Anti-G7 activists march with ‘stolen’ Macron portraits

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BAYONNE, France, Aug 26, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Several hundred anti-G7
protesters staged an unusual protest in southwestern France on Sunday,
holding “stolen” portraits of French President Emmanuel Macron which were
held upside down in a pointed critique on his policies.

Demonstrators at the so-called “portrait march” were carrying official
portraits of the 41-year-old French leader which had been taken down from
town halls across the country over the last few months.

The climate and social justice march was organised by environmental
activist group ANV COP 21, as well as two Basque groups Alternatiba et Bizi
all of whom were marching under a slogan which pledged to “take down Macron”.

“One, two, three degrees, it’s a crime against humanity!” they chanted as
they marched through the narrow streets of Bayonne near the southwestern
French resort of Biarritz where world leaders are gathering for the G7
summit.

“We are holding him upside down to show the lack of sense in his
policies,” explained a Bizi activist called Mathieu.

Others also carried what appeared to be portraits wrapped up in bags or
newspaper on which was written in French, English, Spanish and Basque:
“Climate, social justice: where is Macron?”

“Taking down a portrait is civil disobedience, it’s considered as theft”
in some parts of France, said another demonstrator called Abram.

When the summit opened on Saturday, more than 9,000 protesters joined a
peaceful anti-G7 march across a bridge linking France and Spain, police said,
with organisers giving a figure of 15,000 marchers.

But later in the day, things heated up with police using tear gas and
water cannon to break up protests in Bayonne, where hundreds chanted anti-
capitalist slogans were blocked from reaching the city centre.

By Saturday evening, 68 people had been arrested, 38 of whom were taken
into custody, officials said. A judicial source later said around 30 were
still being held in custody on Sunday evening.

On Sunday, authorities said 19 people were arrested and 17 of them held in
custody as part of the beefed-up security plan for the G7.

Several rights groups protested the arrest of their “observers” including
Amnesty International which said two of their observers were arrested by
police in Bidart, a community near Biarritz.

Anti-capitalist activists, environmentalists and other anti-globalisation
groups have since Monday been flocking to a counter-summit in nearby Hendaye,
close to the Spanish border, which has largely been peaceful.

Biarritz is a popular tourist destination that would normally be basking
in its annual summer boom, but with US President Donald Trump and other world
leaders flying in for three days of talks, the resort was in lockdown. France
has deployed more than 13,000 police and gendarmes to secure the event amid
fears of disturbances by radical anti-capitalist groups, anarchists or the
yellow vest protesters.