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Antiwar Protests
Australia: Protestors express deep disgust with US war plans
By our correspondents
20 February 2003
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WSWS correspondents in a number of Australian cities spoke
to participants at the anti-war rallies last weekend. Altogether
around a million people marched in all the capital cities as well
as in many smaller regional centres and towns across the country.
The interviews contain a range of opinions expressed by the
broad assortment of people of different ages and social backgrounds
who joined the protests. What is common to them all was a deep
disgust at the US war plans, a sense of common purpose with others
around the world, and the feeling that their views have been completely
ignored by the Howard government, the media and political establishment.
Melbourne
Catherine Skipper, a retired teacher, told WSWS: I oppose
the war because it is no solution. The build-up to the war gives
me the impression that the issues are more complex than just oil
in the Iraq of Bushs daddy. What is happening does not correlate
to what is said by the US.
The US is making a bid for global power. I cant
explain it any other way. Ive always felt that George Orwells
1984 had a basis in faint trends he must have perceived
then, but are very clear now. Australia has a history of entering
every single war ever since the Boxer Rebellion. Howard has a
dreadful inferiority complex. The capitalist system seems to need
war.
Payam and Avin Ismael, two sisters
aged 13 and 16 whose family comes from Iraq, said: Life
in Iraq is already destroyed enough. It is going to be horrible.
The nation is going to be wiped out this time. In 1999 we went
backhospitals were ruined, they had barely any medicine.
Last month our grandmother died, she was only in her 60s. No medicine
was available for her. If she was here she wouldnt have
died.
Everyone knows this war is about power and oil. The government
doesnt care about the people. Howard is just Bushs
doormat. The United Nations is not helping the people of Iraq.
George Bush is the same as Hitler. In the future people are going
to look back at him and say he was the next Hitler.
Adrian Dunlop, 30, formerly a student, presently unemployed,
said: Ive been looking at the way Howard and Blair
are acting, when people all around them are less than enthusiastic,
but they are trapped into war. They dont want to concede,
theyve already decided on it. Theyre pushing so hardit
must be something Bush and company have told them privatelyit
seems very sinister to me.
Why does Howard use this
term pre-deployment of troops? The deployment is already
taking place. What sort of language is this hes using? Its
a fraud, its a joke. Were not likely to see a war
crimes tribunal against the US government. But in reality they
have targetted the civilian population in Iraq. There are at least
three war crimes they are guilty of, whether directly or indirectly.
Patrick Callaghan, a third year psychology major at Melbourne
University, said: In the long run, it is a critical masssheer
numbers are against war. I am here because of the implications
of war, what it does do to people, not the sanitised media version.
A lot of people have been de-sensitised to what war really is.
With a few friends I have been looking at ways to make
it a reality for peoplea form of mass art. We want to use
photography, film clips of real war images, showing the realities.
People dont realise fully what they are. Art has to be saying
something about the war.
Tricia Haddom, a part-time student with three children, said:
I came because like all the other people I want peace in
the universe. I think this war is not about Bush taking on Bin
Laden but more about oil and the US wanting to dominate the world.
I think Howard is trying to keep in good with Bush, our
traditional allies. Howard is supposed to represent us. It is
the same with Aboriginal reconciliation. Thousands of people want
it but he keeps just going against the majority. He is not taking
heed; he is like some autocratic headmaster with his own agenda.
Leon, a senior student from McKinnon Secondary College, said:
I dont like being lied to by our government, I just
cant trust anything they say. Howard is in cahoots with
Bush, even though it is well known Bush has contacts in the oil
industry and is speaking for those interests.
By having a war it diverts from the situation occurring
at home in the United States. If you look at the situation, US
children dont get an education. It seems like in the US
they are creating an environment of paranoia like they did during
the Cold War.
Steve Percy, 16, student at Footscray City Secondary College,
said: This is the first demonstration Ive been to.
I believe George Bush first wants oil, then second because he
thinks he owes it to his father and they want to flex American
muscle.
Howard doesnt have a view of his own. He thinks
its better for Australia. America will write itself into the history
books and Howard wants Australia next to it. The UN is misdirected.
I thought that its purpose was to bring peace. The weapons inspectors
are acting for America. If they want to stop weapons they should
disarm America.
Sydney
Ryan, 24, commented: I came
to show solidarity with everyone else around the world who doesnt
want war. I dont want to feel idle or helpless at a time
like this. This war is all about oil. It is all about multinationals
and power. It is a debasement of human life and I dont understand
it. If this war happens it is an awful betrayal against humanity.
Australias involvement is terrible. The Howard
government is pandering to Bush because hes always had a
chip on his shoulder because Australia is not a power in the world,
so he lines up with America. I dont believe the UN will
support this war. How can it? It is a war based solely on oil
and money.
Keiran and Mathew, both 17, have just finished high school.
We came because we wanted to be counted. We wanted to help
make up the numbers. We didnt know there would be this many
people here though. This war is for the same reason as war always
isto build their economy. It is about oil. It is something
we dont need. I dont think terrorism has got anything
to do with it.
