Geneva on high alert as thousands march in anti-G7 protest

WorldPolitics
14 Jun 2026 • 11:51 PM MYT
DPA International
DPA International

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Image from: Geneva on high alert as thousands march in anti-G7 protest
Demonstrators hold a banner reading 'No G7, No NATO: Overcome Helplessness' during a protest organised by the “No-G7” coalition of more than 60 associations, trade unions and left-wing groups against what they describe as fascism and imperialism, one day ahead of the upcoming G7 Summit. (is associated with: «Geneva on high alert as thousands march in anti-G7 protest») Michael Kappeler/dpa

A large protest march against capitalism, in support of the Palestinians and in favour of numerous other causes has begun in the Swiss border city of Geneva, with police expecting up to 50,000 participants.

Sunday's protest was organized by a No G7 coalition of several dozen groups ahead of the Group of Seven (G7) summit in the French town of Évian located on the other side of Lake Geneva, which kicks off on Monday.

The demonstration is taking place in Geneva because France declined to issue permits for any protests near the G7 summit venue, the Geneva city government said, criticizing the decision. Geneva lies around 50 kilometres south-west of Évian.

Geneva airport will also serve as the arrival point for the leaders attending the summit and their delegations on Monday, as it is the nearest airport to the venue.

Geneva's city centre has been in a state of emergency for days: Hundreds of luxury shops and banks, as well as hotels and supermarkets, have boarded up their facades and shop windows with plywood panels out of fear of unrest.

At a summit in Évian in 2003, rioters smashed windows, looted shops and caused millions in damage in Geneva.

That protest was also directed against a summit in Évian, at the time a G8 meeting that still included Russia.

A coalition of around 60 groups called for Sunday's protest against the G7. Geneva police have this time mobilized reinforcements from across the country.

Several thousand officers have been checking vehicles and the identity papers of passers-by throughout the city for two days.

In bright sunshine, several thousand people gathered at a meeting point in a park on the shores of Lake Geneva, carrying placards, according to initial estimates.

Many participants carried Palestinian flags. The different groups include feminists, trade union representatives, Kurds and a "revolutionary bloc," a spokeswoman said ahead of the event.