Danish police made around 250 arrests in Copenhagen Wednesday
morning as an organized demonstration against the U.N. climate talks
converged on the Bella Center ahead of crucial negotiations at the
COP15 summit.
Kristina Larsen, a spokeswoman for Climate Justice
Action (CJA) -- the group organizing the protest -- told CNN that
police have used pepper spray and dogs to contain the protests.
Around
3,000 activists convened at two railway stations in the Danish capital
early on Wednesday and began their march towards the Bella Center --
the scene of the climate talks.
CJA is calling for activists to "take over the conference for one day and transform it into a 'People's Assembly'."
At
the same time protesters were marching towards the U.N. summit, a
number of delegates were planning to walk out of the Bella Center.
Larsen told CNN: "Around 300 people have marched out of the Bella Center shouting 'reclaim power'."
But the planned "People's Assembly" which was due to take place outside the building has, so far, been disrupted by the police.
Reporting
from inside the Bella Center CNN's Phil Black said that several hundred
activists were near the perimeter of the conference center.
"There
have been some clashes and scuffles, and the police have fired some
tear gas, but the protests have been reasonably low-level." Black said.
CJA say they are holding a "People's Assembly" to counter the "false solutions and elitism of the U.N. climate talks."
A
spokesman for the Copenhagen police told CNN that the majority of
arrests have taken place outside the Bella Center but there have been
no serious injuries.
"The protesters detained have been taken
to a temporary holding facility and most are expected to be released in
the next two hours," the Police spokesman said.
On Sunday,
police said they had detained 968 people, accusing protesters of
donning facemasks, throwing fireworks and stones, breaking windows and
setting vehicles alight. A further 212 people were arrested overnight
on Monday.
CJA says that protesters are engaged in "peaceful, nonviolent protest" and accused the police of being "out of control."
"We've
had a lot of police repression in the last couple of days," Larsen told
CNN. She also claimed that the environmental group Friends of the Earth
had been denied access to the Bella Center on Wednesday morning.
While
the protests were going on outside, inside it was being announced that
Danish minister Connie Hedegaard had resigned as president of the U.N.
climate change summit.
"The resignation is essentially
procedural," CNN's Phil Black said, "and she'll be replaced by the
Danish prime minister. It's a reflection of the fact that the talks are
now at the high-level phase, and it was deemed appropriate that the PM
should now take over."
World leaders have started arriving in
Copenhagen for the final days of "high-level" negotiations. British
Prime Minister Gordon Brown was among the first to arrive, holding
talks Tuesday with Australian and Bangladeshi counterparts Kevin Rudd
and Sheikh Hasina. U.S. President Barack Obama is expected to arrive
Friday.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told nations Tuesday
that they had the chance to "change the course of our history" if they
worked together to limit carbon emissions that are blamed for
increasing global temperatures.
"We have a chance -- a real
chance, here and now -- to change the course of our history," he said,
noting that countries had to work quickly, because nature doesn't
negotiate.
He urged both industrialized and developing countries
to do more during this week's Copenhagen summit toward reaching an
agreement on limiting the emissions, saying they "can and they must do
more."
"This is a time to stop pointing fingers," Ban added.
"This is a time to start looking in the mirror and offering what they
can do more of."
U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton wrote Tuesday that the United States
is ready to do their part to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions but that
other countries, especially poorer ones, must play their parts as well.
Clinton's
assertion came as a major international summit headed into the home
stretch. "Nearly all of the growth in emissions in the next 20 years
will come from the developing world," Clinton wrote in an opinion piece
for the International Herald Tribune. "Without their participation and
commitment, a solution is impossible."
The divide between rich and poor countries is one of the key fissures at the conference.
Developing
countries object to restrictions that they fear would keep them from
following the same path to prosperity taken by the United States and
other industrialized nations.
The man running the conference warned Tuesday that "nowhere near enough progress" had been made toward an agreement.
"There
is still an enormous amount of work and ground to be covered if this
conference is to deliver what people around the world expect it to
deliver," Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the U.N. Framework
Convention on Climate Change, said at a news conference.