Wednesday, April 1, 2009

G20: Protesters storm bank, smash windows




LONDON - G20 protesters clashed with riot police in central London overnight, breaking into the heavily guarded Royal Bank of Scotland and smashing its windows.
Nearly two dozen people were arrested. Some 4,000 anarchists, anti-capitalists, environmentalists and others clogged the streets of London's financial district for what demonstrators branded "Financial Fool's Day."
The protests were called ahead of Thursday's Group of 20 summit of world leaders, who hope to take concrete steps to resolve the global financial crisis that has lashed nations and workers worldwide.
Protesters also tried to storm the Bank of England and pelted police with eggs and fruit.
A battered effigy of a banker in a bowler's hat hung on a traffic light near the Bank of England.
While most of the protesters were peaceful, a violent mob wearing balaclavas broke into the RBS building and stole keyboards that were used to break windows.
Other protesters spray-painted graffiti on the RBS building, writing "class war" and "thieves." Riot police batted back protesters carrying banners that read "Abolish Money." Protesters focused the Royal Bank of Scotland because it was bailed out by the British government after a series of disastrous deals brought it to the brink of bankruptcy.
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Still, its former chief executive Fred Goodwin - aged 50 - managed to walk off with a tidy annual pension of 703,000 pounds ($1.2 million) - just as unemployment in Britain is at 2 million and rising.
"Every job I apply for there's already 150 people who have also applied," said protester Nathan Dean, 35, who lost his information technology job three weeks ago.
"I have had to sign on to the dole (welfare) for the first time in my life.
You end up having to pay your mortgage on your credit card and you fall into debt twice over."
The protests in London's financial district - known as "The City" - came as Prime Minister Gordon Brown and President Barack Obama held a news conference at Britain's Foreign Office elsewhere in the capital.
"Clearly, everybody has the right to protest and to make their views known, but people also have the right to go about their daily lives without fear of violence or unnecessary disruption," said Michael Ellam, Brown's spokesman.
At least one police officer was injured when a printer and other office equipment was thrown out of the RBS window.
Hundreds cheered as a blue office chair was used to smash one of the blacked-out branch windows.
Two men - one was wearing a suit - exchanged punches in the financial district before police intervened. Of the nearly two dozen people arrested, offences included disorderly behaviour, illegally wearing a police uniform, carrying knives and assault

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