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Clashes as Occupy Wall St activists removed

Occupy Wall Street activists have clashed with workers and police outside the New York Stock Exchange on the movement's two-month anniversary.

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Occupy Wall Street activists have clashed with workers and police outside the New York Stock Exchange on the movement's two-month anniversary, in a manifestation of their symbolic anti-capitalist push.

As hundreds linked hands to block access to the NYSE building, one man in a blue business suit wrestled with a protester in a cowboy hat, one of several violent scuffles. About 25 people were arrested.

Chanting "Wall Street's closed!" "We are the 99 per cent" and "Whose street? Our street!" about 1000 demonstrators engaged in a tense face-off with hundreds of police, including many on horseback outside the iconic exchange.

The protests were part of a Global Day of Action announced by the website occupywallst.org, with demonstrations across the United States combined with protests in Belgium, Germany, Italy, Nigeria, Poland and Spain.

ST PAUL'S DEADLINE

In London, protesters were waiting nervously as a deadline to leave their camp outside St Paul's Cathedral neared.

The level of participation in the rallies could provide a clear indication of Occupy Wall Street's clout exactly two months since the movement sprang up to denounce big corporate business and the world's wealthiest "one per cent".

The day of protest also came after New York police earlier this week cleared out the cradle of the movement, a tent camp erected in Manhattan's Zuccotti Park on September 17.

Security forces have also torn down protest camps in several US cities, including Oakland, Portland and Dallas, and the Occupy movement finds itself with less space to occupy and its future in doubt.

In New York, protesters vowed to avenge their eviction by marching on the stock exchange, then rallying on the city's subway and major bridges.

While the stock market opened on time, protesters managed a 45-minute blockade outside the NYSE. Police eventually intervened to break through, establishing a corridor to escort Wall Street traders and workers.

YOU WANT A FIGHT?

"You want a fight?" a policeman yelled at the crowd.

Amid chaotic scenes, police then moved in to clear the street, and ensuing clashes sent police and protesters clattering to the ground. Several protesters were handcuffed and dragged into police trucks.

Others were corralled by barricades and police in a tense standoff near Zuccotti Park, where New York mayor Michael Bloomberg ordered the demolition of the protest camp that had become the symbolic heart of the movement against economic inequality.

"We need to show we are bigger than Zuccotti Park, that we are resilient, that we refuse to submit to brutal police tactics," said Jessica Lingel, 28, a librarian from New Jersey.

The New York protesters were urged to also meet at underground rail hubs "and take our own stories to the trains". A rally on a major square near police headquarters and various courthouses was scheduled for later, followed by a march across bridges, likely meaning the nearby Brooklyn Bridge.

By mid-morning the group was already claiming victory, and at least one exasperated New York cop seemed to agree.

"They've blocked everything off. This is what happens when you kick them out of the park: you stir a hornet's nest," said the officer, who would not provide his name.

Authorities "should have left them in the park. They wanted to disrupt Wall Street, and they've done it."

New York deputy mayor Howard Wolfson went on CNN early on Thursday to stress the protesters have the right to demonstrate peacefully, but warned the city will not tolerate masses of people blocking Brooklyn Bridge traffic.

"If people break the law, then obviously we'll deal with that," he said.


4 min read

Published

Updated

Source: AAP



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