"Welcome
to Hell". That's the greeting for U.S. President Donald Trump and other
world leaders from anti-capitalist protesters in Hamburg who aim to disrupt the
G20
summit, already rife with tensions over trade and climate change.
Thousands of
protesters from around Europe were pouring into the port city to join big
demonstrations later. Police expected around 100,000 protesters in Hamburg,
some 8,000 of whom are deemed by security forces to be ready to commit
violence.
This poses a
challenge for those tasked with securing the July 7-8 summit of leaders of the
world's 20 biggest economies, hosted by Chancellor Angela Merkel, who face
tough talks on divisive issues including trade and climate change.
On the
sidelines of the summit, Merkel will meet leaders including Turkey's Tayyip
Erdogan and Trump, who in Poland called again on NATO partners to spend more on
defense and said he would confront the threat from North Korea.
Trump will
also have his first session with Russian President Vladimir Putin after the
U.S. leader called Russia's behavior "destabilizing", a description
the Kremlin rejected.
Merkel, who
is running for a fourth term in a September election, stressed on Thursday that
she was committed to an open international trading system, despite fears of
U.S. protectionism under Trump.
"We're
united in our will to strengthen multilateral relations at the G20 summit...We
need an open society, especially open trade flows," she said in Berlin.
Several
small demonstrations in Hamburg this week have passed off relatively
peacefully. On Wednesday more than 7,000 mainly young and beer-drinking
revelers staged a march waving placards denouncing capitalism and G20 leaders.
But a fire
overnight at a luxury Porsche car dealership in the north of the city that
damaged eight vehicles could be a foretaste of what's to come. Police said they
were investigating whether it was an arson attack linked to the summit.
Locals are
unhappy with Merkel's decision to hold the summit in the center of Germany's
second-largest city to show healthy democracies could tolerate protests, as
they are worried about property damage by leftist militants.
After
Hamburg authorities curbed camping by protesters, the St Pauli football club
offered 200 sleeping places in their stadium as "a clear signal for human
rights, freedom of expression and the right to demonstrate".
Up to 20,000
police officers will be on duty to watch over the main demonstration, dubbed
"Welcome to Hell" by the alliance of anti-capitalist groups who
organized it.
Protesters
say the G20 has failed to solve many of the issues threatening world peace,
including climate change, worsening inequality and violent conflicts.
"EGOTISTICAL
LEADER"
Tens of
thousands were expected to gather at the fish market in the borough of St Pauli
- known for its red light district - at 1400 GMT, around the same time as
Trump's Air Force One jet is due to land in Hamburg. They will then march north
to the heavily secured summit venue.
"It's
ridiculous that police say some of us are violent when starting tomorrow the
leaders of the world's largest weapons-exporting and importing nations will be
arriving in our city," said Stefan Hubert, a 32-year-old graphic designer
who came to the protest on Wednesday with three friends.
Holding a
placard reading, "Make love great again!", a play on Trump's
"Make America Great Again" campaign slogan, he added: "This
summit is a waste of money that could be better spent on deploying more boats
to stop migrants fleeing war and hunger from drowning in the
Mediterranean."
Turkish-German
protester Fatima Cicek said she and her two sisters wanted to make the point
that the G20 is undemocratic as it is a forum where a handful of leaders make
decisions that could impact the whole world.
But her main
issue is with Trump. "He is the most disruptive and egotistical leader at
the summit," the veiled 38-year-old social worker said.
There is
irony in the protesters' dislike of Trump. The U.S. president and
anti-capitalist activists have something in common: distrust of globalization.
Yet Trump
was in Hamburg to push for trade rules that benefit America, including
steelmakers facing tough competition from China, while the protesters were
demanding more rights for the poor regardless of where they live.
"Trump
is here to promote his own interests and those of the richest people in
America," said Cicek. "We are demanding more rights for the millions
of people in Africa who have no roof over their heads."
0 Comments