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Despite Arrests, Wall Street Protesters Vow To Continue

A demonstrator holds up a sign in front of the  New York Stock Exchange in New York City. Hundreds of activists affiliated with the "Occupy Wall Street" demonstrations have begun living in a park in the Financial District near Wall Street.
Spencer Platt
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A demonstrator holds up a sign in front of the New York Stock Exchange in New York City. Hundreds of activists affiliated with the "Occupy Wall Street" demonstrations have begun living in a park in the Financial District near Wall Street.

For more than a week, a group of protesters have been encamped at New York City's Zuccotti Park. They're part of a protest they've termed "Occupy Wall Street." While the group was intent on making a point about what they say is Wall Street's "greed and corruption," much of the media focus has been about the scattered nature of the movement.

But over the weekend, the protests turned serious and controversial when the New York City Police Department arrested 80 in a march from Lower Manhattan to Union Square.

As The New York Times reports, police said most were arrested for "disorderly conduct by individuals who blocked vehicular and pedestrian traffic, but also for resisting arrest, obstructing governmental administration and, in one instance, for assault on a police officer."

The protesters disagreed. They said they were arrested on sidewalks and for no reason. One video that has made the rounds online appears to show a police officer using pepper spray on protesters:

The New York Times reports today that police said the pepper spray was used "appropriately." Some protesters called it "police brutality."

The New York Daily News talked to a few of those arrested:

Other protesters released from jail Sunday complained they were pepper sprayed, roughed up, denied food and water and ridiculed by cops as "hippies."

"It was inhumane. We were treated like criminals, like we just raped someone," said Mariana Flor, 23, a student at Borough of Manhattan Community College, who was arrested on disorderly conduct charges.

She said she was squeezed into a police van with 15 other protesters and taunted by cops.

"They held water bottles in front of us and drank them. They laughed at everyone and called us 'liberals' and 'hippies,' " Flor said of the police. "They told us we're losers."

For their part in , the organizers vowed to continue the protests.

"Drums blared for hours into the night when the Assembly wasn't in session, until the time came for quiet," they wrote. "The drummers ended by reciting from the Principles of Solidarity we approved in Friday's General Assembly in the rain. Before the police lined along the Broadway side of the plaza, they cried together, 'We are daring to imagine a new socio-political and economic alternative that offers greater possibility of equality.'"

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Eyder Peralta
Eyder Peralta is NPR's East Africa correspondent based in Nairobi, Kenya.