The headlines buried deep within the yahoo links.
Instead of the usual input from human rights organizations, the G-8 Summit became a convention of corporateteers hawking their deals.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/summit_feast_and_famineThere was also an unmistakable corporate flavor here.In return for renting mobile phones, Cingular Wireless was permitted to hawk its hardware from a sprawling booth with a giant inflatable model of its X-shaped symbol.
But the human rights and other groups that usually circulate at G-8 summits were absent.
One group that has been a fixture at previous summits, the international aid group Oxfam, said it was told not to come.
At the G-8 summit in Kananaskis, Canada, two years ago, organizers officially allowed such outside groups to have a presence at the media headquarters like the convention center in Savannah. The group was on hand to praise or pan developments, said Lindsey Cruz, a group spokeswoman.
Last year, organizers allowed Cruz to attend the G-8 in Evian, France as a journalist for Oxfam's magazine, Exchange. The organizers knew Cruz was also handing out press releases, too, but looked the other way, she said.
But the American organizers turned her group down, Cruz said. First, they told Oxfam the G-8 would not admit freelance journalists. When she protested, they told her they would bar publications owned by non-governmental groups like Oxfam.
Bennett said the summit planning committee decided to exclude non-governmental groups because of space limitations and because the summit was designated a "national security special event." That put the Secret Service in charge of admission, and meant access was "based on need," he said.