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Analysis : Global
Antiwar Protests
Antiwar marchers defy large police presence in Seoul
By our correspondents
17 February 2003
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Some 2,000 people assembled in Ma-ron-i-ea Park in downtown
Seoul on Saturday afternoon to protest against the planned US
invasion of Iraq. After speeches and entertainment, the protesters
marched to Jong-Myo Park, a couple of kilometres away. The proceedings
were peaceful despite a large police presence throughout the protest.
Ma-ron-i-ea Park is
a popular meeting point for young people and artists. Although
it was a cold afternoon, a wide cross-section of people attended.
Many were students, as well as young families and workers. The
organisations represented included trade unions, womens
groups, religious groups and student organisations. A diverse
range of immigrants participated, including from Algeria, Sri
Lanka, India, the Philippines, America and Canada.
The protest swelled to 3,000 at Jong-Myo Park, which is significant
in South Korea as a meeting point for the civil rights movement.
Speeches by various groups continued until nightfall when candles
were lit. The park was surrounded by a huge police presence, with
the number of riot police almost equalling the number of protesters.
One or two groups held up anti-American banners such as Yankee
go home and demanded the withdrawal of US troops from South
Korea. The majority adopted slogans against war, including No
War for US Oil and Profit. Many denounced the US government
as the most prominent terrorist organisation. The crowd chanted
No war and Dont attack Iraq in Korean
and English. Some groups called for an end to any South Korean
support for US forces in the Persian Gulf.
Despite the one-sided coverage in the South Korean media, everyone
who spoke to the WSWS said the war drive had nothing to do with
disarming Iraq or the other pretexts offered by Washington. The
overall sense was that the war was about oil. Many people said
the protests would not alter US and British plans for war but
felt that they had to do something to express their opposition.
A South Korean student explained that he was not anti-American
and that Korean and American workers had to join together. A young
Algerian worker pointed to the hypocrisy of the US and British
governments, which denounced terrorism while supporting Israel
against the Palestinians. He said the Israeli government were
the terrorists and breakers of UN law.
Other antiwar protests took place in the South Korean cities
of Pusan, Taegu, Taejon, Kwangju and Wonju.
A WSWS correspondent from Beijing emailed the following comments:
There are no reports of any protests in mainland China,
so I conclude that nothing happened. A protest could only happen
if some individuals were to go to US Embassy on their own and
raise a banner.
Chinese Central TV and other media did report on Global
antiwar demonstrations and broadcast short video shots of
demonstrations from Europe and US, including from Asia, like Tokyo
and Korea, labelling it unprecedented since the Vietnam
War. It would be more correct to say: Global minus China, due
to two factors: [Beijings] appeasement of imperialism and
its fear of any public protest, whatever its content.
It is interesting that the mainland media didnt
mention demonstrations in Hong Kongnot a word, let alone
a photograph or video. Hong Kong did have demonstrations, though
of modest scaleup to 1,000 on Saturday.
Elsewhere in North East Asia, an estimated 25,000 marched in
Tokyo on Friday, with thousands more taking part in smaller rallies
in Osaka and other cities. The Tokyo protesters demanded that
the Japanese government refuse to give any support to an attack
on Iraq. They included a delegation of survivors of the 1945 atomic
bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
In Taiwan, over 2,000 people marched in the capital Taipei
on Saturday, under the banner of No Blood for Oil.
They gathered at the office of the American Institute, holding
placards such as War is not the answer and Bombing
solves nothing.
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