Demonstrators have been battling heavily outnumbered police in violence in Gothenburg, Sweden as European Union leaders meet for a summit.
Published:
15 June 2001 y., Friday
At least two shooting victims have been admitted to hospital, said a hospital spokeswoman. Reuters news agency reported that police were forced to retreat before a crowd of roughly 1,500 protesters, abandoning vehicles near the city's university - less than a mile from the conference centre where the 15 EU leaders are meeting.
Swedish radio warned people to stay away from the city centre due to the violence on a day when more than 600 people were detained during 12 hours of rioting.
The severity of the demonstrations prompted police to relocate a planned dinner for EU leaders. Police decided the dinner, originally to be held at the elegant Tragar'n restaurant in the city's Botanical Gardens, would instead be held in the conference centre, which is guarded by hundreds of police.
Four delegations attending the summit were also asked to change hotels after police said they could no longer guarantee their safety from protesters, a spokesman for the Finnish delegation told AFP.
Shops were looted and buildings damaged some distance away from the meeting, where EU leaders discussed ways of putting expansion plans back on track after Irish voters rejected them.
Šaltinis:
BBC News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Two powerful blasts have rocked the headquarters of President Nursultan Nazarbayev's ruling Otan party in Almaty's central district
more »
An Estonian pimp who turned illegal immigrants into sex workers at his Brighton massage parlor got the maximum 41-month federal prison sentence
more »
Pro-Yanukovych Region Sets Autonomy Referendum
more »
Zmitser Bandarenka: "It was Kuchma`s Administration Order to Seize Us"
more »
The Ukrainian opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko has warned the country is on the verge of civil war
more »
Now from 150,000 to 200,000 people have gathered on the Maidan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square)
more »
Ukraine's opposition candidate Viktor Yushchenko has accused the authorities of rigging Sunday's fiercely fought presidential run-off
more »
A Polish woman who was kidnapped in Iraq more than three weeks ago has been released
more »
About 91,000 people from new eastern member states of the EU registered to work in the UK in the five months since the May expansion
more »
Maverick right-wing lawmaker Geert Wilders said on Friday he would weed out radical Muslims by sealing the border to non-Western immigrants for five years and shutting down mosques advocating fundamentalism
more »