The News (New Glasgow)

G7 protests

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Protesters declared victory Friday after a demonstrat­ion that stopped traffic outside Quebec City

Anti-G7 protesters declared victory Friday after an early-morning demonstrat­ion that stopped traffic for about one hour on a road outside Quebec City leading to the summit site of La Malbaie.

Protesters, mostly young and clad in black, gathered in a parking lot north of Quebec City by a road overlookin­g the St. Lawrence River and began marching in the street chanting anti-capitalist slogans.

But police dressed in riot gear were ready, and stood in formation at every corner of the intersecti­on, blocking all exits.

An officer yelled through a loudspeake­r that the protest was illegal because demonstrat­ors didn’t provide police with their march route prior to the demonstrat­ion.

Protesters, trapped with nowhere to go, had no choice but to walk in a circle.

A tense standoff lasted about one hour.

“I want socialism,” said William, 22, who didn’t want to give his family name. “I’m against this G7. I’m against seven people running the planet.”

The G7 summit is an annual and informal gathering of the leaders from Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Germany and Japan and Italy - which represent the majority of global wealth. The European Union also attends the summit as do other dignitarie­s from around the world.

Samy Camus, 23, said he doesn’t like the economic system in Canada at the moment. “But I don’t know what I want to replace it with.”

Protesters screamed at police, but remained peaceful and civil.

After about 45 minutes into the standoff, one flank of officers began slowly closing in on protesters.

Shortly after, officers without the imposing riot gear of their colleagues, wearing yellow vests and helmets, began politely asking protesters to move off the street and onto the sidewalk.

They grudgingly obliged and the protest ended calmly. There were no apparent arrests. “This is still a victory,” said a man yelling into a loudspeake­r. “They shut down the legislatur­e; 10,000 provincial civil servants were told to stay home; daycares have been closed. And we shut the road down leading to La Malbaie!” he said to cheers.

As the street re-opened to traffic, protesters lazed around on grassy patches between the road and the parking lots of fast-food restaurant­s.

Environmen­tal groups, anticapita­lists and other activists are planning several protest actions on Saturday.

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 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Anti-G7 protesters demonstrat­e in Beauport, Que., yesterday.
CP PHOTO Anti-G7 protesters demonstrat­e in Beauport, Que., yesterday.

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