
Occupy Rome turns violent —
Colorful smoke flares ignite in downtown Rome as demonstrators march on Saturday, October 15, and the Occupy Wall Street movement goes global. What started as a peaceful protest turned violent, resulting in injuries to at least 70 people.

Occupy Rome turns violent —
Protesters gather peacefully at the Colosseum in Rome on Saturday. Tens of thousands marched downtown, setting the capital under security lockdown.

Occupy Rome turns violent —
A demonstrator breaks a window with a fire extinguisher. Anarchists -- some wearing ski masks and belonging to a group called "Black Bloc" -- torched cars, broke windows and clashed with police.

Occupy Rome turns violent —
A protester attacks a police van with a pole. A spokesman for Mayor Gianni Alemanno, who condemned the violence, said 40 of the injured people were police officers.

Occupy Rome turns violent —
An anti-riot police officer reacts as protesters throw flares. The Piazza San Giovanni transformed into a battleground between police and protesters.

Occupy Rome turns violent —
Police arrest a man during the rally. No arrest numbers were available late Saturday.

Occupy Rome turns violent —
Rowdy protesters attack the police. Rocks, bottles and tear gas canisters flew, and in the mayhem, an Interior Ministry building caught fire.

Occupy Rome turns violent —
Police walk past a flaming van. Police battled with water cannons while the anarchists remained armed with knives, bats, Molotov cocktails and fireworks, Newsweek correspondent Barbie Nadeau told CNN.
![A man holds a sign amid the protests Saturday. "[The movement has] been completely hijacked by these violent factions, and the police are nervous, and the situation is very tense," Newsweek's Nadeau said.](https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/111015092855-occupy-rome-09.jpg?q=w_3790,h_2691,x_0,y_0,c_fill/h_447)
Occupy Rome turns violent —
A man holds a sign amid the protests Saturday. "[The movement has] been completely hijacked by these violent factions, and the police are nervous, and the situation is very tense," Newsweek's Nadeau said.