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Britain: Protesters condemn military assault on Iraq
By our reporters
22 March 2003
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Thousands took to the streets in Britain on March 20 to protest
the start of the US-led war against Iraq. The World Socialist
Web Site spoke to protesters in London, Leeds and Sheffield
about their opinions on the war, and Prime Minister Tony Blairs
decision to support it.
London
The largest demonstration took
place outside Parliament, where more than 6,000 people were gathered
at any one time. As the protest had begun at midday, when school
youth and college students walked out of lessons, and continued
into the evening the actual number of participants was probably
closer to 10,000.
Mia and Rosa both have parents who were members of the African
National Congress (ANC) and had been involved in the anti-Apartheid
protests in South Africa as young children. Mia and Rosa, 17 and
18 years old, were keen have their views on the war made known.
We have been here since midday, Mia said. Up
until about 3:30 it was all students, but then more people started
to come in. I came down from Camden in North London with about
100 others. A lot of the sixth form came down. I think the teachers
gave their blessing but havent come down themselves.
Rosa said she arrived with about 200 other young people. I
think the teachers were treated quite harshly, told they would
be sacked if they participated.
Commenting on the massive police presence surrounding the protest,
with at least 100 riot vans visible from Parliament Square, Mia
said, We were having a sit-down protest and the police were
literally picking up 10-year-old kids and dropping them on the
floor. They were incredibly rough and totally against everything
we stand for. I was called a bitch by one. As the adults arrived
they eased off, but until then it was quite scary. I was sitting
up a tree and I could see all around the police were behaving
terribly.
They have been saying in the press for years that the
youth of today have gotten complacent and I think this is a real
indication that we are saying no as well and we are
trying to make our voices known. At least we can say it is not
in our name. They are going ahead with it but the British public
are not backing it. It is the imperialists sitting up there [pointing
to the Houses of Parliament] watching us. Bush and his chums have
got huge shares in the oil companies and if they were worried
about the people of Iraq being oppressed they would have stepped
in 12 years ago when they started oppressing the Kurds.
Rosa added, Blair is just trying to preserve capitalist
interests in Britain. If America is not behind you, then you are
in trouble.
Abdulwahid is an Iraqi college lecturer in Britain. He said:
I am from Babylon, the site of the first civilisation
on this planet. Now George W. Bush and the backseat drivers ruling
the United States are trying to impose what he calls civilisation,
but it is causing misery in Iraq and all over the world.
Blair in his campaign leading to the war said the Americans
are the masters and we have to listen to them. But he is not listening
at all to his own people. It is really shameful that Labour MPs
voted for Blair. They have voted for a mass killing in Iraq. The
whole region is being de-civilised. They think they are fighting
terrorism, but you can imagine what will happen. People there
are boiling. Egyptian President Hosni Mubaraks police fired
against demonstrators and 150 were injured. Wheres the democracy?
The time will come when if we open our mouths in Britain we will
be sent to Guantanamo Bay too.
The Iraqi opposition are a bunch of hypocrites. They
are supporting this unjust war and telling lies all the time,
but they have said nothing about the unjust sanctions over the
last 12 years that have killed one and a half million.
There has been killing going on in Israel for 50 years
but nobody cares about it. The young American girl Rachel Corrie
was crushed to death when she was trying to stop a house being
demolished by the Israeli forces. But when you ask Bush about
Sharon he says this is a man of peace.
I have family in Iraq, but we have no news. The telephones
have been cut since yesterday and we have no contact.
Luke and Catalena attended the demonstration representing City
and Islington Sixth Form College. Catalena said, We came
in a big group with part of the London Metropolitan University.
It was a big protest. The main reason I am here is because its
wrong to be the aggressor in a war. All war is bad but were
the aggressor here so we are completely at fault. I am just here
because the people in [Iraq] need to know that they are making
these decisions for us and we dont agree with them.
Luke said, I think it is wrong to devastate a country
that has already been devastated by war so many times by us, because
there are these apparent Al Qaeda links that no one has proof
of.
The thing is that we dont need to be going to war.
We cant afford to pay the firefighters the money they need
to live on, yet we have all this money to go and bomb a country.
I dont want to have to say goodbye to my friends and family
and I dont want anyone else to have to either.
