Hundreds of anti-capitalists poured into the French city of Nice on Tuesday for a march to protest corporate greed ahead of the G20 summit in nearby Cannes, echoing protests worldwide.
Protesters from Germany, Spain and Italy have been arriving since Monday at the “Old Abattoir” cultural centre where a “People’s Summit” is to be held in parallel to the summit of Group of 20 leaders in Cannes on Thursday and Friday.
“We refuse to give the powerful the right to impose their solutions on crises that they created. Alternative paths exist,” said pamphlets distributed by the organisers of the protest march on the Mediterranean city’s outskirts.
Nice police said they had arrested three Spanish men on the city’s renowned Promenade des Anglais seafront in possession of “bolts, mountaineering axes, balaclavas and gas masks” ahead of the march.
Interior ministry spokesman Pierre-Henry Brandet said the men had T-shirts and badges with “Black Cross” written on them, which he said meant they might be part of the militant Black Bloc protest movement.
Cannes itself is to be locked down during the summit, with protesters kept a safe distance away from the world leaders – around 30 kilometres down the Mediterranean coast – in Nice.
Groups including environmental advocates Greenpeace, Attac, the Human Rights League and anti-racism organisations are organising the march that is to begin around 1400 GMT, along with other environmental and left-wing groups.
Around 2,500 extra police have been drafted in to deal with the protest that organisers hope will draw 10,000 people.
But anyone thought to be associated with Black Bloc protests faces arrest if police find them anywhere in the region.
Besides the police presence, organisers will have one person out for every 100 demonstrators, or around 100 in total.
Paris obtained authorisation from Brussels to reintroduce customs and immigration checks on the Italian border to prevent troublemakers gaining entry after around 100 people were injured in violent protests in Rome on October 15.
Most shops are closed on Tuesday as it is a bank holiday in France for the Catholic feast of All Saints.
On Thursday, some protesters will head to the principality of Monaco to “celebrate” the end of tax havens that was announced at the 2009 G20 in London.
The leaders of the world’s 20 biggest economic powerhouses, which between them generate around 85 percent of global output, are hoping to agree measures to head off the threat of global recession during their Cannes summit.
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