from 02 december 2001 blue vol II, # 13 |
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Some notes and photos from the Ottawa anti-G-20 Protest, Nov 16-17, 2001 by Gary Morton
This surprised me because I hadn't heard any visionary statements
from the world leaders gathered in Ottawa for the meetings of the G20,
World Bank and International Monetary Fund. Canadian Finance Minister
Paul Martin opened there by saying that the war on terror will help the
world's poor . and I'm wondering if there will be a follow-up
announcement to the effect that Canada will be dropping welfare cheques
with the US bombs hitting the poorest people on Earth in Afghanistan.
Poverty is also an issue with the citizen protest groups that showed
in Ottawa. They distributed a free book that nails the World Bank,
International Monetary Fund and World Trade Organization as Engines of
Poverty. It should be distributed everywhere and is called "Does
Globalization Help the Poor."
Protest began on Friday Nov 16th with the Ottawa Coalition Against
the Tories hitting the streets. I arrived in sunny Ottawa to find Jaggi
Singh addressing the crowd. Nearby Toronto undercover officer Steve
Irwin looked on. It was too late for me to get the gist of Jaggi's words
and I didn't have to as I know that OCAT opposes the right wing agenda
of Ontario's Tory government. Much of that Tory agenda falls in line
with the Free Trade policies of the G-20/IMF/WB/WTO.
John Cavanagh of the International Forum on Globalization says the
world powers of globalization hate us because we have the youth on our
side. The OCAT demonstrators were nearly all young, and part of a
generation in Canada that has been robbed. Not so many years ago we had
a good social benefits system. I used it to climb out of homelessness
myself . an opportunity that these kids don't have. And Canada wasn't
the only country that lost. Up until the 70s, the world was improving on
all indicators. Then globalization came in like a crash. Wages have
dropped for everyone but the wealthiest. Social programs and public
services have been chopped or privatized world wide. Never have so many
people had so little, and never have so few had so much.
Dressed in black with hoods, bandanas and gas masks, the OCAT crowd
began a snake march behind a banner with the message Smash the State,
End the Hate. This was a gutsy march through the downtown streets of
Ottawa with drumming and chanting. It was risky enough that I was afraid
I would get arrested before covering the larger Saturday demonstration.
Lines of riot cops kept emerging and the march kept shortcutting and
turning here and there to avoid them.
At the war memorial the group was
completely boxed in by riot police in war class body armour. They had
rubber bullet guns and fire extinguishers of pepper spray. I ducked out
to avoid arrest and stood on some steps, pretending to be photographing
the dancing protesters. RCMP and undercover cops were milling around and
the guy beside me had a CSIS badge on his coat. After while the OCAT
protesters marched out and a line of riot cops started running to cut
them off. I sped ahead of them, escaping on roller blades. A
confrontation almost developed, then police moved and the OCAT march
continued for some time with a cop army following and blocking off
streets. If police had a problem it was that they found themselves too
heavily armed. Opening up on protesters with their weapons would have
meant another PepperGate, so they let the march go on.
It ended at a MacDonald's where police looked on as a few
demonstrators tore apart a kiosk with pro life posters and smashed
windows. People began to fade away and later eight people got arrested.
The Ottawa press called this "smashing windows in the name of
democracy", and the police seized the propaganda opportunity to
victimize the Nov 17th demonstrators. The marches left early in morning
sunshine from three locations - Le Breton Flats, Ottawa University and
Hull. They were to meet on the way to the Supreme Court, but problems
began to develop. Police swept in and kidnapped people at Le Breton and
Hull. I was with the Ottawa U crowd of leftists and anarchists and our
problem came when we got to a bridge we had to cross to reach the
Supreme Court. Hordes of heavily armed police had blocked it and police
camera men and gas and rubber bullet gunmen had the high ground on the
steps.
