Anti-G8
protest headquarters in London raided by riot police
Hundreds
of officers deployed and 57 arrests made as Carnival against
Capitalism is staged in London
11
June, 2013
Riot
police raided the central London HQ of anti-G8 protesters on Tuesday
and hundreds of officers were deployed in the capital as protests
took place against next week's G8 summit.
Squatters
inside the building, a former police station in Beak Street, off
Regent Street, accused police of heavy-handed tactics after they were
led out by officers who forced their way in after a tense standoff
lasting more than three hours.
TV
footage showed officers in climbing gear trying to secure the roof,
then grabbing a protester who appeared to be trying to jump off the
rooftop.
The
raid came on the day of the Stop G8 group's Carnival against
Capitalism, targeting banks, hedge funds, mining and oil firms in
central London as well as Claridge's hotel and Boodle's private club
in the runup to the summit in County Fermanagh. The protests were
concentrated on Oxford Circus and Piccadilly Circus. Police said 57
arrests were made in relation to the G8 protests.
A
Metropolitan police spokesman said the force obtained a search
warrant for the Beak Street property "relating to intelligence
that individuals at the address were in possession of weapons and
were intent on causing criminal damage and engaging in violent
disorder".
A
handful of squatters are believed to have arrived on Friday, with
many more subsequently joining them.
The
Metropolitan police operation to evict squatters from a disused
building in Beak Street, Soho, the headquarters of London protests
against the G8 summit in Co Fermanagh. Photograph: Martin Godwin for
the Guardian
People
ejected from the building said about 200 people had been inside. A
banner hung from the building said: "What if we smash the G8?"
More
than 100 officers were stationed outside the property from 10am.
During the standoff, some protesters, many wearing masks, dangled
their legs over a ledge of the building while others popped their
heads out of the window, occasionally chanting anti-capitalist
slogans and "Fuck the police."
At
1.40pm, police began using chainsaws and crowbars to enter.
Protesters
started emerging, most showing little sign of resistance, and were
still being brought out 45 minutes later, suggesting officers had
faced multiple barriers inside the property.
Police
said those who had been in the building were free to leave once they
had been searched.
Police
did not provide a breakdown of how many of the 32 G8 protest arrests
related to the Beak Street raid.
Dozens
of the squatters hung around after they were led out, discussing
where to go next.
One
man, who did not wish to be named, said: "I think it's police
brutality, to enter a completely legal squat. They're just trying to
stop any protests. It's pretty scary."
He
claimed that he saw blood on a police riot shield. One person, who
had apparently been removed from the building, was taken away in an
ambulance. Witnesses said he was bleeding and was being given oxygen.
A
London Ambulance spokesman said: "We treated two patients at the
scene of the protests in central London. Both have been taken to
hospital with minor injuries."
The
leaders of the world's eight wealthiest countries, including Russian
president Vladimir Putin and German chancellor Angela Merkel, are due
to meet at the luxury Lough Erne resort in Co Fermanagh for the
conference on 17-18 June.

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