Over 10,000 people marched in Nice to protest against the upcoming G20 summit. The crowds, angry with the financial system and invigorated by the global "Occupy" movement, demanded governments focus on people more than corporations. The G20 summit will kick off on Thursday further down the coast in Cannes, and the host, France, says it wants this summit on its picturesque Mediterranean coast to reflect the importance of emerging nations in the world. But as the financial situation worsens in both the US and European Union, the leaders may find it even harder to ignore the outcry this time, when more and more people now realize that economists always spot self-interest behind such noble claims. "The pledge to involve more rising economies is really to convince those rising economies to put more money on the table, to bail out the unsustainable currency union of Europe in the first place," a Brussels-based economist Pieter Cleppe explains. Developing countries, which saw the West quick to back civil unrest among their population, now see those same Western countries coming down hard on public movements in their own back yard. Anti-war activists cry double standards. "The primary powers within the G20 - United States, Germany, Britain and France -want to show a world order, a system of states, that still has stability, but in fact there isn't stability," Brian Becker of the ANSWER anti-war coalition told RT. "This summit is an attempt to put a shiny face on what is, really, a failed system." A massive security operation is launched around the present G20 summit venue. Access to the whole area is heavily restricted, and protestors' every move is being followed by helicopters and armed police. John Graham, a former diplomat at the US Embassy in Libya, says Western leaders cannot continue to just block out criticism. "This whole idea that they can simply ignore popular protests against what's happening could come back to bite the leaders of the G7 and the G20," he said. Some add that this protest is different from summits of the past. With Belgium's Dexia the latest Western bank to get bailed out with public money, growing numbers here worry there is something fundamentally wrong with the current set-up. "We have, basically, a financial system where corporations and financial institutions are able to write themselves favorable legislation, quid pro quo via corporate lobbyists," says Edward Murray, an author from Seattle. As for now, police roadblocks bar demonstrators, getting from Nice to the nearby town of Cannes, where the G20 is taking place. But it is becoming ever harder to stop world leaders hearing the voices of protest.
GMT 11:19 2018 Thursday ,13 December
Nine killed, 47 injured as high-speed train crashes in TurkeyGMT 10:36 2018 Wednesday ,12 December
Strasbourg shooting leaves 3 dead, 12 injuredGMT 09:59 2018 Friday ,07 December
Death toll climbs to five after Santo Domingo factory explosionGMT 09:50 2018 Friday ,07 December
At least 18 Afghan soldiers killed in Taliban attackGMT 13:50 2018 Thursday ,06 December
Two found, five missing after US Marine aircraft collide off JapanGMT 16:27 2018 Sunday ,02 December
Villages evacuated as northern Australia fires flare in extreme heatGMT 08:16 2018 Thursday ,29 November
10 killed, 19 wounded in Taliban attack in KabulGMT 14:07 2018 Sunday ,18 November
About 15,000 people killed in Russian road accidents in 2018 so farMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor