National Post

Requisite G20 mayhem with black bloc and pepper? Check

TRUMP QUESTIONS WEST’S ‘WILL TO SURVIVE’ AS LEADERS, PROTESTERS GATHER FOR SUMMIT

- David Rising in Hamburg, Germany

U. S. President Donald Trump and other leaders of the Group of 20 top industrial and developing countries arrived Thursday in Hamburg as police in Germany’s second-biggest city braced themselves for a major protest by anti-globalizat­ion activists raising banners saying “G20: Welcome to Hell.”

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she hoped the G20 leaders meeting Friday and Saturday would be able to find “compromise­s and answers” on a wide range of issues. Merkel said leaders would address regulating financial markets, fighting terrorism and pandemics and combating cli- mate change, among other issues. She said “free, rule-based and fair trade” will be an important issue.

“You can imagine that there will be discussion­s that will not be easy,” she said. “Globalizat­ion can be a win-win situation. It must not always be that there are winners and losers.”

She held a private meeting with Trump shortly after his arrival Thursday. The pair have had a chilly relationsh­ip during his first months in office. Appearing briefly before the media, they appeared casual with one another and chatted freely.

Earlier in the day in Poland, in a speech that sometimes echoed the dark tones of his inaugural address, Trump laid out a stark vision of a clash of civilizati­ons and said it’s not clear that the West can survive. He argued that the West can prevail, but only if nations cling to the bedrock values of faith, family and freedom.

“As the Polish experience reminds us, the defence of the West ultimately rests not only on the means but also on the will of its people to prevail,” Trump told a cheering crowd in Warsaw’s Krasinski Square that at times chanted his name.

“The fundamenta­l question of our time is whether the West has the will to survive.”

“Our own fight for the West does not begin on the battlefiel­d — it begins with our minds, our wills, and our souls,” Trump said.

Trump rebuked Russia on several counts, including its military incursion into Ukraine. He is expected to meet on the sidelines of the summit Friday with Russian President Vladimir Putin in their first face- to- face encounter since his inaugurati­on.

Earlier in the day, Trump refused to say definitive­ly he believes Russia was solely responsibl­e f or i nterferenc­e in the 2016 U. S. election. “I think it could very well have been Russia, but I think it could well have been other countries. I won’t be specific,” Trump said at a news conference in Warsaw.

“I think a lot of people interfere. I think it’s been happening for a long time.”

On the eve of the summit, German police clashed with violent protesters in Hamburg, using water cannons, pepper spray and batons to disperse marchers after some attacked them with bottles and other objects.

The protest was titled “G20: Welcome to Hell,” and a standoff between hardcore anti-capitalist protesters and police developed before the march itself really got going.

Police said they repeatedly asked some demonstrat­ors to remove their masks, to no avail. They then decided to separate the group from the rest of the march, which they estimated at 12,000 people.

Black- hooded protesters attacked a police vehicle with bottles and bricks, breaking its window.

Organizers quickly called an end to the march after the violence broke out, police said. Skirmishes continued, with police advancing down the street with two water cannons while being pelted with bottles by a group of black-clad people.

A nearby building was plastered with the slogan “Borderless solidarity instead of nationalis­m: attack the G20.” A small group on the roof set off fireworks. Police said windows at a furniture store and a bank were damaged. There was no immediate word on a number of arrests or injuries.

Many other groups are calling for peaceful protests and are pushing the G20 leaders for action to fight climate change and address economic disparitie­s in the world. Some are even calling for the dissolutio­n of the G20 itself so the United Nations becomes the platform for such discussion­s.

More than 100,000 protesters are expected in Hamburg for the summit, with some 8,000 considered part of Europe’s violent left- wing scene, according to police.

The northern port city has boosted its police with reinforcem­ents from around the country and has 20,000 officers on hand to patrol Hamburg’s streets, skies and waterways.

 ?? THOMAS LOHNES / GETTY IMAGES ?? Police use water cannon and pepper spray against demonstrat­ors in Hamburg attending the “Welcome to Hell” anti- G20 protest on Thursday.
THOMAS LOHNES / GETTY IMAGES Police use water cannon and pepper spray against demonstrat­ors in Hamburg attending the “Welcome to Hell” anti- G20 protest on Thursday.

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