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What to Expect at G20: Lots and Lots of Cops

by: Sandro Contenta  |  GlobalPost | Report

Toronto, Canada - If you want to see more police officers than you’ve probably ever seen in your life, come to Toronto this weekend.

Downtown, particularly in the area around the iconic CN Tower, they’re everywhere. They hang out like gangs on practically every street corner. You might think they’re just loafing about, calculating their overtime. But you’d be wrong. They’re looking for trouble.

Their job is to protect leaders attending unprecedented, back-to-back economic summits: On Friday and Saturday morning, the G8 meets in the cottage town of Huntsville, 140 miles north of Toronto; Saturday afternoon and Sunday, the expanded G8 — the G20 — wrestles with the world’s economic troubles in Toronto.

It was revealed Friday that Toronto’s chief of police, Bill Blair, requested and secretly received from the provincial government extraordinary new powers for the G20. They allow his officers to arrest anyone who comes within five yards of the security fence and refuses to identify themselves or agree to a police search.

“We have heard from a number of individuals who have frankly said they're going to come here and wreck the place,” Blair told reporters Friday. “We need to make sure we have the proper authority to deal with those threats.”

A university student has already been arrested under that law, widely denounced by critics as an outrageous abuse of power.

By now, any Canadian who hasn’t been living in a cave knows taxpayers are on the hook for the whopping $1.2 billion cost of the summits — $1 billion of that for security alone. (Security for the G20 summit in Pittsburg last year reportedly cost $18 million.) Part of the cost is a $5.5 million concrete and steal mesh fence that snakes for about 4 miles around the area where the leaders will be meeting and sleeping.

The Toronto Star newspaper has calculated that the total amount of time the world leaders will meet during the three-day economic jamboree is 24 hours. The bill for the twin summits, in other words, works out to about $50 million an hour, or $833,000 a minute.

The real costs are higher. Fearing the sometimes violent protests that accompany international summits, many downtown stores and companies will be closed. And many employees are forced to stay home without pay.

It would be all worth it, of course, if the most powerful men and women in the world took serious steps to eliminate poverty, tackle climate change and rein in Wall Street’s greedy gamblers. But what are the chances of that?

The most obvious result so far is that downtown Toronto and idyllic Huntsville have been locked down like armed camps. It’s a sign of the times, Canadian government officials insist. Yet Canada’s spy chief says terrorists are not targeting the summits.

“I think [there is] surprisingly little on the terrorism front,” Richard Fadden, director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, told CBC TV. “We don't think there is anyone who is really interested in doing any harm from that perspective.”

The arrest tally so far has not made for shocking reading.

On Wednesday, a 37-year-old Toronto man was charged with possessing explosive material. He’s a computer security consultant who for months told friends, and posted online, that he was preparing a “stunt” to “test” G20 security.

Thursday afternoon, a 53-year-old man was arrested near the restricted area. Police confiscated from his car a chainsaw, a sledgehammer, four baseball bats and a crossbow. They didn’t explain the bizarre collection of potential weapons, more suitable to a slasher film than a terrorist attack. But they described the man as “disoriented.”

Police have also been questioning people taking pictures of the security fence, and even insisted some be deleted. One officer expressed concern the fence pictures would be posted online and somehow help protesters who are bent on storming it.

Fadden has said that police are mainly concerned with what he called “Anarchist groups,” and “multi-issue extremists.” Citing the potential for violent protest, the U.S. State Department has advised U.S. citizens to stay clear of the city center.

For their part, representatives of some groups planning to protest have pointedly refused to denounce violence. Police will see “different people taking different actions in the ways that they see fit,” said Syed Hussan, of the Toronto Community Mobilization Network, when reporters asked about rejecting violence.

Protesters instead describe the massive show of police strength as an attempt to discourage legitimate protest, one so provocative that it invites violence.

Those who opt for violent protest are a minority. Still, the situation seems to be this: Police use protesters to justify the clampdown, and protesters use the clampdown to justify any violence that breaks out.

