Swift descent into violence at the Crown casino by Charlotte Denny and Patrick Barkham in Sydney
This was supposed to be three days of high-powered talks bringing together in Melbourne some of biggest names of the Asian-Pacific region. Instead, the World Economic Forum descended into Seattle-style violence as anti-capitalist demonstrators clashed with police.
The success of demonstrations last November in scuppering vital trade talks has given new life to the protesters - many of whom had rallied to the anti-capitalist cause via websites which sprung up from the demonstrations against the World Trade Organisation in Seattle.
At least eight people were taken to hospital, including two police officers, as protesters tried to prevent delegates entering the Crown casino. Police reported that there were 1,500 demonstrators, although the organisers claimed nearer 10,000.
Western Australia's right-wing prime minister, Richard Court, was stranded in his vehicle for 20 minutes as protesters daubed it with paint and let down the tyres, while Aboriginal activists "arrested" Mr Court for supporting mandatory sentencing, which leads to the jailing of people in Australia for petty crime.
Mr Court was forced to turn back after 50 baton-charging police officers failed to dislodge the protesters' barricades. Chosen for its secluded riverside site, the casino and other probable targets of anti-globalisation feeling nearby had been heavily fortified against the protesters.
What is worse for the organisers of the conference is that the demonstrations slowed the WEF's registration programme and reduced the number attending speeches and dinners on the first day of the conference, as up to 200 delegates stayed in their hotel rooms. Observers inside the building reported some of the events were only 50% full.
BRAVE FACE
After Melbourne, the next stops on the travel itinerary of the global summit protesters are the annual meetings of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund in Prague later this month. In public they are putting a brave face on things, but in private the world's top trade negotiators admit that the chances of a new round of trade negotiations starting by the end of the year have shrunk to zero.
Diplomats from the 139 members of the World Trade Organisation had hoped that the collapse of attempts to launch a new round last December would prove a temporary setback. Now they are blaming the US presidential elections for the delay, noting that any substantial negotiations are impossible until the political make-up of the new administration is known.
Next year, the world's most populous country, China, joins the Geneva based body, which will tip the balance of power inside the organisation away from the "Quad" - Japan, Canada, the US and the EU - who have traditionally managed the global trading system and in the past provided political impetus for new talks.
As a price of joining, China is opening large parts of its industry to competition from foreign firms, which is expected to cause disruption throughout its economy. Beijing will not be enthusiastic about starting another set of talks to open further markets until it has digested the fallout.
Privately, Quad policymakers admit that there is no political momentum for a new round, and that the trade agenda is bogged down in Geneva bureaucracy. Senior trade policymakers are now whispering that the organisation's rambunctious New Zealand head, Mike Moore may be a lame duck who will never see a trade round launched under his watch.
Indeed, time is running out for Moore who has only two more years at the helm of the WTO. The political fudge which shoehorned him into the job means he has a shorter than usual term, split with his rival, the Thai finance minister, Dr Supachai Panitchpakdi. Moore was the US's first choice and Supachai made himself so unpopular with US negotiators during the selection process, that some insiders doubt he will be able to muster sufficient support from the world's biggest trading nation to launch a round during his term of office which ends in 2005.
FRACTIOUS RELATIONS
Assuming Supachai's successor manages to get a trade round launched with a year of taking office, past experience suggests it will take five or six years to conclude. That suggests the earliest that the next round of talks will be signed off will be around 2012-13 - a gap of almost 20 years since the end of the Uruguay round and the longest gap between trade rounds since the founding of the WTO's predecessor 50 years ago.
The strains of running the global trading system without fresh negotiations are showing. Relations between the world's biggest trading blocs, the EU and the US, are increasingly fractious, with the two seemingly unable to solve arguments over hormone treated beef, Caribbean bananas and Washington's billion dollar export subsidies to US multinationals.
Any day now, the US will publish the latest list of EU goods it is targeting for sanctions under long running disputes over bananas and hormone treated beef. The US has been authorised to apply $300m of sanctions by the WTO because the EU's ban on beef and import regime favouring Caribbean bananas contravene global trading rules. But America's decision to rotate the list it targets has been described by EU negotiators as pouring fuel on the fire as it creates uncertainty for a greater group of producers. Battles behind the scenes between the world's trading powers are as heated as the fights outside their summits - and the protesters' anti-trade agenda appears to be getting the upper hand.