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NewsNovember 30, 2015

PARIS -- Hundreds of thousands of people took part in rallies around the world Sunday, calling on leaders to halt climate change on the eve of a major conference in Paris. The nearly two-week conference comes more than two weeks after the Paris attacks...

By ELAINE GANLEY ~ Associated Press
Kristin Cook, right, of Potomac, Maryland, joins a rally Sunday outside the White House in Washington in support of the climate talks in Paris. (Manuel Balce Ceneta ~ Associated Press)
Kristin Cook, right, of Potomac, Maryland, joins a rally Sunday outside the White House in Washington in support of the climate talks in Paris. (Manuel Balce Ceneta ~ Associated Press)

PARIS -- Hundreds of thousands of people took part in rallies around the world Sunday, calling on leaders to halt climate change on the eve of a major conference in Paris.

The nearly two-week conference comes more than two weeks after the Paris attacks.

A state of emergency was imposed in France after the carnage, and marches have been banned.

But violence quickly erupted between French riot police and a group of several hundred at a major square in Paris that was the site of a peaceful demonstration earlier.

Police fired tear gas to disperse protesters throwing projectiles.

An organizer of the rallies, Avaaz, said that early estimates of marchers around the globe show 570,000 people marched in 175 countries.

Here are some of the rallies that took place in Europe on Sunday.

Paris

Thousands of demonstrators gathered in central Paris and formed a human chain along the route of a long-planned protest march that was banned by the French government in a security crackdown following the Nov. 13 Paris attacks.

Nearby, thousands of shoes, some decorated, were placed at the Place de la Republique to symbolize the many feet that could not march because of the ban.

But violence erupted as the day progressed with several hundred people, some of them masked, throwing objects at riot police blockading the square in a bid to break through.

Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said 174 people were jailed for possible charges.

He said, separately, 26 people have been placed under house arrest, stressing they weren't militants but people known for violence in the past.

Some protesters chanted "a state of emergency is a police state."

Paris police chief Michel Cadot said a group of 200 or 300 people violated a ban on protests under the country's state of emergency.

Cadot said the group lobbed glass bottles and other projectiles, including candles set out in homage to the 130 victims of the extremist attacks.

Shoes laid out at the earlier ceremony also were tossed about.

Police fired numerous rounds of tear gas to disperse the group.

President Francois Hollande denounced the violence by a minority as "scandalous," both because the clashes were caused by "disruptive elements" that have nothing to do with environmental activists and because they occurred at Place de la Republique, which has been a memorial square for the victims Paris attacks.

He said "everything will be done" to ensure they are not present during the conference.

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Prime Minister Manuel Valls also denounced the violence in a tweet, saying that respecting the square, used to pay homage to attack victims, "is to respect the memory of victims."

It was not immediately clear whether those involved in the violence were from a specific group.

A known climate pressure group, 350.org, said the protesters were "unaffiliated with the climate movement and broke "the non-violent pledge that every group involved in the climate coalition" signed off on.

The protests were held ahead of the critical global warming talks outside Paris beginning today.

Spain

Thousands of people took to the streets of several Spanish cities to demand a commitment from world leaders to halt climate change in what organizers are calling the largest pro-environment mobilization in Spain to date.

Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace both said around 20,000 protesters marched between Cibeles and Puerta del Sol in Madrid, while thousands also marched through cities such as Barcelona, Bilbao, Las Palmas, Murcia, Pamplona, Seville, Valladolid and Zaragoza.

At a march through the streets of Madrid, one banner read, "I am marching for my children and grandchildren," and another said "We don't have a planet B."

"Well, to be honest we don't expect much (from the politicians). That's why we are here," said Incarnacion Florin. "We have to do something. It must make a difference."

The gatherings were organized by more than 400 Spanish non-governmental organizations and other groups.

Others around Spain were organized by the Alliance for the Climate and call on world leaders to reach "a fair, ambitious and binding agreement to avoid the worst consequences of climate change and accelerate the transition toward renewable sources of energy by 2050.

London

Thousands of people marched through London, urging world leaders not to blow their chance to take strong action on climate change.

Actress Emma Thompson, designer Vivienne Westwood and Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn are among demonstrators urging politicians to strike a binding agreement at climate talks in Paris.

Corbyn told the crowd the talks were "an enormous opportunity" to tackle "pollution, climate change, inequality, environmental refugees, war refugees and resources wars. If we are to make a real difference in Paris, all these issues have got to be thought about and addressed."

Thompson said that climate change, once seen as a fringe cause, was now "the issue of the 21st century."

Numbers at the London march from Hyde Park to the Whitehall government district were swelled by the ban on a protest march in Paris.

Germany

About 4,000 people held a rally in the German capital, marching from Berlin's train station to the Brandenburg Gate to listen to speeches and music.

The protesters called on the delegates at the Paris conference to set ambitious targets, using an array of signs, including a picture of a polar bear with "Save Me" written on it, or simply "Stop Global Warming."

"I hope that there is a climate agreement that really helps, but I fear actually that the countries and government leaders will only agree to something that won't help, primarily a weak agreement that will not help the living conditions on this planet," said Dr. Anton Hofreiter, member of the Green Party in Germany's parliament.

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