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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews from Around the Americas | June 2007 

Thousands Protest Outside G-8 Summit
email this pageprint this pageemail usAssociated Press


A member of the German Clown Army protests during an anti-G8 summit demonstration in Kuehlungsborn June 5, 2007. The Clandestine Insurgent Rebel Clown Army is a UK-based anti-authoritarian activist group that uses non-violent actions to challenge corporate globalisation, war and actions that the group opposes. (Reuters/Hannibal Hanschke)
Hinter Bollhagen, Germany - Police used water cannon to scatter stone-throwing demonstrators as several thousand protesters gathered at a seven-mile fence surrounding the Group of Eight summit meeting involving US President Bush and other leaders.

An estimated 10,000 demonstrators had reached the fence by early afternoon, police said, while other protesters blocked roads leading from the airport to the summit site of Heiligendamm on the Baltic Sea coast in northern Germany as leaders arrived on the first day of the three-day summit.

Police said the protesters bypassed security checkpoints to reach the fence, but they had not breached the barrier itself at any point. At one section, hundreds of protesters chanted "Peace" and "Free G-8! Free G-8!" while riot police wearing helmets and bearing transparent shields massed inside.

Some police held the leashes of dogs as they watched the protesters, which numbered more than 150 near the small town of Hinter Bollhagen, less than two miles from the summit site.

Elsewhere, one group laid branches across a small-gauge railway used to transport journalists to Heiligendamm from the summit center in nearby Kuehlungsborn, while other protesters blocked two routes leading from the airport in the city of Rostock.

Protesters who reached the fence targeted two police control points, pelting them with stones before authorities turned water cannons on them, police spokesman Manfred Luetjann said. He did not say if there were any injuries or arrests.

"We wanted to prevent this from happening but now they are there and we are handling it," Luetjann told The Associated Press by telephone.

The incident came after a protest Saturday in nearby Rostock where several thousand black-hooded protesters hurled rocks and bottles at police near the end of a march and rally by some 25,000 people. Some 400 police officers were injured.

A police spokesman, Frank Scheulen, said most of the demonstrators who had reached the fence today were peaceful, "but of course we have to assume that there could be potentially violent protesters among them."

"We will take all necessary measures," to ensure the security, he said.

Luetjann said that protesters had blocked two roadways from Laage airport, where Air Force One landed the day before, and where leaders including Russia's Vladimir Putin and Britain's Tony Blair were expected later in the day.

"If we can block them, if they can get their lunch with a few hours' delay, that is fine," Emil Begtrup-Bright, who said he was a member of the left-wing grass roots group called Socialist Youth Forum, told Denmark's TV2 News channel.



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