Climate change protesters gather on Wall Street, block-off Broadway

Climate Change Activists Demonstrate On Wall Street
NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 22: A protestor sits on a pile of barricades during the "Flood Wall Street" protest on September 22, 2014 in New York City. The Flood Wall Street protest came on the heels of climate change march on September 21, that attracted over 300,000 protestors. (Photo by Bryan Thomas/Getty Images)
Photo by Bryan Thomas—Getty Images

One day after a massive climate change march reportedly drew roughly 300,000 people to New York City, a smaller group of protesters has gathered near the New York Stock Exchange in lower Manhattan to protest the role they say financial institutions have in furthering climate change.

Rallying on social media with the hashtag #FloodWallStreet, a crowd of a couple of thousand blue-clad protesters has tried to stage a sit-in on the NYSE steps and are blocking off lower Broadway nearby. Reports suggest that there has been at least one arrest and that a large contingent of police has gathered to quell the protest, which does not have a permit. Protest organizers said on their website that the rally, which began in Battery Park before marching over to the Financial District around noon, is aimed at the finance industry to “confront the system that both causes and profits from the crisis that is threatening humanity.”

Sunday’s People’s Climate March, which was apparently sanctioned by the NYPD, included a two-mile march through Manhattan and the marchers were joined at points by New York City major Bill de Blasio and United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki Moon.

The tagline for the group behind Monday’s protest is “Stop Capitalism. End the Climate Crisis.” The protesters unfurled banners with the “Flood Wall Street” slogan, while the hashtag popped up frequently on Twitter:

Some Twitter users reported that police had been using pepper spray in an attempt to control the crowd

https://twitter.com/YourAnonGlobal/status/514154224922669059