Kept away from the VIPs and amid a heavy police presence, protesters have taken to the streets of Switzerland to demonstrate against the World Economic Forum
Published:
25 January 2004 y., Sunday
Kept away from the VIPs and amid a heavy police presence, protesters have taken to the streets of Switzerland to demonstrate against the World Economic Forum. There were rowdy scenes in the eastern town of Chur, around 50 kilometres from the ski resort of Davos, where business leaders and politicians have been holding talks.
An authorized demonstration took place which police say was mainly peaceful although a bank window was smashed and some grafitti was daubed.
The damage however was nothing compared to previous years. In 2000, anti-free trade activists went on the rampage through Davos and last year protesters ran riot in the Swiss capital Berne.
Bus-loads of demonstrators briefly blocked the main highway between Zurich and Chur, but it all came after the departure of the man making headlines at today's session of talks.
United States Vice President Dick Cheney used his speech in Davos to urge Europe to join the US in promoting democracy in Iran and the Arab world. This,he maintained, was the key to winning the global war against terrorism.
Šaltinis:
EuroNews
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Peaceful revolution exported to Minsk?
more »
Negative reactions to the national census planned for the end of February.
more »
The Russian military said today that 2,728 Russian troops have been killed in the war in Chechnya.
more »
The fatal shooting of a Ukrainian man in the head by Polish police has strained Polish-Ukrainian relations
more »
At the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil, the demonstrators are having a more successful time of it
more »
Ex-vice president to work at Columbia, Fisk and Middle Tennessee State
more »
In one of his final executive acts, President Clinton on Saturday pardoned more than 100 Americans
more »
Tallinn officials on January 8 announced they were beginning discussions about constructing a large mosque in the capital, saying it will be Estonia's first and the largest in northern Europe.
more »
Moscow’s top investigator speaks out on the latest developments in the Wallenberg case
more »
The Cuban government undoubtedly has evidence against deputy Ivan Pilip and Jan Bubenik, who were detained in Cuba on Friday, and will release it at a suitable moment, Cuban charge d'affaires to Prague David Paulovich told journalists today.
more »