Protesters plan to 'kettle' leaders at G20 summit in Hamburg | World news
Protesters plan to take advantage of the decision to hold this weekâs G20 summit in a crowded inner-city area of Hamburg and copy police crowd control tactics to âkettle Trump, Putin and ErdoÄanâ.
Authorities in Germanyâs second-largest city are preparing for the arrival of an unprecedented line-up of controversial world leaders, as well as protest groups eager to voice dissent on 7 and 8 July.
Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin will meet at the summit, and Germany will try to push climate change and free trade to the top of the agenda.
The chancellor, Angela Merkel, has argued that her birthplace, a wealthy port city and a âbeacon of free tradeâ, was âalmost predestinedâ to host the gathering of the worldâs leading industrialised and developing economies.
But the decision to hold it at a congress centre in a densely populated part of the inner city, bordering a district with a long-running history of anti-establishment protests and annual May Day riots, has put police services on high alert.
On Sunday night, the first of a series of protest marches culminated in clashes with police over a disputed campsite in one of the cityâs park areas. Several people were reportedly injured and one person was arrested.
Jan Reinicke, of the Association of Criminal Police, told the Guardian: âMany of my colleagues and I find it incomprehensible that another big city has been chosen for such a gathering after the terrible events of Genoa. Why Hamburg when you could have held the G20 in, say, a forest in Bavaria or on Heligoland?â
The 2001 G8 summit in the Italian port city was overshadowed by clashes between police and an estimated 200,000 demonstrators, and the death of a 23-year-old Italian anti-globalisation protester, Carlo Giuliani.
Hamburg authorities have said they expect about half the numbers of protesters that descended on Genoa in 2001, but the presence of divisive political figures such as Trump and his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip ErdoÄan, is likely to draw protesters from a wide range of political causes.
A âG20 not welcomeâ march on Saturday is expected to attract between 50,000 and 100,000 members of anti-fascist, feminist and Kurdish groups, as well as climate activists. A separate protest march, âHamburg Shows Attitudeâ, has been organised by a range of cultural and social institutions in the city.
Police have expressed particular concern about Thursday afternoonâs âWelcome to Hellâ march, expected to draw up to 8,000 anarchists and leftwing radicals.
The congress centre borders the densely populated Schanzenviertel district on its western and southern edge, and rail tracks prohibit access from the north, meaning delegates will probably only be able to enter the venue from the west.
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