Monday 27 June 2011

Glastonbury Festival. U2 and its frontman Bono known for their global poverty-fighting efforts

U2 frontman Bono and his global efforts to fight poverty, is Ireland who labor in the performance at the Glastonbury Festival in England on Friday crashes are accused of dodging tax by was.

Uncut anti-capitalist art group, a 20-foot (6 m) inflated balloon emblazoned with the message "U 2, you pay taxes."

Security
Guard deflating the balloon and remove it on the ground before wrestled. About 30 people were involved in angry confrontation.

Bono fan, Gary Noble, 45, said he found the answer to the security of all "a little shocking."

He said, "I love U2 but I think everyone should pay their taxes. The campaigners have a right to voice their opinion".

Uncut Art argues that poverty in the developing world, Bono campaigns against the group Irish taxpayer at a time when they avoided simply hit the country's acute need of money.

Ireland, which has already accepted an international bailout tax increase, deep cuts in spending and rising unemployment as the debt burden facing the economy back from brink of bankruptcy, is trying to pull.

"Tax(es) nestling in the band's bank account should be helping to keep open the hospitals, schools and libraries that are closing all over Ireland," Art Uncut member Charlie Dewar said ahead of the protest.

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