Denver cleans up but protesters in New York cheer a reprieve
Dozens of police in riot gear pushed Wall Street protesters into retreat outside the state Capitol in Denver yesterday. The protesters retreated without resisting.
Many chanted: "Peaceful!" as they backed away from their encampment.
Authorities began taking down dozens of tents before dawn. Later, officers in helmets and carrying batons advanced on a line of protesters who had locked arms around the tents, including a makeshift kitchen.
A main downtown street running by the park was cordoned off and some bus services were disrupted.
The action came after authorities had given an 11pm Thursday deadline to clear the park.
In New York, meanwhile, the official cleanup of a plaza in lower Manhattan where protesters had been camped out for a month was postponed yesterday, sending up cheers from a crowd that had scrambled to clean the park on their own out of fear the official effort was merely a pretext to evict them.
Deputy Mayor Cas Holloway said the owners of the private park, Brookfield Office Properties, had put off the cleaning.
Supporters of the protesters started streaming into the park in the morning darkness well beforehand in a show of solidarity. There was still skepticism even after the protesters were told they could stay, for now.
"I'll believe it when we're able to stay here," said protester Peter Hogness, 56, a union employee from Brooklyn. "One thing we have learned from this is that we need to rely on ourselves and not on promises from elected officials."
The "mother" protest in New York that began a month ago has spawned similar encampments in cities across the US and world, and in places beyond New York it was clear that officials' patience was wearing thin.
A number of cities, like Denver, have been trying to get the protesters to stop sleeping on the streets and in parks.
In Trenton, New Jersey, protesters were ordered to remove tents from their encampment near a war memorial.
Boisterous cheers floated up from the crowd in New York as the announcement of the cleaning postponement circulated, and a small group soon marched away with brooms, saying they were going to clean up Wall Street, a few blocks away.
There were reports of a handful of arrests.
Brookfield, a real estate firm, had planned to power-wash the New York plaza section by section over 12 hours and allow the protesters back - but without much of the equipment they needed to sleep and camp there. The company called the conditions at the park unsanitary and unsafe.
But the company said it now believes it can work out an arrangement with the protesters that "will ensure the park remains clean, safe, available for public use."
Liane Nikitovich, 44, a fitness instructor, said she was buoyed by the news but also concerned that it was a postponement - not a cancellation.
Many chanted: "Peaceful!" as they backed away from their encampment.
Authorities began taking down dozens of tents before dawn. Later, officers in helmets and carrying batons advanced on a line of protesters who had locked arms around the tents, including a makeshift kitchen.
A main downtown street running by the park was cordoned off and some bus services were disrupted.
The action came after authorities had given an 11pm Thursday deadline to clear the park.
In New York, meanwhile, the official cleanup of a plaza in lower Manhattan where protesters had been camped out for a month was postponed yesterday, sending up cheers from a crowd that had scrambled to clean the park on their own out of fear the official effort was merely a pretext to evict them.
Deputy Mayor Cas Holloway said the owners of the private park, Brookfield Office Properties, had put off the cleaning.
Supporters of the protesters started streaming into the park in the morning darkness well beforehand in a show of solidarity. There was still skepticism even after the protesters were told they could stay, for now.
"I'll believe it when we're able to stay here," said protester Peter Hogness, 56, a union employee from Brooklyn. "One thing we have learned from this is that we need to rely on ourselves and not on promises from elected officials."
The "mother" protest in New York that began a month ago has spawned similar encampments in cities across the US and world, and in places beyond New York it was clear that officials' patience was wearing thin.
A number of cities, like Denver, have been trying to get the protesters to stop sleeping on the streets and in parks.
In Trenton, New Jersey, protesters were ordered to remove tents from their encampment near a war memorial.
Boisterous cheers floated up from the crowd in New York as the announcement of the cleaning postponement circulated, and a small group soon marched away with brooms, saying they were going to clean up Wall Street, a few blocks away.
There were reports of a handful of arrests.
Brookfield, a real estate firm, had planned to power-wash the New York plaza section by section over 12 hours and allow the protesters back - but without much of the equipment they needed to sleep and camp there. The company called the conditions at the park unsanitary and unsafe.
But the company said it now believes it can work out an arrangement with the protesters that "will ensure the park remains clean, safe, available for public use."
Liane Nikitovich, 44, a fitness instructor, said she was buoyed by the news but also concerned that it was a postponement - not a cancellation.
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