British authorities have evicted dozens of "Occupy London" protesters
from the courtyard of St. Paul's Cathedral, where the anti-capitalist
activists had held continuous demonstrations since October.
City
officials accompanied by riot police dismantled about 50 tents at the
makeshift campsite outside the world-famous cathedral early Tuesday.
Police
said they arrested about 20 protesters, some of whom tried to form a
barricade and set off smoke bombs to prevent officials from clearing the
area.
But there were no reports of violence, unlike in several
U.S. cities where demonstrators and police have clashed in recent months
during the clearing of some of the Occupy Wall Street sites.
The
300-year-old cathedral was the site of one of the longest-running
demonstrations inspired by the movement, which started in New York last
year as a way to protest what activists say is economic inequality and
corporate greed.
Some of the demonstrators Tuesday vowed to continue their protests, despite having had their makeshift homes brought down.
"We're
seeing the state response to something which has been beautiful and
historical, and we're being evicted and it's not the end. Not by a long
shot," one protester warned.
The eviction had been anticipated
since a court ruled last week that the protesters did not have the right
to stage a permanent campsite in the public area, which is in the heart
of London's financial district. One-hundred tents had already been
removed from the facility following the ruling.
The protest had
proven controversial for the leadership of St. Paul's Cathedral, with
two senior Anglican clerics resigning over the church's initial attempts
to have the protesters removed.
http://www.voanews.com
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