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| NYPD officers clash with members of the Occupy Wall St movement at Zuccotti park in New York in March. (Reuters Photo) |
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Occupy Wall
Street will mark its first anniversary this September by trying to blockade the
New York Stock Exchange and perhaps carry out citizen’s arrests of bankers,
organizers of the social protest movement said Thursday.
Occupy has
seen a steep drop in support since its founding a year ago when hundreds of
people camped in Zuccotti Park near Wall Street to protest bank bailouts and
what they called the ruling “one percent” of America’s most wealthy.
However,
activists promise a resurgence on the September 17 anniversary, about six weeks
before Americans decide whether to reelect President Barack Obama or bring in
his Republican challenger, Mitt Romney.
The
highlight of several days of street actions will be a “people’s wall” at the
NYSE, Dana Balicki, a spokeswoman for the group, told AFP.
“That will
be a pretty substantial act of civil disobedience,” she said. Protesters will
stage a sit-in outside the heavily guarded building and there are plans to
attempt citizen’s arrests of bankers.
“That’s
still on the table. That’s been talked about a lot. They’ve been planning some
citizen’s arrests for some time,” she said.
“There’ll
be a mass of people converging on the Stock Exchange to deliver our message:
that we’re the 99 percent and we’re not going to take it,” Balicki, 31, said.
Balicki
said Occupy leaders had learned from past mistakes and were ready to get around
any police crackdown.
Previous
Occupy events in New York’s tightly policed financial district have drawn a
huge law enforcement response, often resulting in dozens and occasionally
hundreds of arrests for disorderly behavior.
Agence France-Presse

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