Ahead of G-20, Protesters Call for New Jobs

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PITTSBURGH -- A relatively small and peaceful group of about 500 protesters, most demanding new jobs programs, marched through city streets in the first full day of demonstrations targeting the Group of 20 economic summit later this week.

The turnout was less than the 1,500 expected, and some protest groups blamed the city delays in issuing permits and the promised threefold expansion in the city's police force for the small turnout. Protestors were also critical of comments made by President Barack Obama in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, downplaying the effectiveness of mass protest on abstract issues such as global capitalism.

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Associated Press Protesters take part in a march for jobs before the start of the Group of 20 economic summit on Sunday in Pittsburgh.
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"You have revealed the real Obama!" Clarence Thomas, a member of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union told the crowd. He said the president's remarks were "very, very disrespectful" to the civil rights and other social movements.

Mr. Thomas blamed the small turnout of the march, organized by a New York-based group called Bailout the People, on comments by the city about the possibility of violence during protests and delays at issuing permits for demonstrations.

There were no incidents or clashes between about 500 marchers and several dozen police who stood by the side of the road or rode bicycles and photographed and videotaped marchers. The city's police force of 900 is expected to grow to about 4,000, including state troopers and National Guard.

"It shows we can march peacefully against the G20," said Pete Shell, co-director of the anti-war committee of the Thomas Merton Center. The group is organizing what is expected to be the week's biggest mass demonstration, a march on Friday that organizers say could attract 7,000 people. Most of the groups represented on Sunday have applied for city permits and are pledging to use nonviolent means to get their messages across: marches, street theatre, panel discussions, teach-ins and workshops.

Although the event was without major incident, most protestors are expected to arrive later this week, when the G-20 representatives arrive. In London, an estimated 35,000 people demonstrated, with some clashing with police and resulting in hundreds of arrests and one death.

Activists have been communicating on the Web via sites like Facebook and groups plan to coordinate members throughout the day using Twitter messages to tell people where to protest and update people with arrest information and other details.

The G20 Resistance Project plans an unpermitted march -- called a "Peoples Uprising" -- on Thursday toward the summit meeting.

"The G-20 is in the house, throwing a party. Let's crash it," the group says on its Web site, which lists 100 venues around the city for coordinated actions are scheduled to end at 11:30 am Friday, including numerous Starbucks coffee shops, military recruiting centers, banks and other retail chains. "We encourage people to form affinity groups with those that they know and trust, to have a familiar faces to stick with in the streets and people to organize and take action with," the group says on its Web site.

Security preparation for the summit has been "the largest full scale event where we have had to interface numerous local, state and federal agencies, vendors and other law enforcement and non-law enforcement resources from across the country," said Diane Richard, a spokeswoman for the Pittsburgh Police Bureau. She declined to provide any specifics on the city's security planning or whether the police are monitoring activities of particular groups. "We are monitoring any and all activity," she said.

Meanwhile, many companies, including U.S. Steel Corp., which has 1,000 employees downtown, PNC Financial Services, which has several thousand and Alcoa Inc. with about 900 near downtown, are telling employees to work from home or from alternate locations outside the city. A spokesman for PNC said it will have just one of its six downtown branches open during the summit. At least one downtown bank has boarded up its windows. "We're going to treat Wednesday, Thursday and Friday essentially as snow days," said Kevin Lowery, a spokesman for Alcoa
 

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Protesters make final G20 plans as Pittsburgh digs in

Protesters make final G20 plans as Pittsburgh digs in

Protesters make final G20 plans as Pittsburgh digs in

Pittsburgh is beefing up security with thousands of extra police, as anti-globalization, anti-war, anti-government and anti-poverty activists descend on it for the G20 summit.

Protesters say they plan to air their opposition to ?the undemocratic way in which the G20 operates and the decisions the group makes, which affect the more than six billion inhabitants of this planet.?

World leaders gather in this once rough-and-tumble US steel town on Thursday and Friday, and while most of the protests are expected to be peaceful, 29-year-old mayor Luke Ravenstahl is taking no chances.

He wants Pittsburgh to show off its new clothes. Once known for smog and smelters, the southwest Pennsylvania city on the Ohio river has undergone a rebirth to emerge as a haven for green business and young professionals.

