The Borneo Post

G20 host Hamburg braces for ‘Welcome to Hell’ protest

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HAMBURG: Germany’s G20 summit host city Hamburg braced for a potentiall­y violent ‘Welcome to Hell’ protest yesterday by anticapita­list militants as tensions rise in the lead- up to the power meet.

Riot police used water cannon and pepper spray to clear an unauthoris­ed protest camp in ugly scenes Tuesday night, leaving five people injured and driving fears of more trouble ahead in the northern port city of Hamburg.

Up to 100,000 demonstrat­ors are expected during the two- day Group of 20 meeting that starts Friday and will bring US President Donald Trump, Russia’s Vladimir Putin, China’s Xi Jinping and other leaders to the city.

Germany’s second city, hosting its largest ever internatio­nal meeting, has deployed some 20,000 police around the event sites, equipped with riot gear, armoured vehicles, helicopter­s and surveillan­ce drones.

A holding centre for detainees has been set up with space for 400 people and detention judges on hand.

Some 30 demonstrat­ions have been announced before and during the meeting, organised by anti-globalisat­ion activists and environmen­talists, trade unions, student and church groups.

Most are expected to be peaceful but several will be spearheade­d by radical leftwing and anarchist militants known as ‘ black bloc’ activists who have often clashed with police, hurling rocks, bottles or fireworks.

“Welcome to Hell” organiser Andreas Blechschmi­dt said the motto is “a combative message but it’s also meant to symbolise that G20 policies worldwide are responsibl­e for hellish conditions like hunger, war and the climate disaster”. Blechschmi­dt told AFP that activists during the G20 would seek to blockade access to the summit venue and, as usual, “reserve for themselves the option of militant resistance” against police.

Chancellor Angela Merkel said that while peaceful demonstrat­ions must be respected, “those who use violence mock democracy”.

The city state of Hamburg has banned rallies from the inner city and along access roads to the airport, forcing marchers into harboursid­e areas of St Pauli and Altona, away from the G20.

Some activists have vowed to defy the ban and pledged ‘civil disobedien­ce’ and blockades to sabotage G20 logistics.

Protesters have charged authoritie­s are turning Germany’s second city into a ‘ fortress’ and denying them the constituti­onal right to assemble and demonstrat­e.

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