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Police keep a close eye on approximately 1,000 protesters moving down University Avenue in Toronto, Friday, June 25, 2010. Police keep an eye on approximately 1,000 protesters making their way along College Street from Allan Gardens in  Toronto, Friday, June 25, 2010. Activists and protesters are confronted by police as they argue for not providing identification before marching along the streets of downtown Toronto during the, Friday, June 25, 2010. (Nathan Denette / THE CANADIAN PRESS)  Toronto police form a line on Carlton Street in advance of a protest on Friday, June 25, 2010. (Naomi Parness / CTV Toronto) Allan Gardens

Riot police turn back largest G20 protest yet

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CTV News Video

CTV News Channel: Naomi Parness at Allan Gardens
Protestors in Toronto have made their way to Allan Gardens and are upset with police for a number of random checks that were performed prior to their march through downtown Toronto.
CTV Toronto: Naomi Parness on the evening demonstration
Relations between police and protesters turned testy on Friday afternoon, with at least one protester wrestled down. Naomi Parness reports.
CTV News Extended: Confrontation leads to arrest on College
Toronto police make an arrest after an altercation on College Street during the protest march in downtown Toronto, Friday, June 25, 2010
CTV News Channel: Lisa LaFlamme on the faceoff
A standoff between riot police and 2,000 protestors moving towards the U.S. embassy in Toronto has resulted in the closure of the security perimeter fence.
CTV News Channel: Jee Yun Lee, CP 24
G20 Protestors are now moving west following a standoff at University Ave. in Toronto, but it is unknown whether or not they plan to move towards the security zone.
CTV News Channel: CP24's Craig Kielburger on the protest
A CP24 correspondent reports from the streets of Toronto, where he says there is an eclectic group of protesters lobbying for a variety of causes, from free transit to global environmental issues.
CTV News Channel: Naomi Parness amid the protest
A CTV correspondent says thousands of people intend to set up a tent city in the downtown core and protest the G20, which they believe accomplishes nothing and fails to represent the people.
CTV Toronto Extended: Aerial view of Allan Gardens protest
Hundreds of protesters gather at Allan Gardens in downtown Toronto on Friday. Police were moving through the area asking people to search their bags.

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Police keep a close eye on approximately 1,000 protesters moving down University Avenue in Toronto, Friday, June 25, 2010. Police keep an eye on approximately 1,000 protesters making their way along College Street from Allan Gardens in  Toronto, Friday, June 25, 2010. Activists and protesters are confronted by police as they argue for not providing identification before marching along the streets of downtown Toronto during the, Friday, June 25, 2010. (Nathan Denette / THE CANADIAN PRESS)  Toronto police form a line on Carlton Street in advance of a protest on Friday, June 25, 2010. (Naomi Parness / CTV Toronto) Allan Gardens

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Police keep a close eye on approximately 1,000 protesters moving down University Avenue in Toronto, Friday, June 25, 2010.

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Date: Fri. Jun. 25 2010 8:31 PM ET

Police temporarily shut the gates to the G20 security perimeter early Friday evening, as they attempted to head off the largest in a string of demonstrations to protest the international meeting.

Anti-poverty demonstrators had attempted to march south towards the security zone where the G20 summit will take place. But they were turned back when police with shields blockaded University Avenue.

Instead the protesters backtracked, marching east towards the park where the demonstration originated, trailed by police in full riot gear.

"I'm not a hell-raiser but I want my voice to be heard," one woman told CP24, adding that she decided to join the demonstration in response to the large number of police on the city's streets. "I thought I lived in a democracy and I don't think I do any more."

The protests led the Integrated Security Unit to close the security fence around the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, where the G20 summit will be held. A gate was later reopened at Yonge Street and Wellington Street, apparently to allow residents and business-owners inside the security zone to pass through.

As the march wound down, organizers said they would set up a collection of tents in Allan Gardens, camp there overnight, and join another large G20 protest to be held at Queen's Park on Saturday afternoon.

The demonstration attracted some 2,000 people at its peak, in spite of a heavy police presence and news that Ontario had quietly passed legislation that allows police to question and arrest anyone walking within five metres of the security fence in the city's financial district.

The crowd was the largest in a string of demonstrations in the lead-up to the G8 summit, which began Friday in Huntsville, Ont., and the G20 summit that starts Saturday in Toronto. But by 7 p.m., the number of protesters in the march has since dwindled to a few hundred people, CTV Toronto's Naomi Parness reported.

One image showed a group of people clad in black masks among the demonstrators. Reports had suggested that a radical group may split off from the main demonstration and move towards the security fence around the Convention Centre, but that never occurred.

Another image showed a sizeable group of helmeted police, standing six officers across, and stretching back down a shaded alley.

The demonstration was for the most part peaceful, aside from one incident in which a protester was reportedly arrested by police.

An immigrants' rights group called No One is Illegal also reportedly released red and black balloons into the air, in an apparent attempt to challenge restrictions on the city's airspace during the summits. (Authorities have banned kites and hot air balloons in the vicinity of the Convention Centre.)

Organizers used social media sites such as Twitter to post updates as the demonstration unfolded.

The Toronto Community Mobilization Network, a collection of protesters from different groups, said that police were searching people as they entered Allan Gardens park where the demonstration originated.

John Clarke, with the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty, called the large police presence "offensive."

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