The Borneo Post

Police gain upper hand after Hamburg’s day of G20 clashes

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HAMBURG: Police gained the upper hand in Hamburg early yesterday morning after a day of running clashes with anticapita­list protesters seeking to disrupt the city’s G20 summit of global leaders.

Heavily armed police commandos moved in after activists had spent much of the day attempting to wrest control of the streets from more than 15,000 police, setting fires, looting and building barricades.

With meetings between leaders of the club of 20 largest global economies finished for the day, police stormed the last holdouts, who had gathered in the Schanzenvi­ertel district, an area known for its left-wing activism and culture of squatting.

With two months to go before she seeks re-election, Chancellor Angela Merkel had hoped to cement Germany’s growing global leadership role with a demonstrat­ion of its unwavering commitment to free speech, assembly and dissent by holding the summit in the centre of a city with a proud radical tradition.

Protesters torched cars and lorries, smashed windows in banks, looted retail stores and hurled paving slabs and other objects before police managed to restore order. Some 197 officers were injured after two days of clashes in the port city. Police made 19 arrests and detained dozens more.

Standing in a nearby falafel restaurant, Mohammad Halabi, 32, a Syrian who arrived in Germany as a refugee some 18 months before, surveyed the scene with disbelief.

“They are crazy. I can’t believe my eyes,” he said. “They have such a beautiful country and they’re destroying it.”

But G20 participan­ts said they had never seen protesters closer to such a summit than in Hamburg and praised the work of police in keeping the event safe, suggesting Merkel’s gamble had paid off.

“I have every understand­ing for peaceful demonstrat­ions but violent demonstrat­ions put human lives in danger,” Merkel had said earlier.

Most of the 100,000 protesters were peaceful, hoisting signs saying the G20 leaders were not welcome, or engaging in mass bicycle procession­s through the city centre wearing brightly coloured uniforms. ‘

When world leaders including US President Donald Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping gathered for a Beethoven concert in the Elbphilhar­monie concert hall on one side of the river, protesters blared the music of Jimi Hendrix from the other side.

But in the night’s most dramatic scenes, police pursued members of the radical Black Bloc movement, which wants to overthrow capitalism, across scaffoldin­g as they sought refuge on rooftops. Below, burning barricades billowed thick smoke.

Despite the chaos that threatened to overwhelm parts of the city during much of the day, the summit, with thousands of participan­ts from dozens of countries, was largely unaffected.

Police declined to clear US first lady Melania Trump’s motorcade to leave her hotel for a tour of the historic harbour, and protests delayed buses taking visitors away from the state dinner that concluded the meetings. — Reuters

 ??  ?? German police walk in line during demonstrat­ions at the G20 summit in Hamburg. — Reuters photo
German police walk in line during demonstrat­ions at the G20 summit in Hamburg. — Reuters photo

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