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Protests greet Bush in Australia
By our correspondents
25 October 2003
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The 21-hour visit by George Bush to Australia was greeted with
protests around the country. On October 22, the day Bush arrived,
demonstrations were held in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Hobart,
as well as smaller regional centers. The following day, over 5,000
people gathered in the national capital Canberra to protest while
the US president addressed the federal parliament.
In Canberra, 450 federal police and Australian Protective Service
Officers, some in riot gear and with attack dogs at their side,
kept the demonstrators behind barricades and well away from Parliament
House. Students, professional people and members of various protest
groups chanted Go home Bush and You are not
welcome here, booing when Bush arrived at 10am. Many shouted
Bush, war criminal and chanted Bush, Bush, CIA,
how many kids have you killed today.
Some 1,000 protestors who marched to the Australian prime ministers
residence to demonstrate when Bushs motorcade arrived there
were confronted by large numbers of armed federal police. Some
demonstrators were injured and five reportedly arrested when the
police suddenly moved forward to herd people off the roadway.
One protestor was dragged through the police line, thrown to the
ground and handcuffed. He narrowly escaped being bitten in the
face by police dogs.
In Sydney the evening before, some 5,000 protesters gathered
at the Town Hall and marched to the US consulate in Martin Place.
The crowd carried banners such as No Howard, No Bush
and Regime change, Bush and Howard youre next,
and chanted George Bush, Uncle Sam, Iraq will be your Vietnam
as they weaved their way through the city.
The protest was organised by the Anti-War Coalitiona
grouping of protest, peace, and human rights groups. Representatives
of the Greens and the Australian Democrats also took part. A high
proportion of the demonstrators comprised young people not affiliated
to any specific political organisation.
Speakers at Town Hall criticised the illegal character of the
war on Iraq, Israels attacks on Palestinians, the Bush administrations
incarceration of Australian citizens David Hicks and Mamdouh
Habib at Guantanamo Bay and the Howard governments cuts
to education.
Brian Gore, a Catholic priest who has worked in the Philippines
and South America, condemned the human rights record of both George
Bush and Chinas Hu Jintou, who was also visiting Australia.
He indicted the imprisonment of hundreds of people without charges
in Guantanomo Bay.
David Barsamian, a visiting American journalist, told the crowd
many Americans had opposed the war and denounced the US media
for concealing this from the rest of the world. He said that the
people had to create their own media. He recalled the New York
Times comments after millions took part in Februarys
global demonstrations that the next superpower is global
public opinion.
Bob Brown, the leader of the Australian Greens, limited himself
to calls for the US to leave Iraq, without making any reference
to the foreign troops moving in under the auspices of the United
Nations. He did not call for the release of Hicks and Habib, only
that they should be transferred to Australia for trial, as Bush
had repatriated the Americans to America. He finished
with nationalist agitation against the proposed US-Australia free
trade agreement, saying Australia did not want to be dominated
by the US.
Kylie Moon, a representative of the radical group Resistance,
sought to bolster illusions in protest politics with claims the
February demonstrations had not failed and that what
was needed was simply more protests. This position serves to prevent
any political lessons being drawn from the Bush administrations
invasion of Iraq in complete disregard of the largest antiwar
protests in history.
Protestors speak to the WSWS
Protestors at both the Canberra and Sydney rallies spoke to
the WSWS about their concerns over the war and democratic rights.
At the Sydney rally, George, a 15 year-old high school student,
stated that the motivation behind the war in Iraq was Americas
desire to seize Iraqs oil: Bush shouldnt be
in Iraq or stay in Iraq. He is ruining the world, pandering to
big corporations to make money. He also expressed concern
about religious zealotry playing an increasing role in politics,
describing Bush as a religious fundamentalist.
Brooke, a Technical and Further Education teacher attended
the protests to show that a sizeable minority is against
Bush. Brooke also maintained that the Bush government
was motivated by a desire to export Christian fundamentalism into
the Middle East. He rejected the official rationale for
the war in Iraq, saying The war had nothing to do with WMD,
never had.
James, 25, an engineer from Britain, said he was against the
war in Iraq: The war was a waste of lives and a waste of
money. He was sceptical about the Hutton inquiry into the
war as it had refused to deal with the heart of the matter,
the lies being told by Blair. They are only discussing Kelly and
personal circumstances.
Kelvin, a 28 year old student from Singapore said he was opposed
to the war in Iraq with or without a UN mandate. He said opposition
to the war was widespread in Singapore. The war was immoral
and the doctrine of preemptive strike sets a precedent.
Zeeshan, 27 from Bangladesh, was concerned about media disinformation:
People have a totally wrong idea of whats going on.
Their understanding depends on the media. They understand that
something is going wrong but the media are playing a very bad
role.
Ben, a Canberra high school student, said: I do not appreciate
the US invading and dictating to other countries. It is not just
the most recent acts of aggression I disagree with, but with 50
years of US policies. I am Australian, but my parents fled Chile
after the US installed a military dictatorship there that murdered
thousands of ordinary people. My friends family in Cuba
has suffered enormous hardships because of the US sanctions on
the country.
He denounced the security arrangements for Bushs visit
as over the top and intended to intimidate people
and to stop opposition.
Frank, an international relations graduate student at the Australian
National University, said Bushs visit showed the increasingly
undemocratic behaviour of governments. The appalling
and disgusting war on Iraq was being followed by an
even more aggressive and closed mind approach.
He said: The security precautions have been right over
the top. I have been to some protests before, especially on the
war, and none of them have been overly aggressive. The amount
of police here today is ridiculous. And last night I couldnt
get to sleep because of the planes and helicopters flying overhead.
If anyone flew within a certain distance of parliament house last
night, they were to be shot down on sight.
Asked why governments felt so insecure and unpopular, Frank
pointed to the attenuated state of democracy: We have a
democracy like the US, for example, where Bush had only 25 percent
of the nation voting for him, and Australia, where John Howard
got in because there is really no-one else to vote for. Democracy
at the moment has a pretty sad existence. It is not democratic
at all.
See Also:
Unprecedented security cocoon for Bush's
Australian visit
[25 October 2003]
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