Global Policy Forum

Protests Aimed at WTO

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By Clare Nullis,

Associated Press
November 12 , 2001


Anti-globalization militants hurled Molotov cocktails, bottles and firecrackers at riot police who erected barricades and barbed wire fences in a protective shield around the World Trade Organization.

The tension erupted after an estimated 5,000 people took to the streets in a peaceful rally to protest WTO efforts in Doha, Qatar, to launch a new round of trade-liberalizing talks, saying the meeting represents a new attempt by a small powerful elite to put profits before people.

``God is dead. The WTO replaced it,'' read one banner, underscoring the popular view that the Geneva-based trade body is invisible but all-powerful.

The protests were part of a series of worldwide demonstrations against the WTO ministerial meeting.

Grass-roots organizations, which gathered in mass for the last big WTO conference, in Seattle in December 1999, say that rigid visa restrictions have prevented them from traveling to the Gulf state for the conference.

Even so, about 25 protesters disrupted the start of a WTO news conference in Doha as journalists went through security checks.

In Berlin, about 4,000 people demonstrated against the WTO, and smaller protests were held throughout Germany on Saturday.

A similar number marched through central Paris, bearing banners such ``Organization of Misery and Chaos'' - a play on the WTO's French acronym OMC. Attac, the group organizing the events, said demonstrations were planned for about 50 French towns.

``Governments have taken refuge in Doha because they are afraid of the people who elected them,'' said Swiss farmer's union leader Fernand Cuche.

Cuche appealed to farmers and city dwellers alike to unite to ``prevent yourselves being gobbled up by the multinationals.''

Fearing a repeat of the violence that scarred Seattle and other global government gatherings, police in full riot gear sealed off Geneva's banking quarter. Many stores along the procession route closed briefly in fear of trouble. Extra security guards were posted by McDonald's outlets - usually a popular target of anti-globalization protesters.

Demonstrators were thwarted in their march on the WTO headquarters on the edge of the city by barricades about 100 yards away from the building. Police also put barbed wire around nearby parks to prevent protesters from scaling over hedges.

As tempers flared, a small group of masked protesters hurled flaming Molotov cocktails, bags of garbage, bottles and paint bombs at police. They eventually retreated after being threatened with tear gas and water cannons. Police said there were no arrests.

The gathering also served as a platform for pacifists to vent their opposition to the U.S. military campaign in Afghanistan.

``In the luxury, heavily guarded meeting rooms of Qatar, the fate of millions of people in the years and decades to come is being decided,'' said Paolo Gilardi of the group Switzerland Without An Army.

``Not far from there, across the Gulf of Oman, without shelter and without protections million of children, women and men face death in the course of the next few months because of war.''


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FAIR USE NOTICE: This page contains copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Global Policy Forum distributes this material without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in 17 U.S.C § 107. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.