Whats been happening in the UN shows that its
got no power. The US just does what it wants. Bush is saying were
going in anyway. We will still oppose the war if the UN
backs it. Why do we have to worry about [a threat from] a country
with just 23 million people. They say its because Iraq mistreats
the Kurds, but Turkey is right next door and it mistreats the
Kurds and the US supports them. Its just lies.
Bob, a 59-year-old retired accountant, came with his wife.
Were here because theres nothing else we can
do. This seems to be it. The government doesnt listen to
ordinary peoples views. I think the war is about oil and
quite a bit of American paranoia. They always seem to have to
have some enemy. I can still remember the domino theory
and Vietnam. This is the same thing.
Im certain that Iraq has dangerous weapons. Im
certain that Saddam Hussein is an evil dictator and doing many
of the things that are being attributed to him. But I simply want
to see the issue resolved through a peaceful process and in a
legal way. I dont want Australia to be involved with a war
crime, which is what this war will be without the UN.
If the UN calls for war it will probably affect my attitude,
but Id still like to be convinced it was necessary. At the
moment Im deeply suspicious of about every argument I hear
in favour of war. There doesnt seem to be too many people
anywhere in favour of the Bush administrations policies.
I wish I knew why Howard was supporting them. Id like him
to explain it to me. The only thing I can see is that he is just
being carried along by his own stupidity, but more than that,
I simply cant understand it.
Rajar Singh, a computer technician, was one of a number of
regular WSWS readers who took part in the Sydney demonstration.
I came today to protest against the war, but more than
that, I came to protest against the existing system. The pretext
for this war is the claim about weapons of mass destruction.
But the real reasons are that the major powers are competing for
control of the worlds resources and profits. Oil is a major
factor in this war, so is strategic positioning. The US is trying
to dominate Central Asia, the Middle East and the Korean peninsula.
We are being dragged toward a greater global conflict.
We need to have a long perspective toward this. A protest
is not enough. This movement has to be channeled so that people
are made aware of what is happening and all the complexities of
what is happening in American and world politics. The French and
German governments are seen by some as opposing the war, but they
have a hidden agenda. Their opposition is because they are not
getting their cut. The Russians are not getting their cut. They
are coming out because they are threatened by the US but they
have the same motivedomination.
This movement has to oppose everything capitalism represents.
Opposing Bush is not enough. Bush is just a manifestation of the
class forces at this time. What we are seeing now is the naked
face of American capitalism and capitalism per se.
Power is controlled by a few, by the elite. Socialists
are trying to overcome the elite and put the power where it should
bein the hands of the working class. The working class has
to move away from nationalism and racial and ethnic and linguistic
differences and form an alliance around the world. Socialism cant
be built in isolation. We have to learn from what happened in
the Soviet Union.
Adelaide
The WSWS received the following comments from two supporters
who attended the February 16 demonstration in Adelaide, the state
capital of South Australia. An estimated 100,000 people marched
in the city, which has a population of one million.
We distributed SEP leaflets, downloaded from wsws.org,
and entered into many conversations. Although many marchers had
unreal expectations of the power of petition and protest, almost
all were aware that the war is about the world domination by US
capitalists and their allies over the rest of the world, and that
weapons of mass destruction etc., etc., is a
con.
It was inspiring to see so many thousands of people uniting
under the banner of No War Against Iraq. We plan to
attend the next rally and distribute more leaflets. Thank you
for providing such great material.
Newcastle
Leo, a high school student, said: I disagree with the
imminent war on Iraq but it seems to be going ahead. I dont
believe Bush is going to war because of the existence of weapons
of mass destruction. I believe the US wants to control the oil
in Iraq and also in the Middle East. I dont know enough
about the position of the Labor Party but I am opposed to a war
under any circumstances. If the UN backs a war I would be disappointed
and it would not make it right. I dont think that any body
should have the right to endorse a war on Iraq.
Perth
Allan Browne, a primary school teacher, said it took a lot
to get him motivated but he came to the rally because he was angry
at the hypocrisy and lies. This war drive is a tragedy. Im
interested in linguistics and language is being mangledlike
a war for peace. I have a seven-year-old son [who
is] asking deep questions. The future scares me.
Maite said: War is never a solution, it always creates
ongoing problems that to this day require more war. America is
not any better than terrorists, they demonstrate arrogance by
assuming they are undefeatable. Bush has lost his mind at the
expense of the earth and the people on it. Maybe we should give
peace a chance for once.
Mary attended the rally with her daughter and granddaughter.
This war has been on the agenda since Bush was elected and
they are making up the reasons to justify it, she said.
Originally from Britain, Mary said that she was disgusted with
the British Labor Party. Tony Blair doesnt represent
the working class in Britainthis is a betrayal.
See Also:
Sydney: Australias largest ever
demonstration
[17 February 2003]
Melbourne: 200,000 take part in antiwar
protest
[17 February 2003]
Protests in Perth, Brisbane and other
Australian centres
[17 February 2003]
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