Danish police on Wednesday kept thousands of protesters from
entering the venue where the United Nations climate talks being held. A
police spokesman said 250 people were arrested at various points in
Copenhagen, one day before the arrival of heads of state such as US
President Barack Obama, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, China's Hu
Jintao, Russian president Medvedev.
Near the Bella Centre, I saw
four people being arrested. At exactly midday, approximately 500
policemen began moving in on a protest that they had declared illegal.
The
protest at the Bella Centre was organized by the Climate Justice action
network, a Danish group that has coordinate several demonstrations.
They had permission for a peaceful protest, but also announced plans to
break through the barriers around the centre.
The protesters
wanted to hold what they called a Peoples Summit inside the venue at
one oclock, together with non-governmental groups taking parts in the
COP15 talks. Several NGOs, including Friends of the Earth, were denied
access on Wednesday.
At the moment they were supposed to meet, about
one thousand protesters found themselves surrounded by police in riot
gear. Outside in the freezing cold with wet snow.
Police at several moments used pepper spray and battons.
When
it became clear that the protesters no longer were able enter the
Centre, the police took off their helmets to adopt a less aggressive
stance..
Some riot police were given time to do something else while their colleagues practized crowd control.
Meanwhile,
inside the Bella Centre, tensions were heating up again. Another day
without real progress has passed, and, with 24 hours to go before the
heads of state of a 110 countries arrive, the Danish climate minister,
Connie Hedegaard, was replaced as President of the COP15 meeting.
Raymond Frenken, for EUX.TV in Copenhagen. Distributed by Tubemogul.
EUX.TV