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| Tuesday, 25 June, 2002, 19:21 GMT 20:21 UK A reporter's life at the Summit Anything to liven up the conference centre
While world leaders meet in secluded quarters some distance away from the press, reporters head for the nearest convention centre, waiting for something to happen.
The strict structure of the high-level meetings means covering these high-profile events can be a rather sterile affair. But there are perks - free food for one. Goody bags and special media parties are another. So it may be, with this year's G8 conference a scant 30 hours in length, that reporters, cameramen and even interns will mourn the meeting's quick passing. Tight security This is the first such gathering of the G8 leaders since the terror attacks of 11 September and security is tight.
Instead of a mere few miles, the G8 leaders have decamped 60 miles west of the media headquarters in the centre of Calgary to the remote village of Kananaskis, high in the Canadian Rockies. Journalists are used to being kept at a distance, and they are also used to tight security. That includes the need to regularly produce credentials and to be X-rayed from head to toe several times a day. Waiting game Nevertheless, one can't help but think the hordes of Canadian Mounted Police and other law enforcement personnel amounts to overkill.
Furthermore, it's Calgary, a town so polite that jaded journalists from New York and Washington are out of their depth in dealing with the kindnesses afforded to them by - gasp! - total strangers. The throng of security men was enough for one reporter to ask "what exactly are they protecting us from?" Who knows? So far, what protests have emerged along the well-patrolled and neatly swept streets of Calgary have been a lark. Demonstrators were dolled up in giant papier-mache likeness of the heads of state representing the world's richest countries - Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Italy, Russia and the United States. So well done were they, that the mock-ups were nearly flattering. But for the blood-hungry media, it was a bit of a let down. In the meantime, reporters remain holed up in the Telus Convention Centre in downtown Calgary, awaiting dribs and drabs of news to be broadcast over dozens of television screens, in the hopes of reporting something exciting - or at least news. |
See also: 24 Jul 01 | Americas 14 Jun 02 | Middle East 13 Jun 02 | Americas Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Business stories now: Links to more Business stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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