Frankfurt Police Station Attacked During The Blockupy Riot
Perseus999: View from inside the Frankfurt Police Station as it gets attacked from protesters, during the Blockupy riot, against the policies of the European Central Bank, during the opening of its new building of cost €1.4 billion (today Wednesday 18 March 2015).
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Frankfurt riot at 'Blockupy' protest
UKC4: Thousand of anti-capitalist protesters clash with police in Frankfurt,
Germany ahead of the official inauguration of the European Central
Bank's new headquarters.
Several cars were set on fire and streets were blocked by burning
stacks of tires and rubbish bins. At least one police officer was
injured, police said.
Police used water cannon to try to make a
path through the mass of black-clad protesters to the entrance of
the building, which is blocked off from the street by police
barricades.
The
organisers, a group called Blockupy - named after the Occupy Wall
Street movement in 2011, estimated that about 10,000 demonstrators
were at the rally. Thousands came into the German financial capital
from other parts of Europe.
"Our protest is against the ECB, as a member of the
troika, that, despite the fact that it is not democratically elected,
hinders the work of the Greek government. We want the austerity
politics to end," Ulrich Wilken, one of the organisers, said. "We
want a loud but peaceful protest," he added.
Frankfurt police spokeswoman Claudia Rogalski described
the mood of the crowd as "aggressive." "We've had stone throwing,
burning rubbish bins and seven police cars were damaged, many set on
fire," she said.
Blockupy says it represents grass-roots critics
supranational financial institutions including the "troika": the ECB,
the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, whose
inspectors monitor countries such as Greece and Cyprus that have
received international bailouts. The ECB is also influential
as a provider of finance to the banks of struggling countries and has
in recent weeks sanctioned a drip feed of extra emergency finance to
Greece's lenders.
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