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A million march in Spain against war
Police fire rubber bullets at demonstrators
By Vicky Short
24 March 2003
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An estimated million people joined marches and demonstrations
in Spain in major cities and regional centres last weekend in
protest against the US-led attack on Iraq. Half a million demonstrated
in Barcelona with over 100,000 protesting in Madrid.
Police attacked demonstrators outside the US Embassy in Madrid,
injuring 81. Thirty police officers were also hurt in the clashes.
Many of the injuries were caused by rubber bullets, used liberally
by police during the weekend. Police injuries tended to be sustained
by bricks and bottles.
The March 22 demonstration in Madrid started peacefully enough,
early afternoon, led by members of the opposition parties and
the trade unions.
By 8 p.m. in the evening, however, riot police surrounded a
section of the march, comprising approximately 10,000 mainly young
people, taunting the protestors, gesticulating, charging their
guns and waving truncheons.
An object apparently thrown by the crowd acted as the trigger
for a police charge into the protestors, who were then chased
into adjacent streets by the police. As people used rubbish bins
to form barricades, police opened fire with plastic bullets, hitting
anyone in their path.
A 500,000-strong demonstration in Barcelona the same day passed
peacefully, although paint, eggs and stones were thrown against
a government building. A 23-year-old man was arrested. Another
group of young demonstrators drew slogans on a mobile unit of
Spanish Television.
The protests were part of a series of demonstrations that have
been held across Spain since the military onslaught on Iraq begun
early March 20.
Earlier in the week hundreds of thousands of university students
throughout Spain left classes to march on government buildings
and American Consulates. They chanted slogans calling for the
resignation of Aznars Peoples Party government and
for a general strike against the war. Flags at the University
of Rovira i Virgili (URV) in Tarragona were lowered to half-mast
as a signal of morning and solidarity with the innocent
victims of the conflict said the university and will
remain so till the end of the war.
Peoples Party buildings, including individual politicians
houses, and US consulates have been a particular target for young
peoples anger with eggs, paint, bottles and animal blood
thrown at them during the last three days. Now protected by riot
police, protestors have taken to spitting at them.
Many big demonstrations also took place on Saturday in smaller
towns and cities. The protest against war was often linked with
hostility to the governments domestic policies. A home-made
banner on one read: Another massacre we will not make us
forget the rubbish work contracts, the miserable salaries, the
mortgaged life. NO TO STATE TERRORISM.
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