October 1, 2009 - Issue 344 |
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Street Report from the G20 |
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The G20 in
What no terrorist could do to us, our own leaders did. Out of fear of the possibility of a terrorist attack, authorities militarize our towns, scare our people away, stop daily life and quash our constitutional rights. For days, downtown In many areas, there were armed police every 100 feet. Businesses closed. Schools closed. Tens of thousands were unable to work. Four thousand police were on duty plus 2500 National Guard plus Coast Guard and Air Force and dozens of other security agencies. A thousand volunteers from other police forces were sworn in to help out. Police were dressed in battle gear, bulky black ninja turtle outfits - helmets with clear visors, strapped on body armor, shin guards, big boots, batons, and long guns. In addition to helicopters, the police had hundreds of cars and motorcycles, armored vehicles, monster trucks, small electric go-karts. There were even passenger vans screaming through town so stuffed with heavily armed ninja turtles that the side and rear doors remained open. No terrorists showed up at the G20. Since no terrorists showed up, those in charge of the heavily armed security forces chose to deploy their forces around those who were protesting. Not everyone is delighted that 20 countries control 80% of the world’s resources. Several thousand of them chose to express their displeasure by protesting. Unfortunately, the officials in charge thought that it was more important to create a militarized people-free zone around the G20 people than to allow freedom of speech, freedom of assembly or the freedom to protest. It took a lawsuit by the Center for Constitutional
Rights and the ACLU to get any major protest permitted anywhere near downtown
Then a group of young people decided that they did not need a permit to express their human and constitutional rights to freedom. They announced they were going to hold their own gathering at a city park and go down the deserted city streets to protest the G20. Maybe 200 of these young people were self-described anarchists, dressed in black, many with bandanas across their faces. The police warned everyone these people were very scary. My cab driver said the anarchist spokesperson looked like Harry Potter in a black hoodie. The anarchists were joined in the park by hundreds of other activists of all ages, ultimately one thousand strong, all insisting on exercising their right to protest. This drove the authorities crazy. The crowd surged out of the park and up a side street yelling, chanting, drumming, and holding signs. As they exited the park, everyone passed an ice cream truck that was playing “It’s a small world after all.” Indeed. Any remaining doubts about the militarization of
the police were dispelled shortly after the crowd left the park. A few
blocks away the police unveiled their latest high tech anti-protestor
toy. It was mounted on the back of a huge black truck. The Pittsburgh-Gazette
described it as Long Range Acoustic Device designed to break up crowds
with piercing noise. Similar devices have been used in Fallujah,
The crowd then moved to other streets. Now they
were being tracked by helicopters. The police repeatedly tried to block
them from re-grouping ultimately firing tear gas into the crowd injuring
hundreds including people in the residential neighborhood where the police
decided to confront the marchers. I was treated to some of the tear gas
myself and I found the After the large group broke and ran from the tear gas, smaller groups went into commercial neighborhoods and broke glass at a bank and a couple of other businesses. The police chased and the glass breakers ran. And the police chased and the people ran. For a few hours. By day the police were menacing, but at night they
lost their cool. Around a park by the The biggest march was Friday. Thousands of people
from Again Friday night, riot clad police fought with
students outside of the Ultimately about 200 were arrested, mostly in clashes with the police around the University. The G20 leaders left by helicopter and limousine. It is now probably even safe to exercise constitutional
rights in The BlackCommentator.com Columnist,
Bill Quigley, is a human rights lawyer and law professor at Loyola University, New Orleans.
He has been an active public interest lawyer since 1977 and has served
as counsel with a wide range of public interest organizations on issues
including Katrina social justice issues, public housing, voting rights,
death penalty, living wage, civil liberties, educational reform, constitutional
rights and civil disobedience. He has litigated numerous cases with the
NAACP Legal Defense and Educational
Fund, Inc., the Advancement Project, and with the ACLU of Louisiana, for which
he served as General Counsel for over 15 years. Bill is one of the lawyers
for displaced residents. Additionally, Bill is the author of the
forthcoming book, Storms Still Raging: Katrina, |
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