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London G20 protest turns deadly

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Police found the body of a dead man amid protests at Bank of England yesterday. He apparently collapsed and stopped breathing around 7:30pm. Authorities did not give any cause of death and say that they found the man in near the epicentre of the protests and moved him behind a police cordon to try and resuscitate him. Thousands marched through the city of London today as part of a series of demonstrations against financial crimes, war, climate chaos and homelessness during this week's G20 summit.
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abbym0308
  • added April 01, 2009

38 comments // London G20 protest turns deadly

  •  

    Here's some front line footage from the protests at the Bank of England. Media coverage was interesting to watch today because, after all the hyping up of potential violence leading up to the event, they spent most of their efforts today talking about how peaceful the events were (which most of them were) but showing the scenes from the clashes with police like this one. I wonder what will become of this

    (NSFW language)

    abbym0308
  •  

    Here's some more. Perhaps you saw the guy with the bloody head on the BBC coverage? Well, here he is up close and personal.

    It's kinda crazy how parts of the protests were quite tame and peaceful, and part of them produced footage like this.

    abbym0308
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    The man "collapsed and stopped breathing" and the police "found him". Yeah right...

    If there was anyone looking for trouble over there it was the police itself.

    George Monbiot wrote on his blog on the Guardian:

    "The trouble-makers are out in force again. Dressed in black, their faces partly obscured, some of them appear to be interested only in violent confrontation. It’s almost as if they are deliberately raising the temperature, pushing and pushing until a fight kicks off. But this isn’t some disorganised rabble: these people were bussed in and are plainly acting in concert. There’s another dead giveaway. They are all wearing the same slogan: Police."

    Dflo
  •  

    You're so right I thought the same thing. The police seemed over provocative. What's with the media's estimates on the number of protesters the BBC says "Police estimate there to be around 5,000 - rubbish! There looked to be way more than that, RT (Russia Today) reckoned there were around 35,000 and that was at 13.00.

    NJ2D
  •  

    Sadly the disruption takes away the gloss of an otherwise peaceful demonstration. When will these cretins learn that their violence and vandalism only dilute the message and create pariahs for the media.

    SW2
    • SW2
    • 7 months ago
  •  

    From The Guardian:

    "As protesters began to gather, after 11am, some City workers were seen waving £10 notes at them from office windows."

    Smooth, guys. Reeeeal smooth.

    richjm
  •  

    i went there last night around 20.00, it was very peacefull (well the protesters were). There was so many police in full riot gear, battons and sheilds ready to beat people down....

    The protesters that set up a camp were blocked in, they couldnt get in or OUT, therefore no-one could go to the toilet, get a drink or go home. They was surrounded by police with shields and face masks, it was a boiling pot ready to burst, because the people were trapped!!!!

    All you could here was the police buzzing around in their choppers and pointless-ly speeding around in their vans and cars with seirens blazing... This made people feel very uneasy, Pure mind games by the fuzz.

    When you look at the media all you see and hear are the words "riots/ rioters" the words peace/ peacefull are never used because the media are planting the seeds in our brains that brian wash us into beliving that protesting is wrong and socially unacceptable..

    When i came into work this morning it became very clear to me that im surrounded by mindless - brainwashed fools, like most people who cant think for themselves.

    Welcome to 1984

    karlos_dawise
  •  

    karlos that sounds very much right the media hyping the negitvie aspects of the protest. I have not been down there and cant but my prayers and throughts go with the G20 and the protesters

    Peace always

    john_b
  •  

    WTF is with the dead body just appearing at 7.30pm? That guy was totally hired by the media to expire so that headlines could read "Deadly G20 Riots".

    catchiecoo
  •  

    Walked up to Bank at lunch, pretty funny scenes. Its was like a cross between Notting Hill and Glade

    JC22
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    Apparently there is a protester climbing up the outside of Lloyds of London in the City.

