Toronto police pay $16.5m to protesters wrongfully held at 2010 G20 summit
Source: The Guardian
Toronto police pay $16.5m to protesters wrongfully held at 2010 G20 summit
Claimants to receive up to $24,700 in historic settlement
Police encircled 1,100 people and carried out mass arrests
Tracey Lindeman in Ottawa
Tue 18 Aug 2020 17.18 BST
About 1,100 protesters who were wrongfully detained at the 2010 G20 summit in Toronto will receive compensation from the citys police force after a historic C$16.5m (US$12.5m) settlement in a class-action lawsuit.
Under the settlement, which was announced late on Monday, each claimant will receive between $5,000 and $24,700, depending on the nature of their detention. They will also have their G20 protest-related records expunged.
Thousands of protesters travelled to downtown Toronto to protest against the convening of the G20 summit. The causes were numerous anti-globalization, anti-poverty, pro-environment, pro-gay rights and the protests leading up to the 2627 June summit were peaceful.
During the summit, however, police cars were set on fire and a small band of masked protesters incited vandalism and violence.
The police responded by encircling more than a thousand people including peaceful protesters, onlookers and journalists at various locations then carried out mass arrests. At one point, hundreds were kettled in a torrential downpour and left to shiver in the cold.
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Read more:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/18/g20-protesters-toronto-police-canada