guardian.co.uk,
Jill Treanor in Davos, Friday 27 January 2012
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| Activists from the Occupy movement entered the open public event in Davos and challenged participants to join their debate on capitalism. Photograph: Laurent Gillieron/EPA |
Activists
from the Occupy movement attempted to disrupt a debate in Davos attended by the
Labour party leader, Ed Miliband, calling on him and the other delegates to
leave the stage and join them on the floor of the packed debate on
"remodelling capitalism".
The event,
which was open to the public as part of a 10-year programme by the organisers
of the World Economic Forum to engage with a wider audience, was eventually
brought back under control when other public participants refused to support
the efforts of Occupy activists.
Eyewitnesses
said about 30 activists had strategically placed themselves in the large
auditorium in the local Swiss Alpine High School and had attempted to conduct
the debate on their own terms.
A
representative of Occupy – who started the proceedings and gave her name only
as Maria – had already been scheduled to take part in the debate, in which Juan
SomavĂa, director general of the International Labour Organisation, was also a
speaker.
After the
event Miliband told the Guardian: "Occupy wanted us to do the debate in a
different way."
But, he said,
they had been outnumbered by other members of the public. He had argued:
"This is a big moment of opportunity. There are real opportunities to show
there are solutions that can be moved forward. I understand why people are
angry."
The
Guardian's economics editor, Larry Elliott, who chaired the debate said:
"Eventually the will of the audience prevailed and we had a good,
productive discussion."
The Occupy
protesters have set up a camp of igloos in this Swiss Alpine resort attended by
prime ministers, central bankers, business people and charitable organisations
from across the globe. Earlier on Friday a number of them had attempted to gain
entry to the high security venue where the major events are held and Klaus
Schwab, the septuagenarian who founded the WEF, has offered to meet them on
Saturday.
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