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Mass arrests at anti-IMF protest in Washington
By Kate Randall
28 September 2002
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Over 600 demonstrators were arrested Friday in Washington DC
during the first day of protests against the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) and World Bank, which are holding their annual meetings
beginning this Sunday in the nations capital. The local
authorities, egged on by the Bush administration and backed by
the media, effectively suspended constitutional rights for those
seeking to express their opposition to globalization and to the
impending US military attack on Iraq.
District of Columbia police chief Charles Ramsey mobilized
an unprecedented number of cops, more than 3,000 in all, heavily
outnumbering the nonviolent demonstrators. Of the 649 people reported
arrested by early evening, only five were charged with destruction
of property, while all the others were charged with parading without
a permit or failing to obey police orders to disperse.
Finance ministers of the Group of 7 (G-7)representing
the US, Canada, Japan, France, Britain, Germany and Italywere
meeting on Friday in advance of the IMF-World Bank meetings. They
convened behind a fortress of fences and security guards and their
activities proceeded as planned. The area around the World Bank
building was cordoned off with iron crowd-control barriers.
Protesting groups included the Anti-Capitalist Convergence,
the Mobilization for Global Justice and other anti-globalization,
environmental and peace organizations. They carried banners reading
Biodiversity, Clean Energy Now, End
Corporate Greed and Drop Bush, Not Bombsa
reference to the Bush administrations plans for war against
Iraq.
Only about a thousand demonstrators turned out Friday in heavy
rain, although 10,000 or more were expected for Saturdays
and Sundays protests. A force about 1,500 DC police officers
was reinforced by about 1,700 additional cops, including from
nearby communities and some as far away as Chicago.
While in some recent DC protests police have moved more cautiously
against protesters, this time they donned riot gear and moved
swiftly to lock them up. Demonstrators were kept several blocks
from the location of the IMF and World Bank meetings and the White
House. In a number of cases, protesters were corralled by police,
unable to escape.
Witnesses reported seeing police dragging away some screaming,
masked protesterswho insisted they had broken no lawsas
well as beating demonstrators with their clubs. Protesters, some
chaining themselves together, chanted, This is not a police
state, we have a right to demonstrate. Some set fire to
tires and set up make-shift stages for protests.
DC Police Chief Charles H. Ramsey emphasized the aim of police
to arrest as many protesters as possible. The intent of
this group is to shut down all DC, he commented. If they
are not locked up, he said, they leave here and go someplace
else and do something else.... Those people that are apprehended
will be missing several protests because they are going to be
behind bars. Ramsey warned demonstrators that anyone caught
damaging property would be jailed.
Troopers were stationed at each of the bridges connecting Washington
and Virginia. The first arrests came around 7.a.m, when police
took about 21 protesters into custody for lying in the road at
14th Street and Independence Avenue, near the 14th Street bridge.
About an hour later, some 300 protesters who had marched from
Franklin Square to K Street and Vermont Avenue were surrounded
by police in riot gear. A few demonstrators allegedly threw rocks
at a Citibank building, breaking windows. About 40 protesters
were then surrounded by police, marched onto nearby buses and
carted off to be booked for arrest. One protester was reportedly
hit by a baton in the nose, and was treated and released at a
local hospital.
A bicycle-ride protest of about 75, planned to disrupt commuter
traffic, took off from Union Station at about 8 a.m. At least
an equal number of police followed the protesters on bicycles,
motorcycles and cars. After riding through the downtown area without
incident, protesters were stopped by police at Pershing Park,
near the White House, where they were joined by a few hundred
others.
Police on foot, bicycle and horseback formed a tight ring around
the protesters at both Pershing Park and Freedom Plaza, refusing
to allow the activists to leave. Some passersby were also caught
up in the police encirclement.
Two to three hundred protesters were arrested after they staged
a drumming protest against a possible attack on Iraq in a park
nearby the White House. By noon at least 500 had been arrested
in protests around the city. Demonstrators were loaded onto Metro
buses and transported to police facilities to be processed.
Both of Washingtons daily newspapers published editorials
supporting a police crackdown on demonstrators in the week before
the protests. The right-wing Washington Times issued a
predictably frothing diatribe against the Anti-Capitalist
Convergence and other hooligans, criticizing Chief Ramsey
for not prohibiting the demonstrators from entering the city.
Ramsey should be thinking of ways to shut them down before
they can cause any trouble, the newspaper declared.
More significant was the editorial in the Washington Post,
headlined, No shutdown for D,c and published on the
eve of the protests. For a city already reeling from the
economic downturn and the impact of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks on its tourist trade, disruption of downtown business
would further set back the Districts chances of recovery,
the Post commented. Thats all the more reason
for the authorities to take appropriate action to ensure that
Washington does not become a city that is besieged and sacked
this weekend.
The swift and repressive response of the police in DC to what
was by all accounts a small and relatively peaceful protest is
an indication of the measures being prepared against those who
speak out against government policy. In line with the anti-democratic
measures which have been enacted in the wake of September 11 in
the war on terrorism, future demonstrators against
the Bush administrations economic policiesor its plans
for war against Iraqcan expect a similar response.
See Also:
New York state terror arreststest
case in attack on rights
[26 September 2002]
One year since September 11: an unprecedented
assault on democratic rights
[11 September 2002]
Police attack anti-Bush demonstrators
in Portland
[24 August 2002]
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