    I can just make out a few coppers about half way up from my office window

    JC22
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    I was out ther yesterday envoking my right to protest, waving my tenner at all the hippies and throwing eggs at the AIG building, but thats just a normal day in the office. I personally dont see what all the fuss is about half the people out there protesting havent got a clue what theyre protesting for, all they know is that it was the big bad banks and fat cat execs who landed us in "this mess"! But what mess? Some one show me one of those protesters who can explain to me exactly "what mess" our economy is in and how it came to pass. I bet you can barely find one maybe a handful at best, the rest are lazy lay about hippies more bothered about global warming and recycling (not entirely unrelated to the G20 summit, but not exactly its main focus) and have nothing better to do then collect their dole money and cause trouble... perhaps if they put the same effort into typing up their CV's and getting an education rather than protesting they might find themselves still in employment. Which lets face is why they are lashing out at decent hard working people who top up their doel money with OUR TAXES. Its the ur rich were poor scenario, lets protest and smash up a bank. Its a load of bollox!!!

    PHILLINJA
  •  

    PHILLINJA makes some pretty good points. I'm all for the people getting out there and protesting as long as they know what they are protesting about. It does seem that far too many people with nothing better to do than look for trouble were out yesterday and gave the genuine protest marchers a bad name. The way it was covered didn't help the message that people were trying to put out there. In the London Paper on the way home they had what they served up as the 'two sides of the argument, Banker v Protester' when you read on, the the person protesting was against climate change not exactly a match up is it? Lazy Journalism?

    I feel for the genuine people who have lost jobs and protest because of this financial situation not the people who would be unemployed no matter what the economic circumstances.

    benson5
  •  

    The main groups who protested yesterday are doing a slow march through the City to pay tribute to the man who died yesterday.

    richjm
  •  
    Image...

    Apparently it wasn't a Fathers4Justice man but Alain Robert also known as "Spiderman"

    He unfurled a yellow banner warning of "100 months" to save the world.

    AnnieMole
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    Image...

    The police have raided two squats they believe are in connection with yesterday's protests. Supposedly a "peace vigil" was being held at the two spaces evicted, Rampart and the Convergence space. According to tweets from the streets, many people have been arrested at Convergence. http://twitter.com/lasthours
    http://london.indymedia.org.uk/

    abbym0308
  •  

    I wonder what all these people would do if they didnt have something to moan about?

    If the world was all perfect they'd be completely gutted wouldnt they?

    jonbrooks
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    Image...

    There's some amazing pics of Wednesday's protests at the link above.

    richjm
  •  

    My friend saw this and was not impressed:

    "nothing beats the most touching moment of yesterday, when a protestor collapsed with a heart attack, the police tried to pick him up and help him, so more idiots started throwing stuff at the police so they couldn't move him. He died in the end. Nice one protestors."

    "watching people verbally abusing and physically attacking policemen who were simply standing there in silence, or people who had gone to work that day wearing a suit and had gone out to buy a sandwich at lunchtime, or smashing up a bank that the British taxpayers themselves have just bought a large part of is possibly the most cowardly, bigoted and pathetic behaviour I have ever seen."

    Aglad
  •  

    what the hell is going on.. what are we ever going to achieve by one normal person attacking another - this is absurd.

    and the whole thing captured, streamed and twittered live to feed the hungry desires of the watching worldwide audience.. but all in less than 140 characters.. or else..

    it worked for Gandhi and it will work again, sit down, breath deeply, stop going to work, stop consuming, protest each and every day.. don't make it a special occasion, all hyped up and testosterone flowing... non-violence is key.

    loveunit
  •  
    Image...

    Ha. Here's something to give the protesters more to protest about. London's hosting the G20 summit is expected to cost taxpayers £80 million... more than four times the official estimate.

    abbym0308
  •  

    Here's a really good opinion piece by Johann Hari from the Independent explaining why we need to listen to the protesters, and why we shouldn't be content to sit at home in silence anymore.

    abbym0308
  •  

    User PostFactMedia has posted an interview with eye witnesses of Ian Tomlinson's death, and according to what they saw, the mainstream press have it all wrong. Apparently the demonstrators were trying to helping the man and only one bottle was thrown at police... not an onslaught of "missiles" that impeded the police from moving him.

    abbym0308
  •  

    First they attacked him, then they didn't help him, they charged the crowd he was in an protesters protected him from being trampled on and then the police came in and forcefully removed the first aider and refused to speak to the 999 operator another protester had on the mobile. I wonder if he might have lived, had they just left the first aider do what she was doing with the support of the 999 operator. In one Interview she says, she had just been told to turn him on his back and was expecting to be told to start CPR when she was removed. Maybe those precious seconds (minutes?) might have made a difference.

    PostFactMedia

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