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Antiwar Protests
Thousands march in Detroit
By Shannon Jones and Lawrence Porter
17 February 2003
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Braving sub-freezing temperatures, close to 5,000 demonstrators
marched through downtown Detroit on Saturday to oppose the threatened
war against Iraq. The protest was sponsored by the Michigan Emergency
Coalition against War on Iraq, and culminated in a rally at the
Cobo Hall convention center.
The demonstrators filled Washington Avenue outside Cobo Hall
with a sea of signs and placards. There were a wide variety of
ages represented, from high school students to working adults
and retirees, and included considerable numbers of teachers, health
care workers and immigrant workers. Signs carried by demonstrators
drew the connection between the economic interests motivating
the US drive to warDont trade lives for oil;
How did our oil get under their sand? and Bush,
Cheney, Rumsfeld, Axis of Oil. Others drew attention to
the ongoing assault on social programsSchools not
bombs read one placard.
The WSWS spoke to a Pakistani immigrant who is employed as
a medical technician in Detroit. We dont need a war,
innocent people will die, he said. If we think Iraq
is such a big threat, why dont we think North Korea is such
a big threat? They say Iraq is complying with the weapons inspectors.
We should be looking for a way to solve this peacefully. I think
if the US goes to war it will lose trust and respect.
He was outraged by the harassment of immigrants: Yesterday
I received a notice from AT&T saying they would disconnect
my phone because I had been calling Pakistan. I have to give them
a letter explaining why I was calling. My kids were born here,
theyre Americans; to them this is their country. It is the
same with me. If it is supposed to be a free country, then it
should really be free.
Most demonstrators were not able to get into the concluding
rally held in Cobo Hall because march organizers had only reserved
a conference room seating 1,200. Thousands of marchers were left
to mill outside in the convention center lobby.
A number of speakers at the rally made impassioned pleas against
the threatened war. The Detroit area is home to a large community
of Iraqi-Chaldean immigrants. A spokesman from the Chaldean Federation
of America spoke of the conditions he witnessed in Iraq following
the Gulf War: In 1991 I visited Iraq as part of a delegation
with the Red Cross. I witnessed damage to infrastructure that
left the country in paralysis and chaos. I saw people dying of
hunger in the streets of Baghdad. The images of Iraqi children
in hospitals still haunt me. I would like to bring to the attention
of the US State Department that there are 50,000 Chaldean refugees
all over the world, stranded. This is one of the tragic consequences
of the war.
Another speaker noted that over 40,000 homes in Detroit had
their water shut off and thousands more had gas and electricity
cut off. We dont hear anything from Washington about
these problems, the speaker stated.
UAW Secretary-Treasurer Elizabeth Bunn declared, It is
our duty to protest this war. However, she did not explain
why the UAW did not mobilize even a token delegation of auto workers
to attend the protest. The only reason Bunn and other UAW officials
were at Cobo Hall in the first place was to attend the state Democratic
Party convention going on downstairs. While thousands marched
in the cold, UAW leaders were busy hailing newly elected Michigan
Governor Jennifer Granholm, who has outlined a program of massive
cuts in education and social programs.
The only Democratic politician to address the rally was Congressman
John Conyers of Detroit. He had no policy to offer except more
protests. He made the fraudulent claim that the drive to war could
be halted by exerting sufficient pressure on the Democratic Party
and the ruling establishment in Washington.
Lansing, Michigan
Several thousand protesters
also marched and rallied in LansingMichigans capital
and home to the 40,000-student campus of Michigan State University.
The march began at MSU in East Lansing and continued for more
than three miles in below freezing temperatures to the State Capitol
building in downtown Lansing.
The spirited march spread out for close to a mile, and included
peace activists, students from MSU and the University of Michigan
in Ann Arbor, Muslim students opposed to the war, veterans and
others.
Local Democratic Party officials addressed the crowd at the
concluding rally. When Lansing Mayor Tony Benavides made a gesture
of appreciation for American soldiers going to the Persian Gulf,
the crowd let him know that rather than sending them good wishes
he should call for the troops to be brought back home.
The WSWS spoke to Christopher,
a graduate student at MSU, who made a sign against the war with
a poster of the Guernica painting by Picasso. He said
he had read the WSWS article on the decision of the Bush administration
to cover up the Guernica tapestry at the United Nations when Colin
Powell gave his February 5 report.
I decided to do this because of the cover up of Guernica
at the Powell speech, Christopher said. I felt it
was important for people to see that if this administration is
so fearful of a painting, it indicates what they are saying about
their cause. If they are afraid of speaking before this painting
it testifies to the power of art and the fragility of their arguments.
The cover up of the painting is an indictment of the policies
of the government itself.
Supporters of the Socialist Equality Party, including college
and high school students, handed out thousands of copies of the
WSWS statement The tasks facing the antiwar movement
at the Michigan protests.
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