As
Occupy
Wall Street
Reaches Banks
in Midtown,
Paper Planes
& UN
Response
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
TIMES
SQUARE,
October 28,
updated with video -- Taking the Occupy Wall
Street protest
into Midtown
to deliver
victimized
consumers'
letters to Bank of America,
Morgan Stanley
and others, a
march moved
west on 42nd
Street on
Friday,
surrounded by
police. JPMorgan Chase protest video here.
At
Bank of
America on
Sixth Avenue,
the letters
were delivered
in the form of
paper
airplanes
addressed to
"missing" CEO
Brian
Moynahan. Video here, and below.
Then
the
march,
complete with
two mock
pirate ships,
continued west
to Times
Square. Here
on a recent
Saturday
night, riot
cops and
police horses
kept
protesters
pinned down on
either side of
Broadway.
On
Friday in
broad
daylight, the
march moved
north to
Morgan Stanley
where a song
was sung. An
invitation was
extended to
Morgan
Stanley's
honchos to
come have
lunch down
near Liberty
Square; jokes
were made
about Chase
CEO Jaime
Dimon. The
east again to
Park Avenue,
where JPMorgan
Chase sits
on 48th Street
(JPMC
video here),
and Citigroup
nearby on
Lexington.
#OccupyWallStreet
on 42 St Oct
28, heading to
BofA
(c) MRLee
Back
down in the
park,
generators
used to heat
the protesters
have been
seized, while
in Bryant Park
corporate gift
shops can use
them.
At
the UN on
October 27,
Inner City
Press asked
for a comment
on the police
having
fractured the
skull of Iraq
veteran Scott
Olsen at
Occupy
Oakland. The
spokesman for
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon,
Martin
Nesirky, said
that the
authorities
were
investigating.
President
Obama, it's
said, learns
about Occupy
Wall Street
only through
the
newspapers.
That might
have to
change. Watch
this site.
At
UN,
Deby On TNC's
"Hypocrisy, "
400,000
Chadians
"Blocked" in
Libya, "No
Prisoners in
Chad"
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
September 19
-- Chad's
President
Idriss Deby
told Inner
City Press on
Monday that
there remain
400,000
Chadian's
"blocked"
inside Libya.
He
said the vast
majority had
gone to Libya
to work. Some
had been
recruited to
fight but by
both sides, he
insisted,
Gaddafi and
the National
Transitional
Council.
He said that
going forward
the
international
community
should help
reconcile all
Libyans,
"including
those who
worked with
Gaddafi." Video here, 1st part
of interview.
Deby
accused the
leaders of the
"New Libya,"
the National
Transitional
Council, of
hypocrisy as
many of them
previously
worked with
Gaddafi. He
said there
should be
greater
African Union
involvement in
the New Libya,
and chafed at
Inner City
Press'
statement that
South Africa
has led on
that issue,
and on that of
African
migrants.
"There
are other
African
countries on
the Security
Council," he
said, naming
Gabon and then
Nigeria.
Inner
City Press
asked Deby for
his view of
developments
in Sudan. Deby
spoke of
Southern
Kordofan and
"Nil Bleu,"
Blue Nile,
then said that
much remains
to be solved
between North
and South
Sudan.
"In
the
October 14 to
17 edition of
the local
newspaper
N'Djamena
Bi-Hebdo, the
publishers
included an
article
comparing
southern Sudan
with southern
Chad. The
prime minister
called the
article
'dangerous'
and asked the
HCC to act on
the matter. On
October 19,
the HCC met
with
journalists
and warned
N'Djamena
Bi-Hebdo in
particular and
all media
houses in
general to
"observe
ethics rules"
by not
printing
articles that
risked
inciting
hatred,
violence, or
separatist
sentiment."
Deby
said he didn't
know about the
case. He said
"come to Chad"
to see the
freedom of the
press, and
also said that
"there are no
political
prisons in
Chad." Inner
City Press
began to ask
of one example
-- Ibni
Oumar Mahamat
Saleh --
but Deby
didn't answer
on it.
Deby and the
author, smiles
on Libya,
other answers
not show
The
interview was
over, and
Inner City
Press left the
Plaza Hotel.
Deby will
speak before
the General
Assembly on
Friday, after
meeting with
Ban Ki-moon
the day
before. "Mais
vous savez de
tout,"
Deby said. Not
as much as
we'd like to.
Watch this
site.
These
reports
are
usually also available through Google
News and on Lexis-Nexis.
Click
here
for a Reuters
AlertNet
piece by this correspondent about Uganda's
Lord's Resistance Army. Click here
for an earlier Reuters
AlertNet piece about the Somali
National Reconciliation Congress, and the UN's
$200,000 contribution from an undefined trust
fund. Video
Analysis here