Oroville Mercury-Register

Pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors block roads in Chicago and SF

- By Sophia Tareen

Pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors blocked roadways in Illinois, California, New York and Oregon on Monday, temporaril­y shutting down travel into Chicago O'Hare Internatio­nal Airport, onto the Golden Gate and Brooklyn bridges and on a busy West Coast highway.

In Chicago, protesters linked arms and blocked lanes of Interstate 190 leading into one of the nation's busiest airports around 7 a.m., a demonstrat­ion they said was part of a global “economic blockade to free Palestine,” according to Rifqa Falaneh, one of the organizers.

Traffic in the San Francisco Bay Area was snarled for hours as demonstrat­ors shut down all vehicle, pedestrian and bike traffic on the Golden Gate Bridge and chained themselves to 55-gallon drums filled with cement across Interstate 880 in Oakland. Protesters marching into Brooklyn blocked Manhattan-bound traffic on the Brooklyn Bridge. In Eugene, Oregon, protesters blocked Interstate 5, shutting down traffic on the major highway for about 45 minutes.

O'Hare warned travelers on the social platform X to take alternativ­e forms of transporta­tion with car travel “substantia­lly delayed this morning due to protest activity.”

Some travelers stuck in standstill traffic left their cars and walked the final leg to the airport along the freeway, trailing their luggage behind them.

Among them was Madeline Hannan from suburban Chicago. She was headed to O'Hare for a work trip to Florida when her and her husband's car ended up stalled for 20 minutes. She got out and “both ran and speed walked” more than 1 mile. She said she made it to the gate on time, but barely.

“This was an inconvenie­nce,” she said in a telephone interview from Florida. “But in the grand scheme of things going on overseas, it's a minor inconvenie­nce.”

While individual travelers may have been affected, operations at the airport appeared near normal with delays of under 15 minutes, according to the Chicago Department of Aviation.

Inbound traffic toward O'Hare resumed around 9 a.m.

About 20 protesters were arrested at the Golden Gate Bridge demonstrat­ion and traffic resumed

shortly after noon, according to the California Highway Patrol. The agency said officers were making arrests at two points on the interstate, including one spot where roughly 300 protesters refused orders to disperse,

“Attempting to block or shut down a freeway or state highway to protest is unlawful, dangerous, and prevents motorists from safely reaching their destinatio­ns,” the agency said in a statement.

Oregon State Police said dozens of protesters were were arrested for disorderly conduct following the Interstate 5 protest in Eugene, Oregon, about 110 miles (177 kilometers) south of Portland.

New York Police made numerous arrests, saying 150 protesters initially involved in the march around 3:15 p.m., but that number quickly grew. The bridge was fully reopened by 5 p.m.

 ?? LEA SUZUKI — SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE VIA AP ?? Pedestrian­s and bicyclists wait outside the pedestrian gate on the south side of the Golden Gate Bridge while the bridge is closed due to protesters on Monday in San Francisco.
LEA SUZUKI — SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE VIA AP Pedestrian­s and bicyclists wait outside the pedestrian gate on the south side of the Golden Gate Bridge while the bridge is closed due to protesters on Monday in San Francisco.

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