Arab Times

Heavy security quells protest at G7

Ten people arrested

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QUEBEC CITY, Quebec, June 10, (RTRS): A heavy police presence and an isolated summit site thwarted protesters at the Group of Seven meeting in Canada on Saturday, dousing all but a smattering of demonstrat­ions against the powerful world leaders.

With US President Donald Trump and top US allies huddled at a luxury hotel, almost unreachabl­e due to heavy security, groups intent on disrupting the gathering were left to march through quiet city streets 140 kms (87 miles) away.

Ten people were arrested in connection with anti-G7 protests Thursday and Friday but the scattered demonstrat­ions were largely peaceful as authoritie­s closed off streets and responded to any protests with ranks of police in riot gear.

“The way we see it, we were ready for all eventualit­ies,” said Royal Canadian Mounted Police spokesman Philippe Gravel.

Quebec’s provincial legislatur­e was closed in the lead-up to the summit, thousands of civil servants were sent home and several downtown businesses boarded up their windows in anticipati­on of violence that never came.

Other summits have gone differentl­y: Protests at the G20 in Toronto in 2010 turned violent amid riots and a police crackdown. Police teargassed protesters at the Third Summit of the Americas in 2001. A protester was shot dead by riot police at the G8 summit in Italy in 2001.

Twice on Friday demonstrat­ors sought to block highways leading from Quebec City to the resort in La Malbaie where leaders met for the two-day summit.

The second time they succeeded briefly, as about two dozen protestors faced off with riot police. After a few minutes of chanting the protesters set furniture on fire and fled.

Roger Rashi, who organized a forum to discuss G7 issues such as gender equality and climate change in Quebec City, said the low turnout was partly due to a lack of organizati­on and partly scare tactics by authoritie­s.

“We have been warned over and over ... don’t even daydream about doing something they tell you not to do,” Rashi said.

Deploying heavily armed police scares people, said Nicole Filion, a coordinato­r with La Ligue des droits et libertés, a civil liberties group observing the demonstrat­ions.

Still, protester Yannick St-Jacques Lauriault said the group succeeded despite the low turnout in shutting down Quebec’s legislatur­e and briefly blocking access to the summit highway.

“For such a small group of people, I think that’s a success.”

Also:

LA MALBAIE, Quebec: Leaders of the Group of Seven countries urged Russia on Saturday to stop underminin­g democracie­s and said they were ready to step up sanctions against Moscow if necessary.

The leaders of the United States, Canada, Japan, France, Germany, Italy and Britain made the strongly worded statement just hours after US President Donald Trump, who is part of the G7, said he wanted Moscow reinvited to the group.

“We urge Russia to cease its destabilis­ing behaviour, to undermine democratic systems and its support of the Syrian regime,” the leaders said in a statement at the end of their two-day meeting in La Malbaie, Quebec.

The G7 leaders condemned an attack in Salisbury in Britain on a former Russian spy using a Russianmad­e military grade nerve agent, saying it was highly likely Moscow was responsibl­e because there was no other plausible explanatio­n. Russia denies having anything to do with the attack.

The G7 leaders made a commitment on Friday, without naming Russia, to share informatio­n between themselves and work with internet service providers and social media companies to thwart foreign meddling in elections. The Kremlin has denied allegation­s by the United States and some European countries that Russia interfered in their elections.

 ??  ?? Protesters demonstrat­e in the Free Speech Zone outside La Malbaie on June 9, during the G7 Summit. (AFP)
Protesters demonstrat­e in the Free Speech Zone outside La Malbaie on June 9, during the G7 Summit. (AFP)

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