guardian.co.uk,
Paul Harris in New York, Sunday 2 October 2011
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| Protesters are blocked from crossing the Brooklyn Bridge by the NYPD during an Occupy Wall Street march. Photograph: James Fassinger |
More than
700 people were arrested on the Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday evening during a
march by anti-Wall Street protesters who have been occupying a downtown
Manhattan square for two weeks.
The group,
called Occupy Wall Street, has been protesting against the finance industry and
other perceived social ills by camping out in Zuccotti park in New York.
During the
afternoon a long line of protesters numbering several thousand snaked through
the streets towards the landmark bridge across the East River with the aim of
ending at a Brooklyn park.
However,
during the march across the bridge groups of protesters sat down or strayed
into the road from the pedestrian pathway. They were then arrested in large
numbers by officers who were part of a heavy police presence shepherding the
march along its path.
At one
stage 500 protesters were blocked off by police on the bridge. At least one
journalist, freelancer Natasha Lennard for the New York Times, was among those
arrested. "About half way across the group of people who wanted to occupy
the bridge launched their action and stepped into the road. They wanted to get
arrested. It was sort of the idea," said Yaier Heber, one of the marchers.
But others
said the sit-down protest appeared to happen only after the protesters were
deliberately blocked off by police after actually being allowed onto the
roadway. "They met the police line and ended up being arrested one by
one," said Damon Eris, another protester.
The march
ended in chaotic scenes with police buses driving up the bridge to be filled
with arrested marchers. The packed buses then drove off to central booking.
Meanwhile, other marchers waited at the bottom of the bridge's Manhattan side
and cheered as some released protesters, or those who had escaped being blocked
off, came back down. "Let them go! Let them go!" was a frequent
chant.
It was a
different scene from the night before when an equally large march had ended up
at the city's police headquarters. That demonstration had been against the
brutal treatment meted out by some police on protesters on a march the weekend
before. Video of one senior police officer spraying pepper spray on femaleprotesters went viral on the internet and drew widespread condemnation.
But the
incident did help put the Occupy Wall Street movement into American newspapers
and TV shows that had hitherto paid it little attention. The group, drawn from
a wide range of backgrounds, say they are inspired by social movements in Spain
and the Arab spring. Last week the protesters attracted numerous celebrity
visits, including actor Susan Sarandon and film-maker Michael Moore. This week
they are expected to get an injection of support from local labour unions.
The
movement has also started to spread in significant numbers to several other
major cities. On Saturday in Los Angeles hundreds of protesters marched on the
city hall with the intention of starting a similar encampment. In Boston
protesters have already started camping out in Dewey square, near the city's
financial district. Unlike in New York, where protesters are not allowed to
create shelter in Zuccotti park, Occupy Boston has been able to set up rows of
tents.
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