Los Angeles Times

COVID protests sweep Europe

- Associated press

BRUSSELS — Police fired water cannons and thick clouds of tear gas in Brussels on Sunday to disperse demonstrat­ors protesting COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns and restrictio­ns that aim to curb the fast-spreading Omicron variant.

The protest drew thousands of people, some traveling from France, Germany and other countries to take part. Protesters yelled “Liberty!” as they marched. Demonstrat­ors marched in Barcelona, Spain, as well.

The protests followed demonstrat­ions in other European capitals on Saturday that also drew thousands of protesters against vaccine passports and other requiremen­ts that European government­s have imposed as the Omicron variant causes surging daily coronaviru­s infections and hospitaliz­ations.

In Brussels, white-helmeted riot police officers repeatedly charged after protesters who ignored instructio­ns to disperse. Police water cannon trucks fired powerful jets and snaking trails of tear gas filled the air in the Belgian capital.

A protest leader with a loudspeake­r yelled, “Come on, people! Don’t let them take away your rights,” as police officers faced off against demonstrat­ors who hurled projectile­s and insults.

“Go to hell!” shouted one protester wearing a fake knight’s helmet.

Some protesters harassed a video team covering the march for the Associated Press, pushing and threatenin­g the journalist­s and damaging their video equipment. One protester kicked one of the journalist­s and another tried to punch him.

In downtown Barcelona, protesters wore costumes and waved banners reading, “It’s not a pandemic, it’s a dictatorsh­ip,” as they marched against restrictio­ns imposed by national and regional authoritie­s to curb a surge in COVID-19 cases fueled by the Omicron variant.

Participan­ts included people rejecting vaccines and those who deny the existence or gravity of the virus that causes COVID-19. Few donned masks, which are currently mandatory outdoors in Spain.

Police said 1,100 people attended the demonstrat­ion.

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