Dozens of South Korean protesters -- some with plastic wrap over their eyes to protect them from pepper spray -- clashed with riot police yesterday for the second straight day at a WTO meeting. No serious injuries were immediately reported.
Security forces fought back with clubs and shields as about 100 Koreans spent 45 minutes trying to punch and kick their way through a police line a few blocks from the WTO's meeting venue. After the Koreans left, a small group of Filipino and Indonesian demonstrators briefly scuffled with police.
The protesters were among thousands of anti-globalization activists here who oppose the WTO's efforts to lower trade barriers -- a move they say will wipe out their farmers and other industries. The WTO meeting began on Tuesday and was to end Sunday.
PHOTO: AP
The Korean's clash with police appeared to be carefully choreographed by the protesters. Dressed in matching red vests saying "Down, down WTO," the protesters attacked in waves, surging forward and scuffling with police to the beat of drums before backing away a few steps to rest and regroup.
They protected their faces by covering their eyes with plastic wrap and wearing red bandanas over their mouths. But several got hit in the face with pepper spray -- brown skin-stinging foam shot from an aerosol can.
Some of the protesters snatched police shields and tossed them to their comrades in the back of the crowd. They later stacked the shields on the ground, surrounded them and chanted before returning them to the police.
Between attacks, a troupe of Korean drummers in wide-brimmed straw hats entertained the crowd by banging gongs and dancing in a circle.
After they concluded their protest, the Koreans picked up scraps of torn signs, plastic bottles and other protest litter. They put it in a neat pile for street sweepers to clean up.
Wednesday's protest began peacefully with hundreds of marchers demonstrating against the WTO's campaign to lower trade barriers in the service sector. But the march turned violent as the South Koreans joined near the meeting venue.
The march marked the third anti-WTO protest this week. A massive street demonstration was peaceful on Sunday, but a protest on Tuesday became violent when South Korean farmers scuffled with police near the WTO meeting venue in downtown Hong Kong.
The protesters and police clashed as the South Korean farmers tried to carry a large mock wooden coffin to the meeting venue. The farmers hit the riot police with bamboo poles and the officers answered with pepper spray. The fight lasted about a half hour.
In another protest, about 100 Korean farmers jumped into Victoria Harbor on Tuesday and tried to swim along the coast to the meeting venue, a few 100m away. The men were quickly fished out of the cold water by marine police.
Also see story:
Food aid on the table at WTO meeting
A US YouTuber who caused outrage for filming himself kissing a statue commemorating Korean wartime sex slaves has been sentenced to six months in prison, a court in Seoul said yesterday. Johnny Somali, 25, gained notoriety several years ago for recording himself doing a series of provocative stunts in South Korea and Japan, and streaming them on platforms such as YouTube and Twitch. South Korean authorities indicted Somali — whose real name is Ramsey Khalid Ismael — in 2024 on public order violations and obstruction of business, and banned him from leaving the country. “The court has sentenced him to six months in
Former Lima mayor Rafael Lopez Aliaga, a Peruvian presidential hopeful, gathered hundreds of supporters in Lima on Tuesday and gave authorities 24 hours to annul the first round of the country’s election over allegations of fraud. Lopez Aliaga is locked in a tight three-way race with two other candidates for second place in Sunday’s vote. The election runner-up wins a ticket to June’s presidential run-off against front-runner Keiko Fujimori. “I am giving them 24 hours to declare this electoral fraud null and void,” said Lopez Aliaga, surrounded by a crowd of several hundred supporters. “If it is not declared null and void tomorrow,
Four contenders are squaring up to succeed Antonio Guterres as secretary-general of the UN, which faces unprecedented global instability, wars and its own crushing budget crisis. Chile’s Michelle Bachelet, Argentina’s Rafael Grossi, Costa Rica’s Rebeca Grynspan and Senegal’s Macky Sall are each to face grillings by 193 member states and non-governmental organizations for three hours today and tomorrow. It is only the second time the UN has held a public question-and-answer, a format created in 2016 to boost transparency. Ultimately the five permanent members of the UN’s top body, the Security Council, hold the power, wielding vetoes over who leads the
A humanoid robot that won a half-marathon race for robots in Beijing on Sunday ran faster than the human world record in a show of China’s technological leaps. The winner from Honor, a Chinese smartphone maker, completed the 21km race in 50 minutes and 26 seconds, said a WeChat post by the Beijing Economic-Technological Development Area, also known as Beijing E-Town, where the race began. That was faster than the human world record holder, Ugandan Jacob Kiplimo, who finished the same distance in about 57 minutes in March at the Lisbon road race. The performance by the robot marked a significant step forward