Protests, Security, APEC Leaders and Road Closures
By Selwyn Manning
Amnesty International has set up a
billboard of photographs displaying human right’s abuses it
says are occurring in APEC member countries.
The
billboard is displayed on the corner of Queen and Wellesley
streets. It is part of a growing protest presence in
Auckland this week.
A public meeting will also be held
at the Methodist Mission at 370 Queen Street tonight at 7pm.
The meeting will discuss alternative APEC issues, and
demonstrate the affects of free market politics on
industrial working conditions and individual rights. The
meeting will also hear the latest of the East Timor crisis
and consider what the international community should do to
stop the killings in the former Portuguese colony.
A
major protest march is planned for Auckland tomorrow night
which is scheduled to begin at 8pm.
As a result,
security in Auckland is now at high alert with the first of
the world’s most prominent leaders about to arrive for the
APEC leader’s conference.
First of seven leaders due to
arrive today was the Mexican president. The remainder will
arrive tomorrow with US President Bill Clinton arriving in
the morning and the Chinese president in the afternoon.
The obvious police presence around Auckland will highten
today. Foreign security agents expressed fears that upgraded
rubbish bins on Queen Street posed possible bomb risks. The
bins have been removed.
More road blocks are scheduled
and arterial routes and motorways will be closed when
motorcades pass through.
Meanwhile, the APEC trade
ministers have agreed on abolishing all agricultural export
subsidies and unjustifiable export prohibition. This
recommendation will be put to their leaders, who will then,
if agreed, take it to the World Trade
Organisation.