The Oklahoman

‘Occupy’ movement marks anniversar­y with marches

- BY MEGHAN BARR

NEW YORK — Occupy Wall Street protesters celebrated the movement’s anniversar­y on Monday by clogging intersecti­ons in the city’s financial district, marching to the beat of drums that were a familiar refrain last year.

Protesters roamed around the lower Manhattan financial district all morning in groups of a few dozen each, from one intersecti­on to another and back again, chanting loudly about the ills of Wall Street. In total, there were a few hundred protesters scattered throughout the city. More than 180 of them were arrested by early Monday evening, mostly on disorderly conduct charges.

The day’s events lacked the heft of Occupy protests last year, when protesters gathered by the thousands. But Occupiers were upbeat as they spread out in their old stomping grounds, giddy at the prospect of being together again. They brushed off any suggestion­s that the movement had petered out.

“This is a movement. It’s only been a year,” said protester Justin Stone Diaz, of Brooklyn. “It’s going to take many years for it to develop and figure out exactly who we are.”

But the movement is now a shadow of its mighty infancy, when a group of young people harnessed the power of a disillusio­ned nation and took to the streets chanting about corporate greed and inequality.

A familiar Statue of Liberty pup- pet was back, bobbing in the crowd above protesters’ heads. Protesters in wheelchair­s blocked a road and chanted “All day, all week, occupy Wall Street!” before they were steered off the road by police.

Zuccotti Park, the former home of the encampment, was encircled by metal police barricades lined with police officers standing watch.

Hamza Sinanaj, a 30-year-old airplane mechanic who works in upstate New York as a security guard, said he was among the first Occupy protesters last September.

“I felt that protest was long overdue, and I’m back today,” he said, holding up a sign that read, “America Rise Up.”

Events were planned in more than 30 cities worldwide.

In San Francisco, local Occupy groups planned to occupy 10 banks across the city and then hold a rally honoring foreclosur­e fighters, people who’ve been helping residents stave off foreclosur­es by squatting or holding sit-ins, outside the Bank of America building in the Financial District, the site of previous protests.

 ??  ?? Occupy Wall Street protester Chris Philips screams as he is arrested Monday near Zuccotti Park in New York. Multiple Occupy Wall Street protesters were arrested during a march toward the New York Stock Exchange on the anniversar­y of the grass-roots...
Occupy Wall Street protester Chris Philips screams as he is arrested Monday near Zuccotti Park in New York. Multiple Occupy Wall Street protesters were arrested during a march toward the New York Stock Exchange on the anniversar­y of the grass-roots...

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