There were hundreds of us and march organizers wore red toques. I
believe one of them got snatched later by police. We were told that a
check point had been set up and they were going to search all of our
bags. Of course we said no to that and a long standoff developed. People
chanted then sat down on the road. A spokes council circle meeting took
place to decide what to do. Some of the far left people called it a
circle jerk and started preparing to march off. The council ended up
weighing two options. One was that we lock arms and march against police
lines. It likely would have meant pepper spray but our point would have
been made. The other option was to march off and try to make it to the
court via a longer route. The decision was 16 to 14 in favour of the
longer route.
Enthusiasm, shouts and whistles rose as we marched off. The police
held their stations and looked somewhat baffled. Echoes rose as we
headed down under a bridge. Then some people broke off and ran up the
embankment. A few cops guarded the top. There was an argument and
people rushed through and waved for the rest of us to follow. Racing up
the embankment we took the bridge and excited people began the long
march across with others running ahead to scout for police. We beat them
with speed and marched through the rest of Ottawa, with a great cheer
rising when the other march showed coming up the hill by the parliament
buildings. Back at the bridge I had looked through some windows and saw
a number of police inside. It dawned on me that the Defense Ministry on
the bridge we were originally supposed to cross was likely filled with
scores more cops. It had been a trap and if we had attempted to go
through the papers wouldn't be listing 17 arrests (apparently the actual
figure was 48 arrests), it'd be more like 800 people pepper sprayed in
mass arrest.
Corporate media in Ottawa is portraying us as rioters with headlines
saying we clashed with police and failed to shut the meeting down. The
truth is that Nov 17th was planned as a peaceful post Sept 11th event.
Arrests happened when police attacked some of the 2,000 demonstrators
that gathered at the War Memorial. Using tear gas, rubber bullets,
attack dogs, water hoses and pepper spray police seized people that
breached a barricade. It was hardly a riot or an attempt to shut the
meeting down and police cruelty to animals is an issue. They used attack
dogs on demonstrators and reporters. Protests are not a place for dogs.
They could be injured and police should know that.
Numbers were smaller than some other globalization protests, but they
were good considering it was hastily and perhaps poorly arranged.
National Peace demonstrations probably cut the Ottawa numbers
considerably. I got a call from Toronto saying a large peace demo was
underway, yet it appears to have gotten little media coverage. If the
Sept 11th Peace Coalition and Ottawa protest groups were hoping that
holding protests nationally on the same day would draw media coverage,
they were wrong. Corporate media gave almost no coverage to the peace
events, and there was no in depth coverage of the Ottawa demos.
The Issues:
An Engines of Poverty forum in Ottawa Friday night covered the issues
of this demonstration quite well. There must have been 800 people in the
huge church. Here are just a few of the interesting things that came
out.
There are 1.1 billion undernourished people on this planet. The
majority of them are women and children. Every day 11,000 children die
of hunger. Even the United States has hungry people - 10 million of
them, and globalization and Free Trade are making it worse.
Maude Barlow on the (WTO) World Trade Organization meeting in Qatar
In an attempt to hide from protests the WTO met in the oppressive
desert state of Qatar. A place where Arab rulers prohibit all forms of
free speech and protest. They met in an opulent hotel designed like a
golden pyramid and issued hypocritical statements on how they are
helping the poor and improving human rights. Their meetings continue to
build a system that gives special preference to the 200 corporations and
475 billionaires that have pocketed nearly all of the wealth of the
world.
Through dirty dealing that Canada participated heavily in they have
agreed to a new a round. A clause has been snuck in that would exempt
multinational corporations from all regulations that protect the
environment world wide, and it sets things up so nations won't sign
environmental treaties like the Kyoto deal on global warming.
So let me end by echoing other speakers and writers. Globalization
doesn't help the poor. It doesn't help anyone when the planet's
resources are being devoured by greedy men. Yes a Better World is Still
Possible After September 11th, but we are going to have to fight the
Third Reich of War and Globalization to get it.
- Maude Barlow
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