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<div><a href="http://ottsun.canoe.ca/News/OttawaAndRegion/2006/06/09/pf-1621810.html">http://ottsun.canoe.ca/News/OttawaAndRegion/2006/06/09/pf-1621810.html</a></div>
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<div>June 9, 2006 <br> </div>
<h2 class="sIFR-replaced"><span></span><span class="sIFR-alternate"><b>'These guys love secrecy'</b></span></h2>
<h3 class="sIFR-replaced"><span></span><span class="sIFR-alternate"><b>...and they're in town for mystery meeting</b></span></h3><b>By MEGAN GILLIS, OTTAWA SUN</b><br>
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<td><img height="8" src="http://www.canoe.ca/CanoeGlobalnav/invisible.gif" width="4"><br><b>David Rockefeller arrives at the Bilderberg meeting in Kanata last night. (Errol McGihon SUN)</b></td></tr></tbody></table>
<p>A RED Hyundai slows outside Kanata's Brookstreet Hotel, set amid the manicured green campuses of Ottawa's hi-tech firms. </p>
<p>"What's going on?" the driver asks, leaning out. </p>
<p>"Sir, there's a global crime syndicate meeting," cries Alex Jones, the host of an Austin, Tex., radio show who's been stalking the secretive Bilderberg Group for years. </p>
<p>He was one of a pack of alternative journalists, conspiracy theorists and just plain suspicious local folks who camped out last night and caught a glimpse, they said, of David Rockefeller, Henry Kissinger, Queen Beatrix of Holland, former
N.B. premier Frank McKenna and a host of other bigwigs. </p>
<p>They might well have -- all those names were on a rare, unsigned Bilderberg press release, Canadian Press reported. </p>
<p>New York Gov. George Pataki, the heads of Coca-Cola, Credit Suisse, the Royal Bank of Canada and two figures behind the U.S. invasion of Iraq -- Richard Perle and Ahmad Chalabi -- are also in town, according to the release.
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<p>One no-show was Prime Minister Stephen Harper. But he's already addressed the group at a 2003 meeting in France. </p>
<p>DETAINED AT AIRPORT </p>
<p>There's still a strong Canadian contingent this year, including Power Corp.'s Paul Desmarais and Heather Reisman, of Indigo Books. </p>
<p>Talk-show host Jones said he almost didn't make it. </p>
<p>He said he was detained at the Ottawa Airport for more than 12 hours by border guards who seemed to know who he is. </p>
<p>It was no coincidence, Jones insisted. </p>
<p>"These guys love secrecy -- 125 of the most elite people on the planet meeting together and setting policy," Jones said. "It's diabolical -- world government, global taxation. On the agenda here, they're debating (an impending) attack on Iran."
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<p>The Bilderberg Group -- named after the Dutch hotel where they first met in 1954 -- has as its stated goal to increase ties between Europe and North America. </p>
<p>Bilderbergers meet behind closed doors, they say, so the politicians, tycoons and royalty can speak frankly. </p>
<p>But even mainstream critics call them elitist. They've spawned a stream of conspiracy theories. </p>
<p>"A very powerful group of people who destroy every constitution on Earth to create a new world order" is the conclusion of Canadian Daniel Estulin who published a book that, he said, prominent Bilderbergers arranged to have banned.
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<p>The tiny group controls the world's 6 billion people, said Estulin, who, undeterred, is at work on a second book from his home base in Spain. </p>
<p>"It's safer for me there," he said darkly. </p>
<div><a href="mailto:megan.gillis@ott.sunpub.com">megan.gillis@ott.sunpub.com</a> </div>
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<div>Vision2020 Post by Ted Moffett</div><br>