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Antiwar Protests
200,000 march in Paris against Iraq war
By a WSWS reporting team
17 February 2003
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Some 200,000 people marched in Paris on Saturday to protest
the impending US war against Iraq. The procession, which gathered
protesters from every region of France, took several hours to
march from the Place Denfert-Rochereau in the south of Paris to
the Place de la Bastille in the central east.

Students, trade unionists, professional workers, North African
and African immigrants joined in the march. In keeping with recent
French tradition, there were no speeches and the huge crowd dispersed
in the early evening hours.
The protesters carried signs denouncing George W. Bush and
the US government, accusing Washington of planning a brutal war
for oil. In a play on words, numerous demonstrators condemned
the threatened Busherie (butchery in French
is boucherie). We demand the veto was another
slogan (referring to Frances veto power in the United Nations
Security Council). Others shouted, We are all against war,
Bush, murderer! and With the UN or not, we dont
want war. Signs read Bush and Rambo, the couple of
the year, War is not a game and Give peace
a chance (the latter two in English).
The banner at the head of the march read, No to war against
Iraq. Justice and peace in the Middle East. Among those
leading the procession were French Communist Party (PCF) officials
Marie-George Buffet and Jean-Claude Gayssot, Green Party leader
Noel Mamère, the secretary general of the CGT (the CP-linked
union) Bernard Thibault, head of the CFDT (the union aligned with
the Socialist Party) François Chérèque, the
leader of the Farmers Confederation José Bové and
Alain Krivine of the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire (LCR).
Some 80 organizations, political parties and trade unions sponsored
the protest, including the official left and some of the far-left
parties, as well as the anti-globalization movement Attac, the
League for the Rights of Man, the Movement for Peace, the Movement
Against Racism and for Friendship Between Peoples, and Palestine
solidarity committees. There were also delegations on the march
from Lutte Ouvrière, the anarcho-syndicalist movements
and a host of other organizations. Trade unions represented included
the CGT, CFDT, SUD (a small left-wing union) and, in far smaller
numbers, the Catholic unions. Several dozen Americans also joined
the demonstration in Paris.
The leadership of the Socialist Party (PS) was out in particular
force, with the party secretary, François Hollande, and
former ministers Laurent Fabius, Jack Lang, Pierre Mauroy, Martine
Aubry and Elisabeth Guigou all in attendance. This delegation
had a certain significance. PS leaders have generally declined
to show their faces in public since the partys electoral
debacle last spring.
Demonstrations took place in 80 French cities, among the largest
in Toulouse, Bordeaux, Nice and Marseilles. Organizers estimate
that at least half a million people participated in these protests.
As substantial as they were, the protests in France were dwarfed
by the mass demonstrations in Britain, Germany and Spain. The
present international and national political conjuncture has a
great deal to do with this. The ongoing conflict between American
and French imperialist interests has permitted the government
of Jacques Chirac to posture as peace-loving and humanitarian.
This misconception is reinforced by the media and the official
left.
The demonstrations had something of the character of officially
sponsored events. While neither the government party, the UMP
(Union for a Popular Movement), nor its coalition partner, the
UDF (Union for French Democracy), supported the demonstrations,
15 right-wing deputies signed an anti-war appeal and Philippe
de Villiers, the anti-European ultra-rightist, told journalists
that he intended to participate in the march.
The PS and PCF (Communist Party) officials present in Paris
expressed their basic agreement with the Chirac regimes
policy. Hollande reaffirmed the support of the PS for the government
over Iraq, explaining that this was the role of an opposition
conscious of its responsibilities. Buffet of the PCF told
the press, We are here to say no to war, yes to peace. Today,
we all feel a bit like citizens of the world in view of the breadth
of the mobilization on a world scale. I find that the position
of France is courageous, but I hope that this position will be
held right to the end. Thibault of the CGT commented, The
position of France has been firm. It is to be wished for that
our country rests on the principles that boil down to one thing:
international law.
Others like Jacques Nikonoff of Attac merely implied their
support for Chirac by raining all their fire on the US government.
He hoped that the rejection of war which is expressed in
the polls concretizes itself in the streets because the
desire of the US to consolidate its imperial supremacy goes hand
in hand with neo-liberal globalization.
There was no question about the depth of hostility felt by
the mass of demonstrators for Bush and US imperialism or their
genuine horror about the consequences of the impending war. In
discussions many also expressed scepticism about the motives of
Chirac in opposing the American plans, pointing to the current
French colonial-style intervention in the Ivory Coast.
Supporters of the WSWS intervened in the demonstration, distributing
thousands of copies of the French version of the statement, The
tasks facing the anti-war movement. Interviews with a number
of demonstrators in Paris will be posted in the coming days.
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