|
WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Global
Antiwar Protests
Thousands join rallies in Pittsburgh and nearby cities
By Paul Sherman
17 February 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
A number of rallies, vigils and demonstrations took place in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and the smaller cities and towns in the
surrounding tri-state area. People gathered at county courthouses
and in public parks to show their opposition to the impending
war in Iraq.
In Pittsburgh, several
hundred people took part in a half dozen vigils and demonstrations
throughout the city. One rally was held to commemorate the 12th
anniversary of the bombing of the Ameriyah shelter in Iraq in
February 1991 during the first Gulf War. This bombing by US war
planes killed 317 men, women and children as they slept in an
underground bomb shelter.
John, a high school student who took part in the rally, said,
I came because we have to speak out against the war so we
are heard above the war drums that are beating. If we are drowned
out then they will do what they want. We have to show that we
are not for this war.
Gaggan, a university student at Duquesne University, explained
why he took part in todays rally. I am against this
war. It is unjust. Iraq is no threat to us. There is no real reason
that we should go to war.
This war is really about oil and oil concessions. They
want to kill people so that they can get oil. I think the mainstream
media is co-opted by the Bush administration. They just say whatever
the government wants them to say.
At least 10,000 people were killed in the last gulf war
and many more people will be killed if there is another war. They
will bomb Baghdad and many innocent people will be killed. This
has to be stopped.
In addition to Pittsburgh, demonstrations took place in Butler
and Meadville, Pennsylvania; Youngstown, Ohio and Spencer, West
Virginia, showing that the opposition to war has spread to many
small cities and towns throughout the country.
In Butler, Pennsylvania, a small city 35 miles north of Pittsburgh,
250 people gathered to protest the war at a park across from the
courthouse. Butler is a city of 35-40,000 people and serves as
a bedroom community to Pittsburgh. Most of the industry in the
area has been closed. The last remaining steel plant is AK Steel,
formally Armco, which employs just 1,500 workers, down from 4,300
at its height.
People came from all walks of lifeyoung and old, workers
and retirees. Ordinary people were focused on wanting to
make a statement that they dont support what our government
is doing, said Bill Neel, one of the organizers of the Butler
protest.
One of the speakers was dressed in his military uniform and
had served in both the first Gulf War and in Bosnia. Signs read,
Lets bomb taxes, they have oil too, and Empty
warheadsBush, Cheney and Rumsfeld.
A group of about 100 rallied in front of the courthouse in
Spencer, West Virginia, a town of fewer than 5,000 people, north
of Charleston in the mountains of West Virginia. Most of the industry
in Spencer consisted of small manufacturing, such as a hub cap
plant and a sweater factory, which have closed down.
I am a total pacifist, said Sarah, who attended
the Spencer rally. Most people came despite the terrible
weather because people are very uneasy about this war. A friend
and I felt we had to do something to show our opposition to this
war, so we organized this demonstration. It was our first one,
but we will hold more.
In Meadville, Pennsylvania, a city of 15,000 north of Pittsburgh,
250 people took part in a demonstration. The city is the Crawford
County seat and home to Allegheny College. Demonstrators ranged
from high school and college students, to grandparents, to babies
brought by the parents in strollers. Handmade signs read: Peace
is patriotic, No blood for oil and Stop
mad cowboy disease.
In Youngstown, Ohio, more than 300 people stood in freezing
temperatures and scattered snow to show their opposition to the
war at a rally outside the federal courthouse. The demonstrators
carried signs and listened to speakers and music.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |