German
clashes: May Day rallies turn violent in Berlin
Left
wing protesters clashed with police in Berlin as a traditional May
Day demonstration came to a halt far before reaching its intended end
in the city center.
Some
demonstrators threw stones, bottles and firecrackers at the riot
police, and officers responded with charges and batons. Arrests were
made. The thousands strong demonstration had set off late on Tuesday
afternoon from Berlin's neighborhood of Kreuzberg.
Meanwhile
in Hamburg, over one-thousand leftist activists gathered for the
annual May Day protest march, local media reported. The demonstration
- themed "No Alternative to Revolution" - saw protesters
marching from St. Pauli to Ottensen.
Right
at the start, protesters threw fireworks at police officers, but the
crowd remained mostly calm for the ensuing march. However, after a
speech marking the end of the demonstration, violence erupted. Stones
and bottles were thrown at the policemen escorting the march. Police
responded employing pepper spray and arresting several protesters.
Injuries were reported on both sides. Later on, riots broke out in
Hamburg's Schanzenviertel neighborhood, a notorious site for May Day
violence in past years..
May Day Protests Around the World
Workers
take to the streets on International Workers' Day in Asia, Africa,
the Middle East and Europe
Deadly
clashes at Cairo demo against military rule
Unknown
attackers have killed at least 20 Egyptian protesters and wounded
more than 160 on a fourth day of clashes in Cairo. Troops have been
deployed to the area to end the violence.
Hospital
officials say that the death toll has risen to 20. Earlier reports
suggested that nine people had died of gunshot wounds to the head,
while two people were stabbed to death. So far it is not clear if any
of the attackers were among the dead or if the victims were all
protesters.
The
Egyptian army has reportedly deployed troops to the area to end the
clashes. In the face of the insurgency, the Military Council said it
may transfer power on May 24 if the president is elected in the first
round.
On
Wednesday the attackers targeted several hundred protesters camped
outside the Defense Ministry on Abbaseyah Square to demand an end of
military rule. They are protesting against Egypt’s ruling military
body the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), and its
disqualification of Islamist Salafi leader Hazem Salah Abu-Ismail
from May's presidential race. Witnesses say the assailants came at
the protesters at dawn with cement-based bombs, stones, Molotov
cocktails, birdshot and teargas canisters.
Twitter
users call the clashes a massacre: “Let the world know that a
massacre happened last night in #Abassiya #Egypt #MOD,” writes
@Amir_Elshenawy.
“Thugs
have been attacking sit-in for 4 days in a row, using molotovs,
shotguns, swords, bombs
Following
the clashes the leading Egyptian presidential candidate Abdel Moneim
Abol Fotouh has suspended campaign events over the treatment of
protesters.
Some
tweets suggested the protesters were also armed. “Okay this
needs to be said. Some of us protesters have guns. Some are on the
phone asking for guns,” @Psypherize admits.
Since
Saturday, hundreds have protested the banning of Hazem Salah
Abu-Ismail from next month's presidential race. The Islamist Salafi
leader was disqualified because his mother held dual Egyptian-US
citizenship, which violates the eligibility rules. He had been seen
as one of the front-runners. His supporters have seen several similar
attacks in the last four days, although army troops and police
deployed in the area reportedly did nothing to intervene.
This
makes activists believe the assailants operate with the blessing of
the military or police, and that they may even be on their payroll.
“Plain
clothed thugs shooting at protesters with live bullets and tear gas,
for sure they are working for SCAF,” @Gsquare86 wrote when the
attack began several hours ago.
“How
can 'thugs' use teargas unless they are supplied by Interior
Ministry. They are either CSF [Central Security Forces] conscripts or
police-backed civilians,” @JonathanRashad says.
Pro-military
state media say the assailants were local residents angered by the
disruption caused by the protests.
The
violence has ratcheted up tensions in Egypt as the crucial
presidential election is scheduled in just three weeks. The military
generals dubbed as “Mubarak’s Junta” by pro-democracy activists
took power after the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak 14 months ago.
Since then Egypt has seen a year of turmoil with nationwide protests
and hundreds killed in the violence.
The
SCAF headed by Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi earlier promised to hand
over power to a civilian administration by July 1. However recent
anti-military protests suggest many Egyptians do not believe
Mubarak’s allies will give up their position.
Political
activist Ahmed Naguib believes that those "unidentified people"
who attacked the protesters are the remnants of Mubarak’s military
apparatus, which are being used by the ruling Military Council to
bring chaos to the streets and disrupt the upcoming presidential
elections.
RT:
The attackers outside the Defence Ministry in Cairo have not been
identified, but who could they be?
Ahmed
Naguib: They have definitely been identified. They’ve definitely
been there since day one of the revolution. This is what the Military
Council kept calling or referring to as “the third party”. This
third party has been part of the militias, of the National Democratic
Party and the state security apparatus for the past 20 years. All of
them have very intense criminal records and they have been used
instead of the formal militias or the army itself. So they are doing
the dirty work for the Military Council.
RT:
With that supposition from you and with this current violence while
there is little over three weeks to go until the election, is that a
sign that there is an element within Cairo that does not really want
to see pe
AN:
Absolutely. They’ve already tried that in November and December
during the parliamentary election but it failed. They were trying to
drag the Muslim Brotherhood into Tahrir Square so that they can
declare martial law and say that the Muslim Brotherhood is a violent
group, but they failed to do that. Now they are trying to do the same
thing and every single time it turns against them. They’ve
obviously not learned their lessons. They are following Mubarak’s
steps exactly and that is why they’ve managed to unify everyone
again – all the liberals, and the Brotherhood, and the Salafis –
everyone is in the same trench right now against the Military
Council.
RT:
Nevertheless, will we see that election go ahead, and if so will it
be free and fair?
AN:
Let me tell you something. There is already a shroud of uncertainty
with the Article 28 that was passed through the referendum or the
declaration that came as a result of the referendum on March 19,
2011, that says that no one can revoke the results announced by the
head or the chief of the electoral committee. Which means even if you
verbally announce someone else than the person who truly won, nobody
can revoke those results. There is a clear intention to rig those
elections and this is why today we heard Sami Anan, the
second-in-command in the Military Council, saying that they are ready
to hand over power even on May 24 if the presidential candidate wins
from the first round. This only means that they are ready with that
candidate in mind.
US
protesters nearly bring Los Angeles airport to shutdown
Hundreds
of protesters have nearly brought the Los Angeles International
Airport to a shutdown as part of a global May Day protest rally.
2
May, 2012
Hundreds
of protesters have nearly brought the Los Angeles International
Airport to a shutdown as part of a global May Day protest rally.
The
protesters in the major West Coast US city demonstrated just outside
the main international terminal of the busy airport, demanding equal
treatment for workers and support for the 99-percenters, referring to
the majority of the US population deemed victimized by corporate
America (the remaining one-percent).
Many
of those participating in the protest rally were airport workers, who
have reportedly gone on strike until their work conditions at the
airport improve.
The
demonstrators marched throughout the massive airport while Los
Angeles police officers stood on guard, monitoring the protest.
The
LA police eventually arrested 10 protesters, reportedly on the charge
of refusing to disperse from a nearby intersection.
Earlier
in the day, US police forces clashed with Occupy Wall Street
protesters as well as other activists across the nation. The scuffles
broke out as the protesters took to the streets of major cities to
mark the international labor day (May Day).
The
police reportedly arrested at least 30 activists in New York,
Seattle, San Francisco and Los Angeles.
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