Wall Street protests draw overseas attention hosted.ap.org     
  NEW YORK     (AP)  -- The Occupy Wall Street movement, which has spawned grass-roots  activities around the U.S. and prompted comments from President Barack  Obama, is now drawing political remarks from overseas.
   Poland's  former President Lech Walesa says he supports the Occupy Wall Street  movement in New York, saying he is planning either a visit or writing a  letter to the protesters.
   Walesa said the  global economic crisis has made people aware that "we need to change the  capitalist system" because we need "more justice, more people's  interests, and less money for money's sake."
   Meanwhile,  Iran's top leader said the wave of protests reflects a serious problem  that will ultimately topple capitalism in America. Ayatollah Ali  Khamenei claimed the United States is in a full-blown crisis because its  "corrupt foundation has been exposed to the American people."
   Khamenei's  remarks came a day after U.S. officials said the Obama administration  plans to leverage charges that Iran plotted to assassinate Saudi  Arabia's ambassador into a new global campaign to isolate the Islamic  republic.
   For the past 3 1/2 weeks, the  protesters have besieged a park in lower Manhattan near Wall Street to  rally primarily against corporate greed as what they say is the primary  cause for the country's failing economy.
   New  York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg visited them Wednesday at Zuccotti  Park, where protesters have been camped out since mid-September.  Bloomberg told them park owner Brookfield Properties plans to clean the  public space on Friday, and said they would be allowed to return after  the park is clean.
   Deputy Mayor Cas Holloway  said in a statement that the protest has "created unsanitary conditions  and considerable wear and tear on the park." He said Brookfield  Properties asked for police help to clear the park so it can be cleaned.
   Allison  Esso of Human Services Council, a group that supports the protesters,  was wary. "I'm hoping that they're not trying to undermine their ability  to protest," she said.
   The New York protest  has triggered sympathetic groups in other cities, who each stage their  own local rallies and demonstrations: Occupy Boston, Occupy Cincinnati,  Occupy Houston, Occupy Los Angeles, Occupy Philadelphia, Occupy  Providence, Occupy Salt Lake, and Occupy Seattle, among them.
  Protesters say they are in it for the long haul, despite the onset of cold weather.
   The  New York demonstrators gathered Wednesday at the headquarters of JP  Morgan Chase, where they'll continue to decry the expiration of the  state's 2 percent "millionaires' tax" in December.
   Meanwhile,  a lawyer for a woman pepper sprayed during an action last month is  demanding that the Manhattan district attorney prosecute an NYPD deputy  inspector on an assault charge. Commissioner Raymond Kelly said the  matter was being investigated by police internal affairs and the  Civilian Complaint Review Board.
   The New York  state comptroller has issued a report showing that Wall Street is again  losing jobs because of global economic woes. The job losses threaten tax  revenue for a city and state heavily reliant on the financial industry.
   The  industry shed 4,100 jobs in late spring and summer and could lose  nearly 10,000 more by the end of 2012, Comptroller Thomas Napoli said.  That would bring the total industry loss to 32,000 positions since the  financial meltdown of 2008.
   The sector employed 166,600 people in investment banks, securities trading firms and hedge funds as of August. |