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News » September 26, 2009 » Web Only

Protesting the G-20 Summit

A photo essay from Pittsburgh’s streets.

By Christopher Moraff

World leaders pretend: A scene from outside the G-20 summit held in Pittsburgh, Pa., September 24-25. (All photos by Christopher Moraff)

The City of Pittsburgh had prepared for the worst.

PITTSBURGH—On September 24 and 25, thousands of activists from around the world gathered in Pittsburgh, Pa., to protest the G-20 meeting bringing together leaders of the “Group of Twenty” nations, which together account for about 85 percent of the world economy.

The City of Pittsburgh had prepared for the worst. Authorities trucked in thousands of police reserves from across Pennsylvania, and members of the U.S. Coast Guard, the Border Patrol and the National Guard were all in attendance. In most parts of the city, police outnumbered protesters.

One non-sanctioned protest in the city’s Lawrenceville section on Thursday afternoon saw about 1,000 mostly black-clad protesters face off with several hundred police in riot gear. After scattering, protesters regrouped, and as the sun began to set, damage to some local businesses drew a heavy police response.

Authorities employed rubber bullets, pepper spray (OC gas) and a newly purchased Long-Range Acoustic Device (LRAD) to disperse crowds. Clashes continued intermittently throughout the night, with a total of approximately 60 people arrested Thursday, according to a statement released Saturday by the Pittsburgh G-20 Resistance Project (PGRP).

Earlier Thursday, 14 Greenpeace activists were arrested after they rappelled off the city’s West End Bridge, unfurling a large banner that warned of “climate destruction ahead” due to global warming. Elsewhere in the city, residents and journalists wandered a nearly deserted downtown that had been mostly shut down for the summit.

Below are a dozen photographs taken Thursday and Friday on Pittsburgh’s streets.

Monk protesters

Thursday morning, a small group of Burmese activists, led by about a dozen Buddhists monks, prays facing the David L. Lawrence Convention Center—the site of the G-20 summit.

No bailout

About a thousand protesters, mostly anarchist youth, took to the streets Thursday in a non-sanctioned march starting in Arsenal Park, in the city’s Lawrenceville section. The protesters had planned to march to the David L. Lawrence Convention Center, where the G-20 was getting underway, but were blocked by police.

Two sides

Police in full riot gear eye activists at the start Thursday’s non-sanctioned march in Pittsburgh’s Lawrenceville section.

Black mask protester

A neighbor watches anarchists run from police in Pittsburgh’s Lawrenceville neighborhood on Thursday afternoon.

Riot cop close-up

Police from Harrisburg, Pa., await the start of a non-sanctioned protest in Pittsburgh’s Lawrenceville section on Thursday afternoon.

Protesters with dumpster

Black clad protesters wheel a dumpster to the top of a street in Pittsburgh’s Lawrenceville district. The aim was to block an intersection to police access, according to one protester.

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Christopher Moraff is a writer and photographer who frequently contributes to In These Times, The American Prospect online and Common Sense magazine. He currently serves as a features correspondent for The Philadelphia Tribune and is associate editor of the finance magazine the Monitor, where he specializes in covering corporate fraud. He lives and works in Philadelphia.

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