pa., said he drove three hours to attend the rally. “We need good jobs and good health care, and the G-20 isn’t helping that,” said Mr. Smith, who was carrying a sign that said “Capitalism Kills.” “Their policies are undermining jobs and health care.”
A member of the local chapter of Code Pink, a women’s antiwar group, led a protest against the continued presence of American troops in Afghanistan.
Rows of police officers looked on from the sidewalk, watching a group of more than 400 self-described anarchists clad in black.
Before long, singers from the Raging Grannies and workers from the United Steelworkers of America took the stage to talk about the need for jobs.
After more than an hour, the crowd began to disperse, some wondering aloud if the G-20 leaders would hear their messages.
Cory Perrotte, 20, a student from Duquesne University, was optimistic that it would be hard to ignore thousands in the street.
“They will listen to a certain degree,” he said. “They might not necessarily do anything.”
Ian Urbina and Sean D. Hamill contributed reporting from Pittsburgh.
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  • News Source: Press TV | about 1 month ago
    The group estimated that nearly 500 people gathered at the Schenley Plaza, angry about Thursday's protest and how the police treated them, the New York Times reported. According to the report, a university message that warned students to stay off...
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    Police say they arrested 110 protesters Friday night during G20 summit demonstrations at the University of Pittsburgh. Riot squads used pepper spray to help disperse the crowd estimated at around 400 people that gathered in Schenley Plaza.
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  • Blog Source: www.v7n.com
    What do they get in return? Nothing. They can say they hosted the 2009 G20 summit, but who cares? Nobody outside of Pittsburgh. If I lived there and this event was forced upon me, I'd be furious. I wonder how many locals are angry about ...
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