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G20

Rallye in Pittsburgh against the G20-meeting

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This is a video of Democracy Now!, being cutted by the "FernSichten"-editing team from Attac Germany. During the film you can see the Attac-Bloc in the background (e.g. bei 4:40).

Video of yesterday's rallye

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A short Video showing impressions of the g20-rallye yesterday ...

A résumé of the summit in the conjunctive

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The G20 summit in Pittsburgh has ended. A basic consensus has been found regarding management salaries, strengthening of the IMF and increasing the capital buffers of banks. Will this package of measures be enough to fulfil the promise of the G20 to avoid future crises? To ask that in another way: If the package had been wrapped up five years ago, would it have been able to prevent the real estate crisis of 2007/2008?

The half hearted effort to limit management pay is a symbolic if not indeed a populist act. Would the bankers at lower pay levels really have distributed fewer housing credits?

The strengthening of the IMF seems cynical. This was the institution that had demanded the liberalisation of capital markets. If the budget of the IMF had been tripled five years ago, 5% of the voting right given to China and an explanation given to it that the freedom of capital markets was not quite that easy a matter, would that have prevented the crisis?

We are getting involved!

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A warm early autumn day, the sun is shining, the female bus driver takes everyone who’s is going to the demonstration ride for free and when getting off the bus we already hear choruses shouting slogans – an ideal start for the largest demonstration in Pittsburgh since the Vietnam war, which ends peacefully early in the evening. Around ten-thousand people came to the university in Oakland and joint the trek to Downtown, to the vicinity of the convention centre, where at the same the G20 were meeting. With hundreds of self-made placards and with well rehearsed and very creative choruses they demanded from the heads of states to abandon their neoliberal agenda.

Attac Banner

Climate destruction ahead

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Wednesday morning. Greenpeace – in an exceedingly daring action – hung a huge banner from the West End bridge in Pittsburgh. Four Activists hang from ropes from the very busy bridge, between them the Banner text „Danger! Climate Destruction ahead. Reduce CO2 Emissions now“

An appeal to the G20-Bosses, not to let the theme fall by the wayside. An Appeal, which Barack Obama should in particular take to heart, who at the UN-meeting yesterday in New York was unwilling to give a US grantee for  even the minimal standards  which China endorsed.

(Translation by Homi Kutar)

Greenpeace

Stiglitz supports the protesters

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Mittwoch nachmittag:

Although life in a tent city is usually quite easy going, with the rain showers driving people to seek the shelter of the pavilions, the long shadow of the afternoon event looms: Joseph Stiglitz is expected, at the big discussion in the Monumental Baptist Church next to the tent city (yes, I know, actually it is the other way around). Before that is the press conference. The density of journalist starts increasing. I have a meeting with the ARD television team and a radio journalist.

The large congregation hall which in the last few days we had used as our  general abode, was particularly  tidy, and a podium for the prominent guest and his fellow podium-people was ready. 

In Pittsburgh saving banks is called Mellon-Bail-Out

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On Tuesday a small demonstration for the right of affordable accommodation went from the Hill District downwards. My feet are touching here more tarmac than during the past months. Again down to “Downtown”!

Target of the protest: the immense banking-tower of the Mellon Bank. In 1813 already Thomas Mellon founded this bank, the family earned millions with coal and steel and today you encounter their name anywhere: ice-hockey in the Mellon Arena, study in the Carnegie Mellon University. Within the framework of the finance crisis the bank was bailed-out with 3 billion US-dollars.

The list of accusations against the bank is long. As coal-baron already the Mellons showed hardly any consideration for the rights of their employees. As the Mellon Tower rises above most of the other buildings in the city the march to it is an obvious contribution to the G20-protests.

Protest Nisches

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I walked through Pittsburgh, starting from my base camp, the small town of tents “on the hill”. Sniffed a lot of exhaust fumes, found broken houses and large bill boards. And finally some other places where already today protest preparations can be seen.

Curious people have to search long to find out about events ahead of the main action. The daily “Pittsburgh Post-Gazette” comments about the situation: "It is very hard to keep track of all of the protests planned around the G20. It would help if the anarchists were much better organized, and with a bigger marketing budget." So – maybe it will turn out to be a strong point of the protest that everything here is a bit confussed.

The police has some trouble coping with all. Yesterday the officers had to admit that they have not read the conditions for the two larger demonstrations (the “March for Jobs” and a demonstration with the motto “G 6 Billion Journey & Witness”) and were blocking the demonstrations longer than they were allowed.

 

First pictures – Camp city and protest are coming to live

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Already at 7am the sun is shining. The city of tents has grown. Not the area, that remained quite small, but colourful tents are standing now where yesterday still was open space. There was short-lived excitement because of a “break-down” of the bus from Rhode Island. Then came the “all clear”. The group could continue their travel, in front of tent city the first bus from New York stops.

… slowly the camping ground is filling up.

There are workshops ahead of the “March for Jobs”

There intense discussions about “health insurance”, “workers’ rights” and “right of housing”

 

Security-Freak-Show and warm welcome

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I arrived twice in the USA.

In Philadelphia I had to enter officially. From the plane it went directly into a dark-grey hall with many counters with generally gloomy looking officers. Information signs everywhere: No picture taking! Cell-phones prohibited! Forbidden by sign board too: to treat the men at the counters in an unfriendly manner. No clock in the whole room. I got 1.5 hours for the connecting flight and queuing for ages. Fingerprints, picture, interrogation. “My security officer” was drilling me why I intended to travel to Pittsburgh at this time. Now I would like to know my rights in the same way as I know them when dealing with German police man. The man in front of me wrinkles his face and finally slams an immigration stamp into my passport. Rushing to the next queue. Kept in line by separating tapes hundreds of people are standing in long queues, to get again through the security checks.

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