Protests
Outside Asia-EU Summit
By JAE-SUK YOO
SEOUL, South
Korea, Oct 20 (AP) - Riot police battled stone-throwing protesters who
wielded wooden sticks and shouted anti-globalization slogans amid demonstrations
Friday during a gathering of Asian and European leaders.
Some 400
protesters fought running street battles with about 1,000 police armed
with yard-long batons who were blocking their march.
At least three protesters were seen taken to hospital with injuries to
the head and face. One protester was taken away in a police car.
The protesters were among 3,000 labor, environmental and human rights
activists who rallied at a major intersection to oppose the biennial summit
of the Asia-Europe Meeting, or ASEM, which brought together 25 leaders
of Asian and European Union leaders to discuss closer cooperation between
their regions.
Activists expected the Seoul meeting to strengthen economic globalization,
which they claim would restrict workers' rights and widen the gap between
the rich and poor nations.
Anti-globalization protests disrupted the World Trade Organization meeting
in Seattle last year. Violent demonstrations also marred last month's
International Monetary Fund and World Bank meetings in Prague, the Czech
Republic.
Organizers said they planned a larger demonstration later Friday expected
to draw 20,000 people.
Earlier in the day, police stopped a dozen activists from marching to
the convention center where the summit was held.
``Is this a country which has received a Nobel prize?'' the protesters
shouted as they were aggressively pushed away by riot police, armed with
helmets, shields and meter-long batons.
South Korean President Kim Dae-jung, who received the Nobel Peace Prize
last week for his policy of reaching out to North Korea, is the host of
the third biennial summit seeking ways of strengthening political and
economic cooperation.
When stopped by police yards from the convention center, the labor, religious,
environmental and human rights activists unfurled two large placards which
read: ``No to Neoliberal Globalization'' and ``No to Structural Adjustment
Program.'' ``Neoliberal'' refers to the free market economic policies
adopted by many of the countries in the region.
``ASEM pursues neoliberal globalization, which is destroying the livelihood
of workers, ecology and human rights,'' the protesters said in a statement.
Authorities deployed 30,000 riot and plainclothes police in Seoul to safeguard
the summit. Anti-terrorism police squads were seen patrolling around the
convention center and hotels where the summit leaders were staying.
Police also expected South Korean followers of the Falun Gong spiritual
movement, which has been the target of a heavy crackdown by the Chinese
government, to stage a protest during the summit due to the presence of
Chinese Prime Minister Zhu Rongji.
Police,
Protesters Clash Outside Asia-EU Summit
By JAE-SUK YOO
SEOUL, South
Korea, Oct. 20, (AP) - Some 10,000 activists shouting anti-globalization
slogans marched on the convention center where European and Asian leaders
were meeting Friday, but were blocked from reaching their goal by police
backed by two water cannons.
Earlier,
in a different part of Seoul, riot police battled about 400 stone-throwing
protesters wielding wooden sticks. At least three protesters were slightly
injured. One protester was taken away in a police car.
But overall the protest was peaceful and fewer than the 20,000 protesters
expected by organizers showed up, police said.
Authorities deployed 30,000 riot and plainclothes police to safeguard
the third Asia-Europe Meeting, or ASEM, which brought together 25 leaders
of Asian and European Union leaders to discuss closer cooperation between
their regions.
The protesters carried placards that denounced globalization and free
market economic policies. Many wore red and blue headbands with the sign
''Fight'' on them.
Officials said the protesters were disorganized in the face of a massive
show of police force.
The marchers were stopped 1,000 yards from the summit venue by 8,000 helmeted
riot police backed by two water cannons. Huge garbage tanks were put across
the street to block the march.
After a 40-minute confrontation with police, protesters dispersed. Traffic
was backed up for miles.
Activists expected the Seoul meeting to strengthen economic globalization,
which they claim would restrict workers' rights and widen the gap between
the rich and poor nations.
Anti-globalization protests disrupted the World Trade Organization meeting
in Seattle last year. Violent demonstrations also marred last month's
International Monetary Fund and World Bank meetings in Prague, the Czech
Republic.
Earlier in the day, police stopped a dozen activists from marching to
the convention center where the summit was held.
''Is this a country which has received a Nobel prize?'' the protesters
shouted as they were aggressively pushed away by riot police, armed with
helmets, shields and meter-long batons.
South Korean President Kim Dae-jung, who received the Nobel Peace Prize
last week for his policy of reaching out to North Korea, is the host of
the summit.
When stopped by police yards from the convention center, the labor, religious,
environmental and human rights activists unfurled two large placards which
read: ''No to Neoliberal Globalization'' and ''No to Structural Adjustment
Program.'' ''Neoliberal'' refers to the free market economic policies
adopted by many of the countries in the region.
Police also expected South Korean followers of the Falun Gong spiritual
movement, which has been the target of a heavy crackdown by the Chinese
government, to stage a protest during the summit due to the presence of
Chinese Prime Minister Zhu Rongji.
Thousands of protestors slam Asia-Europe summit
SEOUL, Oct 19, 2000
Thousands
of protestors staged a boisterous anti-globalization rally Thursday as
Asian and European leaders gathered in Seoul for a cross-continent summit.
"No
globalization," chanted some 4,000 students, labor leaders and civil
rights activists at Soongsil University campus in southern Seoul on the
eve of the third Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM).
The evening rally drew some 100 foreign activists taking part in a forum
of nongovernment organizations (NGOs) held to coincide with the summit
on Friday and Saturday.
Tens of thousands of police, backed by helicopters and armoured riot vehicles,
have been deployed throughout Seoul to stop protests. But no violence
was reported.
The protestors punched the air, surrounding a podium decorated with a
banner reading "We Oppose Neo-liberalization and Globalization!"
and a large picture depicting an angry slogan-chanting worker.
Students and union activists held up placards blasting ASEM for promoting
a US-led globalization movement and vowed to lead a protest march on Friday,
which will be kept several kilometers from the ASEM convention center.
The march will be headed by the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU),
a militant union group which has opposed sweeping economic reforms since
an economic crisis forced South Korea to accept a 58-billion-dollar bailout
from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in late 1997.
The protestors blasted the lending policies of international institutions
such as the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the IMF for increasing
the suffering of poor nations by imposing harsh repayment obligations.
"Globalization is a main cause of worsening labor conditions."
read a statement distributed at the rally.
"Disband the international organizations soliciting neo-liberalism.
Stop negotiations about free trade measures and block the WTO New Round."
South Korean pressure groups have pledged there will be no repeat of the
violence that dogged the WTO conference last year in Seattle, and the
World Bank/IMF meetings in Prague last month.
But organizers of ASEM, South Korea's biggest international event since
the 1988 Olympics, are desperate to avoid violent clashes with protestors
and are taking no chances with security.
From Thursday, riot police sealed off all public access to within two
kilometers (1.2 miles) of the sprawling ASEM site.
A South Korean photographer reported seeing around 20 local student activists
detained by police after trying to break through police lines. However
police denied any arrests had been.
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