Manhattan, NY +Level One For Protest+
Manhattan, NY +Level One For Protest+ A demonstration in front of 140 East 45th Street between Lexington Avenue and 3rd Avenue's at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations.
NYPD of the 17th Pct are requesting a level one mobilization and ESU for a group of protestors who chained themselves together.
U/D:
Cops have arrested 21 of the protesters that chained themselves together.
1 Comments:
At 6:05 PM, Anonymous said…
NEW YORK -- Police used bolt cutters to separate AIDS activists who had chained themselves to each other on Wednesday in the lobby of the building that houses the U.S. Mission of the United Nations.
The protesters had come to the building on East 45th Street to rail against what they said was the United States' failure to do enough to fight the global epidemic.
Charles King, one of the organizers, said they were denied admittance to deliver a letter, addressed to U.S. Ambassador John Bolton, which prompted the sit-in and chaining.
Police said they ended up taking 21 people into custody for resisting arrest.
The protesters chained themselves in a circle in the lobby of the mission around a large poster that featured a blowup of the letter, while chanting ``End AIDS Now!''
After police cut through the heavy chains to remove the protesters, some walked out and others, like King, had to be carried out.
The letter criticized the United States for not fulfilling everything it pledged at the U.N. General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS in 2001.
``We're here to bring public attention to the fact that the United States signed the declaration on AIDS ... but it's failed to keep many of the promises it made,'' King said.
On Wednesday, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan addressed a high-level meeting of the General Assembly where leaders from around the world gathered to think up new ways to tackle the deadly virus. Annan said the world has fallen far short of fulfilling the promises made five years ago to fight HIV/AIDS.
A major United Nations report on Tuesday found that AIDS had slowed but was still spreading.
Matthew Kavanagh, another of the organizers, said the United States wasn't allocating enough funds to the global AIDS fight, and criticized how AIDS prevention was being presented.
The Bush administration has come under criticism from some for emphasizing the abstinence aspect of prevention.
``We know how to treat and prevent HIV/AIDS but the United States refuses to implement the right policies because they put right-wing ideology above science,'' Kavanagh said.
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