Jakarta Globe – AFP, September 18, 2013
New York City. “Occupy Wall Street” returned to the streets of New York Tuesday to mark the second anniversary of the birth of the social protest movement.
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| Protesters carry a banner during a march to mark the two year anniversary of the Occupy Wall Street movement in New York, USA, Sept. 17, 2013. (EPA Photo/Justin Lane) |
New York City. “Occupy Wall Street” returned to the streets of New York Tuesday to mark the second anniversary of the birth of the social protest movement.
Some 250
people gathered at midday in Zuccotti Park in Manhattan’s downtown financial
district, where the movement first gained ground.
As police
kept a close eye, the activists then peacefully marched up Broadway to
Washington Square.
At least
three people were arrested for blocking traffic.
The
demonstrators carried signs with a multitude of messages. One read “Too much
deregulation.”
“Disarm the
Pentagon,” read another.
The Occupy
movement was born in New York on September 17, 2011, when a group of youths put
up tents in Zuccotti Square to protest social and economic inequality with the
slogan “We are the 99 percent.”
It quickly
spread to other US cities but fizzled out due to a lack of hierarchy and clear
goals.
The tent
camps were subsequently raided by police. In New York, authorities went in
early on November 15, 2011, to clean up the square.
“I was here
at the beginning,” said Jason Woody, an activist marking Tuesday’s anniversary.
“It’s funny
because a lot of people like to say that Occupy is dead, but it’s not exactly
what happened,” the 29-year-old added.
Instead, he
told AFP, people took what they learned by coming together back to their home
communities to start other movements there.
“The things
we did here did inspire people in all parts of the world, to stand up and take
control,” he said.
“It has
been a long hard journey …We changed the conversation in this country.”
Another
demonstration was planned later Tuesday at the United Nations.
Agence France-Presse

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