What if the equation suddenly changed? What if protesters spent the weekend peacefully denouncing greed and environmental pillaging?

How would the Canadian government look if, after spending $1 billion on security, no one smashed a window or threw a rock? How would U.S. President Barack Obama and the others look if, to peaceful demands for political accountability, they wined and dined and cut deals behind a level of security normally associated with police states? Who would look more credible and reasonable?

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Comments

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It's five metres, not five

It's five metres, not five yards. Five metres is a much longer distance.

A meter is about 3 inches

A meter is about 3 inches longer than a yard so it's about 15 inches longer...About the length of a nightstick!

Either five meters or five

Either five meters or five yards is unacceptable, especially considering that the fence isn't anywhere close to the G20 meeting location. However, the difference in these distances is only about 15 inches: 15 feet for 5 yards versus 16.4 feet (a teeny bit less than 16 feet, 5 inches) for 5 meters. Se not a "much longer distance."

$1.2 billion! (I have fallen

$1.2 billion! (I have fallen off my chair laughing.) $1.2 billion, oh my (gasp gasp). This is an enormous victory for the forces of good in the world. We have scared the living s&*t out of a bunch of mainly evil people.

That their are forces bent

That their are forces bent on vandalism and trying to provoke a heavy handed response is a fact of life.However to get the "best bang for the taxpayers buck" this meeting could have been held securely at any air force base in Canada where anti terrorist security measures are already in force and budgeted for.
Those spartan surroundings that are good enough for our armed forces would of course not be suitable for all the "Free Wheeling and spending"worlds politicians who use these so called "Meetings Of The Minds" to have a junket and be "Poseurs" on the World Stage.To some it up whatever is discussed could be done much cheaper and timely by Videoconferencing, but hey that,s no fun Eh?

There is simply no credible

There is simply no credible reason to spend over a billion dollars on security for a two day meeting. The reference to anarchist groups as a reason for the heightened security is laughable, in that the numbers of people in groups such as the so-called "Black Bloc" is miniscule. In addition, the IMF and World Bank participation, in any capacity, seriously undermines the credibility of the summit and casts a grey cloud over talk laced with code words such as fiscal stimulus (or lack thereof), austerity measures, deficit reduction and many other econo-centric concepts which in practice have lead to creating more poverty and the wholesale elimination of the middle class in favor of "haves and have nots". There are legitimate reasons to protest a secret meeting of people who deem themselves the power players of the world, and have no qualms about deciding who of 6 billion people get what resources. Violent protest, well, who's more ready to get violent? It seems $1 billion buys a lot of violence. The message is evidently that these summit participants are going to do what they want no matter who doesn't agree. It really has little to do with security, and much more to do with a statement about a very few people controlling the resources and lives of most of the planet's 6 billion people. This seems a dangerous and unsustainable thing.

Wonder how many of the

Wonder how many of the "Black Bloc" are actually police provocateurs?

With a billion to spend, it

With a billion to spend, it would seem that a few million should be spent on plainclothes infiltration within the ranks of the protestors. If you wish to justify the cost of security it wouldn't look very good if there were only peaceful protests! A few provocateurs would make all the difference in order to "sell" this extraordinary cost to the masses! A pity the Vancouver Olympics were relatively peaceful. I wonder how those companies that have done well by these security contracts will find their next payday?

After the triple image

After the triple image crashes of escalating wars in the gulf, money into the banks and a gulf oiled, credibility Gulfs trump reason. THEY. DON'T. CARE!

I would like to say this is

I would like to say this is what happens when you have your guns taken away, but then I remember the equally outrageous actions of our own recent presidents (free speech zones, anyone?). We're all in the same leaky boat together it seems.

I agree with' uppity woman',

I agree with' uppity woman', these few privileged powerful and wealthy people are determining how the world will be run to their advantage. They are already aware of the the damages to the other 6 billion or so people their decisions affect and the affects their decisions have on the welfare of the earth, By God they should live in fear.

I'd go so far as to say they should be extremely ashamed but I don't believe they have that attribute in them! Power and greed over road anything human that was ever there!