The fear in the minds of residents, officials and security forces is that violent demonstrations such as those seen in 1999 in Seattle ? where protesters and riot police faced off for days, disrupting a meeting of the World Trade Organization ? will mar this week?s G20 summit.

?I hope they?ll keep the protesters under control so Seattle doesn?t repeat itself,? said resident Nancy Provil.

Ravenstahl has said protesters will be allowed to exercise their constitutional freedom of speech and assembly ?within sight and sound? of the summit venue.

It turns out this will be in a strictly delineated area outside of the downtown cultural area where the likes of US President Barack Obama and China?s Hu Jintao will be sitting down with other world leaders.

Ravenstahl has also called in 4,000 highly trained federal police officers to back up local security forces during the summit.

?We know that there will be some individuals who will seek to do harm to our city,? said Pittsburgh director of public safety Michael Huss.

The bill for ensuring security during the summit is expected to be in the region of 18 million dollars, but the two-day meeting of the world?s top developing and developed nations is likely to bring more than that into the city?s coffers.

While the authorities were busy gearing up for the summit, the protesters were, too.

The Pittsburgh Organizing Group held a ?Mass Action 101″ workshop for students last week, and will conduct a similar training session on Sunday.

?It?s less about advocating doing one thing or another and more of ?how-to? participate in a mobilization,? Patrick Young of POG, an anarchist group, told AFP.

?These are questions you want to ask yourself about what you want to participate in and where you want to put yourself and what kind of preparations you want to make before coming to a major demonstration.?

Activist groups around Pittsburgh have been trying to organize housing for the thousands of demonstrators from around the world who are expected to stream into the city for the summit.

The Pittsburgh G20 Resistance Project (PGRP) has created accounts on the micro-blogging platform Twitter and a website where activists can find information on everything from where to get a meal to how many people have been arrested.

At least four major marches and rallies have been scheduled in Pittsburgh in the build-up to and during the summit. The first is a ?March for Jobs? on Sunday, which is expected to draw several thousand people.

On the eve of the summit on Wednesday, workers and environmentalist movements will be holding a concert, which 10,000 people are expected to attend, according to Young.

The following day around 1,000 people are expected to march towards the summit venue in a protest organized by the Pittsburgh G20 Resistance Project (PGRP).

?They have not applied for a permit, nor have they pre-emptively been offered one,? said Young.

And on Friday, as the summit winds down, protesters have been called to take part in the main event: a mass march on ?institutions that pepper the landscape where the G-20?s worldview manifests? the places that symbolize the kind of world the G-20 works to protect and sustain,? according to the PGRP website.

?It?s important that we show the world that the G7 is a body that is self-appointed,? said Edith Bell, a member of the Women?s International League for Peace and Freedom who, at the age of 85, hardly fits the stereotype of anti-G20 activist. The G20 comprises the G7, plus the European Union and other leading world economies.
 

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Five Helicopters and Crews Support Pennsylvania National Guard

Five Helicopters and Crews Support Pennsylvania National Guard

Governor Announces New York National Guard Support for G20 Meeting
Five Helicopters and Crews Support Pennsylvania National Guard

ALBANY, NY (09/23/2009)(readMedia)-- Governor David Paterson announced today that the New York Army National Guard is providing five helicopters to support the G20 Summit being held being held Thursday and Friday in Pittsburgh.

"I am proud that the New York Army National Guard is available to support our sister state as Pennsylvania hosts this vital economic summit," Gov. Paterson said. "The men and women of the New York National Guard are always ready for any mission, any place."

Four UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters, and a CH-47D Chinook heavy lift helicopter, are providing transportation support for 2,500 Pennsylvania National Guardsmen and women, as well as police and other security forces as leaders of the worlds 20 largest economies meet Thursday and Friday.

Two of the UH-60's are normally based at Albany International Airport and two work out of McArthur Airport in Ronkonkoma. The CH-47 is base at the Greater Rochester International Airport.

Twenty-three Soldiers deployed to locations in Western Pennsylvania with the helicopters on Monday and they are due to return on Saturday.

The New York Army National Guard aircrew and helicopters are flying in support of the Pennsylvania National Guard's Joint Task Force G20 which is executing Operation Steel Kickoff, security support for the G20 Summit involving 2,500 National Guard Soldiers and Airmen working at the direction of the Secret Service.

The National Guard forces are operating under the control of the Governor of Pennsylvania under compacts that allow National Guard forces from one state to be loaned to another.
 
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