Leeds
In Leeds, West Yorkshire, rush-hour traffic into the city was
blocked for hours when protesters formed human roadblocks at two
of the main roundabouts. Police had to call in a specialist team
to release the protesters, who had chained their wrists together
inside plastic piping. Nine people were arrested.
At noon hundreds of school youth and university students flooded
into the city centre to join a group of local government workers
in a demonstration against the war. When the march reached the
Town Hall, police had to set up a mounted guard to prevent the
demonstrators occupying the building. As dusk fell, up to 3,000
people marched through the city, accompanied by a heavy police
presence, including mounted police and a helicopter flying overhead.
When they attempted to march into City Square, police blocked
their way.
Emma, 19, from Park Lane College said, I am completely
against this war because I feel that innocent people will die
for a stupid cause. Bush is a murderer. He is following in his
fathers footsteps because he was a murderer too in the Gulf
War.
My sister and I watch News Round, the TV programme for
young people. They keep saying, Dont worry. The fighting
is in Iraq and it wont come over here. But I think
the consequences involve us all. Its just heartbreaking
to think about the innocent people and young children who are
dying. They are people, like all of us, who want to have the possibility
of a happy life and it is being denied them. It is very frightening.
Zairab, 16, is from Ralph Thorseby High School. She said, I
am an Iraqi. I have been in this country since I was one year
old, so Britain is home for me. I know that Saddam is not a good
person, but that is not what this war is about. It is not fair
that innocent people are being killed. My family is terribly worried
because we have relatives over there.
Britain is a democratic country. Everyone is allowed
to voice their opinion, but what is the use of that if nobody
in the government is listening?
Her friend Wasan, 16, is also an Iraqi. She said, Everyone
knows that this war is about oil. But it is also about redrawing
the map of the Middle East and restabilising Israel. Sharon thinks
that he can cover up for the injustices and atrocities he is committing
against the Palestinian people because the eyes of the world have
been shifted from Israel to Iraq.
Elaine, 18, is a pupil at Notre Dame High School. She said,
This is the third time we have walked out of school. About
150 of us joined the university students on March 5, then again
on March 19 and today. I didnt used to be at all political.
I didnt understand anything that was going on. But now I
wont be passive any more. I feel the need to stand up for
what I believe in.
A group from Lawnswood High School were carrying a banner in
the march which read, If you are not outraged you are not
paying enough attention. As she walked along, Hannah told
our reporter, The present leaders in the US are completely
hypocritical. Everyone knows that they were the ones who armed
Saddam Hussein in the first place. And Al Qaeda is exactly the
same.
The oil issue is also very important. At the end of the
Cold War, over 10 years ago, Cheney and Rumsfeld sat down and
decided that they couldnt allow any other country to challenge
the US. The American imperialists think they can control the whole
world.
Four young workers walked out of a branch of Pizza Express
in the city centre. One of them, Jamie, aged 23, said, We
decided to walk out today. We left them trying to cope, with a
staff of two people. We all decided that something had to be done.
Sheffield
In Sheffield, students and children who had walked out of school
had been collecting in the city centre of Sheffield since midday.
Later a larger crowd of around 500 gathered in front of the town
hall. There was a heavy police presence with horse-mounted officers
along the roadside.
Katharina, a student teacher from Bavaria, said, I think
its an imperialist war. Not really even a waran aggression
against a country that has suffered quite a lot over the last
few years, and has already been disarmed. The Iraqis cant
really defend themselves. Its a big lie to say that Saddam
Hussein has weapons of mass destruction and has to be disarmed
when it is Bush and Blair that really have these weapons and are
using them.
Hopefully we are creating a social popular movement that
shows these so-called democratic governments that they cant
just do as they want. I fear that lots and lots of innocent people
are going to die. They dont seem to think Iraqi lives are
worth much.
An Iraqi refugee from Basra approached the World Socialist
Web Site reporting team. He insisted on anonymity so as not
to jeopardise his case with the British Immigration Service. The
largest number of refugees arriving in the UK last year came from
Iraq, followed by Afghanistan and Zimbabwe. He expressed his deep
sadness about the current situation:
It is all wrong. I want regime change in Baghdad, but
not like this. Four female members of my family are suffering
from breast cancer (one of them had to have a breast removal)
because of the depleted uranium shells used in the last Gulf War.
Now Ive just telephoned home, and they say that the city
is about to be occupied.
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