G20: protestor dies
CLASHES: Police officers in riot gear scuffle with demonstrators near the Bank of England as thousands of demonstrators converged on London's financial district in sometimes violent protests.
A protestor has died during clashes with riot police at anti-G20 demonstrations in London's financial centre.
London's Metropolitan police said the man had collapsed on the street in London's financial district.
He was looked at by two police officers who called an ambulance.
Police said they had to move the man after protestors hurled bottles at them.
He was pronounced dead at the hospital.
Police did not give a possible cause of death.
Riot police staged baton charges to try to disperse several hundred protestors gathered around the Bank of England after a day of protest around the G20 summit.
The charges against a hard core of anti-capitalist demonstrators appeared aimed at clearing the area before nightfall. Bottles flew through the air towards police lines and police on horseback stood by ready to intervene.
Some protestors set fire to an effigy of a banker hanging from a lamppost.
BANK ATTACK
Hundreds of protestors converged on a branch of the Royal Bank of Scotland, shattering windows.
Rescued by the government in October, RBS has become a lightning rod for public anger in Britain over banker excess blamed for the crisis. The protests were timed to coincide with a G20 meeting of the world's leading and emerging economies.
Mounted police and officers in riot gear surrounded the building to keep the crowds back. Protestors hurled paint bombs and bottles, chanting: "These streets, our streets! These banks, our banks!"
Police said a number of officers had been injured, and minor scuffles broke out as the afternoon progressed.
Generally, though, the situation appeared to be dying down and commuters in the small area of London affected by the clashes began to leave work for home.
HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE
Earlier, protestors marched behind models of the "four horsemen of the apocalypse" representing financial crimes, war, climate change and homelessness.
Some threw eggs at police and chanted "build a bonfire, put the bankers on the top." Others shouted "jump" and "shame on you" at financial sector workers watching the march from office block windows.
"I am angry at the hubris of the government, the hubris of the bankers," said Jean Noble, a 60-year-old from Blackburn in northern England.
"I am here on behalf of the poor, those who are not going to now get their pension or who have lost their houses while these fat cats keep their bonuses, hide their money in tax havens and go and live where nobody can touch them."
A smaller demonstration against Britain's military role in Iraq and Afghanistan attracted several hundred people in Trafalgar Square, not far from parliament.
Police said they had deployed one of Britain's biggest security operations to protect businesses, the Bank of England, the London Stock Exchange and other financial institutions.
The protests, which brought together anti-capitalists, environmentalists, anti-war campaigners and others, were meant to mark what demonstrators called "Financial Fools' Day" - a reference to April fool's day which falls on April 1.
Some 4000 protestors thronged outside the central bank, and a Gucci store nearby was closed and its windows emptied.
RBS said in a statement it was "aware of the violence" outside its branch and "had already taken the precautionary step" of closing central branches.
Wooden boards covered the war memorial in front of the Royal Exchange, once the center of commerce in the City of London and now an upmarket shopping center. Building sites and roadworks in the financial district were sealed to stop people using building materials as weapons, police said.
Police stopped a military-style armored vehicle with the word "RIOT" printed on the front and a police spokesman said its 11 occupants were arrested for having fake police uniforms. By mid-afternoon a total of 19 people had been arrested.
- AP, Reuters
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