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LA TIMES
10
Protesters Arrested as Agriculture Meeting Winds Down in Sacramento
By
Eric Bailey and Joel Rubin
Times
Staff Writers
June
25, 2003
SACRAMENTO Protesters
and police continued their urban dance of nonviolent civil disobedience
and subsequent arrests for a third straight day Tuesday as an international
agriculture conference that became a flash point for foes of genetically
modified crops wound down.
After two days of bigger
marches, a smaller group of about 100 protesters remained Tuesday
to parade around the leafy blocks fanning out from the California
Capitol.
At each turn, the mostly
youthful demonstrators, banging drums and chanting slogans, met
unyielding lines of riot police. About 10 arrests were made throughout
the day.
Meanwhile, delegates from
120 nations continued to meet behind a wall of security at the Sacramento
Convention Center, where the first Ministerial Conference and Expo
on Agricultural Science and Technology is set to wrap up this morning.
The conference is billed
by organizers at the U.S. Department of Agriculture as an attempt
to generate momentum to fight global hunger with scientific advancements.
The meeting came as President
Bush this week continued to pressure European governments to drop
a boycott against genetically engineered foods, which he said could
ease famine in Africa.
Caroline Lucas, a European
Union member of Parliament, said the Bush challenge is viewed "with
great hostility" and represents an "aggressive attempt" to control
what Europeans eat.
Critics of the conference
say it is nothing more than a Bush administration trade show intended
to help agribusiness giants spread genetically modified crops throughout
the developing world.
After a relatively calm day
Monday, when many office workers in Sacramento remained home, the
city was abuzz Tuesday as protesters hit the streets midmorning.
The most heated standoff
with police came about 10:30 a.m., as about 50 demonstrators massed
across from the convention center. A dozen sat down on busy J Street,
stopping traffic and were promptly warned by police to disperse.
When they refused, officers
in riot gear circled the protesters and began making arrests. In
the resulting showdown, five people were arrested. Several protesters
criticized police for not giving them an escape route, and one woman
who wasn't apprehended said an officer used a Taser gun on her.
"It was not a pleasant experience,"
said Star Hawk, 52, a San Francisco writer. She showed a welt on
her left underarm that she said was the result of the electric charge
of the Taser.
"I don't understand why the
nonviolent protest around this issue is so threatening that they
have to use such force," Hawk said.
Sacramento police countered
that the department, which was expecting as many as 10,000 protesters
during the three-day meeting, believed it was best to be well prepared
to avoid the sort of melee that occurred in Seattle during the 1999
World Trade Organization meeting.
"It's not like these people
are sitting back and we're coming in with no provocation," said
Capt. Sam Somers of the Sacramento Police Department. "We're responding
to the acts they commit. They're the instigators."
But some bystanders were
left shaking their heads.
Downtown businessman Dustin
Corracon, 60, watched as the protesters jostled with police. "This
is unbelievable. There are four cops with guns for every one protester,"
he said. "I grew up in the '60s when there were real demonstrations.
I find their overreaction amazing."
Others raised fiscal concerns
over a conference that almost certainly won't have brought in enough
revenue to pay the costs of days of around-the-clock policing and
months of preparation.
"There's no way, no matter
how the Chamber of Commerce spins it, this paid for itself in terms
of increased revenues," said Bob David, a hospital trade association
executive. "If the city gets stuck with the bill, I'm not happy.
It should be the responsibility of the federal government."
As the day wore on, the protesters
marched through city streets, stopping traffic as they passed the
Capitol, City Hall and the county jail, where they yelled to cohorts
they believed were behind bars there.
They then headed back to
the abandoned Mexican restaurant that has housed their command center,
marching a mile north of downtown flanked by police on horses, bicycles
and foot. A few protesters began to moo as the procession wound
up the street.
Since the protests began
Sunday, city police had arrested 75 people, mostly for failure to
disperse, Somer said. Three were arraigned Tuesday on misdemeanor
charges, released and assigned a court date. One woman's court appearance
was delayed until Thursday, when she will be arraigned on a felony
charge.
Meanwhile, 15 miles away
at UC Davis, about 25 protesters entered a biology research building,
where two men suspended themselves by rope in an open stairwell.
A third locked himself to a railing.
Hanging in midair and locked
together at their necks, the two men shouted, "Corporate greed is
destroying our trees!" Within hours, all three were cut loose and
arrested.
Neelima Sinha, a professor
of plant biology, spoke angrily with some of the protesters. No
genetic research on trees is conducted in the building, Sinha said,
adding, "They are a very misguided and misinformed group of protesters."
Copyright 2003 Los Angeles
Times
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