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Bu-lat-lat (boo-lat-lat) verb: to search, probe, investigate, inquire; to unearth facts Volume 3, Number 37 October 19 - 25, 2003 Quezon City, Philippines |
Demonstrators
Gather in Cities Around the World By
Jack Garland
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to Alternative Reader Index
London
- Thousands of protesters demanding an end to the occupation of Iraq took to the
streets Saturday in London, Athens, Paris and other cities around the world,
chanting slogans against the United States and Britain. The
protests, the first major demonstrations since Saddam Hussein was ousted earlier
this year, come as the United States tries to gain international help in
rebuilding Iraq. The demonstrations were organized in each country by local
activist groups that have informal contacts with each other. London's
was the biggest protest, drawing 20,000 people. Demonstrators turned out in a
dozen other countries, including South Korea and Egypt. "No
more war. No more lies" proclaimed a banner pinned to the pedestal of
Nelson's Column in London's Trafalgar Square, where demonstrators rallied after
a march through the city. People of all ages, from gray-haired couples to
toddlers in strollers, joined the orderly stream of protesters marching from
Hyde Park. Some
young marchers chanted, "George Bush, Uncle Sam, Iraq will be your
Vietnam!" "I
don't believe the war with Iraq was right and the proof is we haven't found any
weapons of mass destruction," London protester Emma Loebid, 20, said.
"I think they should hand Iraq back to the Iraqis and get the troops
out." Demonstrators,
including those in London, also added the Palestinian cause to their campaign. Some
3,000 people marched in Paris, where a wide banner read, "American
Imperialism: Take your bloody hands off the Middle East." Others held
posters that read "Wanted: George W. Bush War Criminal." In
Beirut, thousands of Lebanese and Palestinian protesters demanded that U.S.
forces leave Iraq and that Israel to stop its attacks in the Palestinian
territories. Yasser
Arafat, the Palestinian leader, addressed the crowd by phone from his
headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah. "Together
with you until victory and together until (we liberate) Jerusalem," Arafat
said, his voice blaring over loudspeakers. Outside
the U.S. Embassy in Athens, demonstrators hurled bottles and yogurt at riot
police. About 3,000 protesters, chanting "Occupiers Out" and
"Freedom for Palestine," joined the rally. Protests
were also staged in other parts of Greece and on island of Crete, outside an
American naval base at Souda Bay. The base supports the U.S. 6th Fleet and spy
planes. In
Spain, thousands of people carrying anti-war banners, banging drums and wearing
white smocks marched through the streets of Madrid, Barcelona, Seville and
Malaga. "Oil kills," read a banner in Madrid. In
Seoul, thousands of activists protested a U.S. request to send South Korean
troops to Iraq. Protesters chanted "No war!" and carried banners
saying "End the occupation in Iraq" and "Oppose a plan to
dispatch S. Korean combat troops to Iraq." Some
4,000 protesters in the Turkish capital, Ankara, shouted slogans and unfurled
banners to support the Palestinian cause and demand an end to the U.S.-led
occupation of Iraq. Hundreds more gathered at a similar rally in Istanbul and
burned American and Israeli flags. In
downtown Cairo, about 50 political activists and journalists staged a peaceful
protest against Israeli attacks and the U.S.-led occupation. In
Warsaw, 100 young people protested the Polish military presence in Iraq,
marching with banners saying "Down with the global U.S terrorism" and
"We don't want to occupy with Bush." An
estimated 1,200 demonstrated in Brussels, while about 400 people marched through
downtown Berlin. In Stockholm, police said about 250 people staged a
demonstration. Opposition
to the war has always been strong in Britain. Several large peace protests were
held during the war, though none matched a huge rally on Feb. 15, before the
conflict began, when between 750,000 and 2 million people marched through
central London. Now,
questions about Prime Minister Tony Blair's tactics in trying to win public
support before invading Iraq have left his government struggling through its
worst crisis. The ruling Labor Party is still well ahead of the opposition in
opinion polls, but the public's faith in the government and in Blair has eroded.
A
new poll taken Sept. 11-16 and published Saturday in The Financial Times found
50 percent of those questioned said Blair should step aside. The newspaper did
not give the sample size or margin of error. The
London protest Saturday was timed for the eve of the governing party's annual
conference for "maximum political impact," said Andrew Burgin,
spokesman for Stop the War Coalition, one of the rally's organizers. Campaign
for Nuclear Disarmament, another organizer of Saturday's march, said a big
demonstration would send a strong message to the government that the public did
not condone what it called "lies" used to justify the war. Twenty-year-old Liban Kahiye, also in London, said, "I don't believe British and American troops should still be in Iraq. Everyday you hear stories of innocent people being killed that's not justice." September 27, 2003 Bulatlat.com We want to know what you think of this article.
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