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Dublin: 10 °C Wednesday 22 May, 2013

300 people arrested at Occupy protests in California

Demonstrators burned an American flag in a city hall after police fired tear gas and bean bags to disperse the crowds.

Occupy Oakland protestors burn an American flag found inside Oakland City Hall during an Occupy Oakland protest on the steps of City Hall on Saturday
Occupy Oakland protestors burn an American flag found inside Oakland City Hall during an Occupy Oakland protest on the steps of City Hall on Saturday
Image: AP Photo/Beck Diefenbach

AROUND 300 PEOPLE were arrested on Saturday during a chaotic day of Occupy protests that saw demonstrators break into City Hall and burn an American flag, as police earlier fired tear gas and bean bags to disperse hundreds of people after some threw rocks and bottles and tore down fencing outside a nearby convention center.

Dozens of police officers remained on guard outside City Hall around midnight following the most turbulent day of protests since November, when Oakland police forcefully dismantled an Occupy encampment.

An exasperated Mayor Jean Quan, who faced heavy criticism for the police action last fall, called on the Occupy movement to “stop using Oakland as its playground.”

“People in the community and people in the Occupy movement have to stop making excuses for this behavior,” Quan said.

Protesters clashed with police throughout the day, at times throwing rocks, bottles and other objects at officers. Police responded by deploying smoke, tear gas and bean bag rounds, City Administrator Deanna Santanta said.

“These demonstrators stated their intention was to provoke officers and engage in illegal activity and that’s exactly what has occurred today,” Santana said.

Interim Police Chief Howard Jordan said about 300 arrests were made.

The group assembled outside City Hall late Saturday morning and marched through the streets, disrupting traffic as they threatened to take over the vacant Henry Kaiser Convention Center.

The protesters walked to the vacant convention center, where some started tearing down perimeter fencing and “destroying construction equipment” shortly before 3 p.m., police said.

Police said they issued a dispersal order and used smoke and tear gas after some protesters pelted them with bottles, rocks, burning flares and other objects.

The number of demonstrators swelled as the day wore on, with afternoon estimates ranging from about 1,000 to 2,000 people.

A majority of the arrests came after police took scores of protesters into custody as they marched through the city’s downtown, with some entering a YMCA building, said Sargeant Jeff Thomason, a police spokesman.

Around the same time police were taking people into custody near the YMCA, about dozens of officers surrounded City Hall, while others swept the inside of the building looking for protesters who had broken into the building, then ran out of the building with American flags before officers arrived.

The protest group issued an email criticizing police, saying “Occupy Oakland’s building occupation, an act of constitutionally protected civil disobedience was disrupted by a brutal police response today.”

Michael Davis, 32, who is originally from Ohio and was in the Occupy movement in Cincinnati, said Saturday was a very hectic day that originally started off calm but escalated when police began using “flash bangs, tear gas, smoke grenades and bean bags.”

“It was very emotional. I thought it was a very good day for the movement because it brought us back together,” Davis said. “We all were here in spirit and everybody actually helped everyone today.

“What could’ve been handled differently is the way the Oakland police came at us,” Davis said. “We were peaceful.”

Quan blamed the destruction on a small “very radical, violent” splinter group within Occupy Oakland.

“This is not a situation where we had a 1,000 peaceful people and a few violent people. If you look at what’s happening today in terms of destructing property, throwing at and charging the police, it’s almost like they are begging for attention and hoping that the police will make an error.”

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Comments (15 Comments)

  • I wag watching the live stream on UStream for ages. It was like something out of a horror film. Helicopters were flying and so forth. Anonymous retaliated after a well know Anonymous member was arrested. They doxed the Mayor, council members, the city attorney etc.

    Reply
  • American coverage of protests is always distorted. This one for example. Thousands of people protest inequality in Oakland and what gets the visual photo coverage? A couple of people burning a flag. The same thing happened in the early 1990’s during nationwide protests against Bush Senior’s Pesian Gulf Blood for Oil war. In Chicago alone, at least a hundred thousand people protested that one. The next day-on the front page of a major Chicago newspaper- was a big photo of one young man burning a flag. Burning the flag can make many americans go mad and froth at the mouth paving the way in the future in their minds to label all dissent as ‘unpatriotic’.

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  • It’s hard to do it in the face of such draconian laws in America but the protest must stay peaceful. That way the police don’t know how to handle it. The police love force because it justifies their massive budgets

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  • connman 29/01/12 #

    Another disappointing article taken straight from American corporate propaganda news

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  • Typical pro corporatism Associated Press bullshit artical. Does everyone get their news from them now?

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  • They need Lugs Brannigan to sort out those protesters.

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  • They have the right to burn the American flag , they don’t have the right to march into a building “find” someone else’s American flag & burn it

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  • Scumbags. Imagine if they burned the tri-colour. Such disrespect. They think that this helps their cause? They now look as mad as the terrorists who also burn flags.

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    • Don’t believe the hype the police response now to any protest will be extreme, and those protesting will be cast in the bad light. They have every right to burn THEIR flag if they feel the powers that represent them and their flag are doing nothing but making the rich richer and the poor poorer, get off your high horse mate, it is what we should be doing here.

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    • If they disagree with their politicians they should run against them. The occupy movement just sits around and expects things to change without actually doing anything.

      This only proves how anti-democratic and anarchist the movement is!

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    • David, most politicians (esp. in the US) have heavy financial backing and would not find it too hard to win re-election. A lot of people in the Occupy movement feel left out of the democratic process because of this.

      Personally I wouldn’t burn a flag, for a number of reasons, I can see their frustration. And I certainly wouldn’t call them scumbags.

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    • David. Are you supporting the 1%?

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  • if they fire a bean bag at me I will never budge

    Reply

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