Perilous
Times
Protesters burn cars and police van in Rome as 'Occupy'
protests spread worldwide
Demonstrators in Rome set fire to two cars and a police van, and
broke shop windows during a protest in the Italian capital, as
activists organised a series of rallies in 82 countries.
Tens of thousands marched in Rome as part of a global day of
protests inspired by the Occupy Wall Street movement
5:35PM BST 15 Oct 2011
The Telegraph UK
Inspired by the Occupy Wall St movement and Spain's "Indignants",
demonstrators from Asia to Europe took to the streets.
Riot police in Rome charged hundreds of protesters and fired water
cannons, while a group of activists set alight a defence ministry
annex nearby.
Flames could be seen coming out of the roof and windows of the
building on Via Labicana as firefighters struggled to tame the
blaze. Dozens of masked protesters could be seen in the area,
which had not been cordoned off.
Demonstrators set a police van on fire, and television pictures
showed the van engulfed in flames. The occupants of the van were
believed to have been able to escape before the demonstrators, who
surrounded the van and pelted it with rocks, set it on fire,
television reports said.
The violence was said to be caused by hooded militants known as
"black blocks," who have infiltrated demonstrations in the past.
Italy, with a national debt ratio second only to Greece in the
17-nation eurozone, is rapidly becoming a focus of concern in
Europe's debt crisis.
In Frankfurt, police said 5,000 were in the square dominated by a
giant blue-and-yellow euro logo.
Youths, retired people and families with children in strollers
joined the protest in bright autumn sunshine, with signs reading
"Smash the Dictatorship of Capitalism" and "Don't Sell Out
Democracy at the ECB".
"I see the global capitalist system as a time bomb for humans but
also for the planet," said a 27-year-old protester who gave his
name only as Tobias.
"Our (material) well-being is financed to the detriment of other
countries, (and) the ECB represents this unjust and murderous
system," said the schoolteacher, carrying a sign reading
"Capitalism Will Kill Capitalism."
Another protester, pensioner Christl, said she came thinking of
her children and grandchildren "who will have to pay for our
debts".
"I think the banking system is awful overall," she said.
"Investment banks should bear the cost of their losses on their
own. It's time to rise up, otherwise nothing will ever happen."
Frauke Distelrath of the Attac anti-globalisation movement that
organised the protest said she was pleased with the turnout.
"We chose to demonstrate outside the ECB, but we could have
demonstrated outside Deutsche Bank, or outside the Frankfurt stock
exchange," she said
Further afield, hundreds of people marched in the New Zealand
cities of Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch.
In Australia, 2,000 people gathered in Sydney - including
representatives of Aboriginal groups, communists and trade
unionists - outside the central Reserve Bank of Australia.