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Canada: Protests in more than 50 cities
By a WSWS reporting team
22 March 2004
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Canadians in more than 50 cities and towns demonstrated Saturday
against the illegal US-British invasion and occupation of Iraq.

The largest protest was in Vancouver, where at least 20,000
heard antiwar bands and speakers. In Montreal about 7,000 trade
unionists, other workers, youth and unemployed joined a demonstration
called by the Collectif échec à la guerre
(Stop the War Coalition) to oppose the so-called war
on terror, express solidarity with the peoples
of Iraq, Afghanistan, [and] Palestine against occupation,
and demand more funding for public services, rather than the military
and the totalitarian surveillance of citizens.
In Toronto more than 5,000 people turned out despite pouring
rain and in Ottawa some 2,000 demonstrators braved a snow storm
to march from Parliament Hill to the US Embassy, then to the British
High Commission and the headquarters of the Ministry of National
Defence.
Olivia Chow, a Toronto municipal councillor and prospective
candidate for the social-democratic New Democratic Party in the
coming federal election, was among those who addressed the Toronto
demonstration. Chow criticized Prime Minister Paul Martin for
having appointed David Pratt, a Liberal MP who broke with the
government to support the Iraq war, as his defence minister and
for signalling that Canada will participate in the Bush administrations
missile defence program. In keeping with the Canadian nationalist
perspective promoted by the NDP, Chow repeatedly touted Canadian
values as a progressive and pacific alternative to US militarism,
although Canada is itself an imperialist power and its ruling
class was an enthusiastic supporter of the British Empire and
a major belligerent in the world wars of the last century
Chows husband, federal NDP leader Jack Layton, sent a
message of solidarity that was read out to the crowd. Ignoring
the UN Security Councils complicity in both the occupation
of Iraq and the US orchestrated coup against Haitis democratically-elected
president, Layton urged Canadians to put their faith in international
law and multilateral institutions. It has never been a more
important time, declared Layton, to be on the side
of peace, on the side of the United Nations, and on the side of
international lawthe only way we are going to have international
laws with teeth, laws that bind every nation to peace, is through
public pressure to respect these laws like were doing today.
Also addressing the Toronto demonstration was Jerry Heintzmann,
a US soldier who deserted from the 82nd Airborne Division to escape
deployment to Iraq and is currently seeking political refugee
status in Canada.
Although I am no longer [in Fort Bragg], said Heintzmann,
I am thankful for having had the experience because without
it I believe I would have lived the rest of my life unaware of
my countrys aims in the world and how it uses its young
to naively fulfill them...
As a soldier the only way I could stop this was by taking
myself out of the equation. Thats why we are here today.
The Canadian people overwhelmingly said no to the war and your
government listened, to a point. They said no to a war based on
false pretences. It was evident before America even attacked Iraq
that Iraq was not home to weapons of mass destruction...
I refuse to be a pawn in such an imperialist game and
an act of aggression with no defensive basis. I think most of
the American people would have refused as well had the Bush administration
not exploited their justifiable fears regarding terrorism in the
wake of September 11.
Yes Saddam Hussein was a tyrant, however the responsibility
of overthrowing him belonged to the Iraqi people.... The only
democracy likely to emerge in Iraq is an oligarchy of puppets
that will impose the miracle of privatization on the Iraqi economy
thus making it a feast for multinational corporations.
Fahim Kayani faces deportation after being falsely accused
by the Canadian government and press of being part of a terrorist
conspiracy. Fahim told the Toronto demonstration, I am one
of the 23 Pakistanis who were arrested under allegations of terrorism.
It was totally a brutal act and totally insane because they had
nothing [as proof]. We were shackled, put in a maximum security
prison. We were tortured mentally and emotionally. Simply, we
were treated like animals.... I am not a terrorist and I was never
charged with any terrorism.... Now they want to deport me just
to hide the facts and their mistake.
A highpoint of the Ottawa rally was the speech by Haitian journalist
Jean St. Vil. He provided details of the role that the Martin
Liberal government played in last months ouster of Haitis
elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. St. Vil noted that
Port-au-Prince airport was under the control of Canadian troops
when US and French officials were hustling Aristide out of the
country in what the deposed Haitian president has called a political
kidnapping. Earlier Canada had joined with the US and France
to block CARICOM (the association of Caribbean states) from assisting
Aristide in confronting an armed rebellion led by thugs of previous
Haitian dictatorships. In the Ottawa crowd, there were several
Haitian immigrants demanding that Canada immediately withdraw
its troops from the Caribbean-island country.
WSWS supporters distributed hundreds of leaflets at both the
Montreal and Toronto demonstrations.
Rob and Sarah, workers from the industrial city of Hamilton,
told the WSWS they feared the Martin Liberal government
was seeking to tie Canada ever more closely to the Bush administration.
Sarah said, Id like to see Canada withdraw all troops
out of any occupied territories and support peace. Maybe send
medicine, send clothing; all the essentials rather than sending
guns.
Chris Dwyer, an artist, was at the demonstration to oppose
the occupation of Iraq and press for an international inquiry
into the events of September 11, 2001. Part of a group that is
campaigning for such an inquiry, Dwyer said the Bush administrations
explanation for 9/11, including the numerous security breaches,
is implausible.
I believe that somebody somewhere, or a group of people,
turned a blind eye, more or less silently guided people through
the gates, Chris commented. These guys had ridiculous
amounts of errors on their visa applications, but they all got
in. They were all under surveillance by the FBI, the CIA.... Its
just not possible. I think that 9/11 was really a milestone as
far as the new world order. Its the tool the US is using
to implement something theyve wanted to implement for years
according to their own documents.
Mike, a freelance writer from Hamilton, is a regular WSWS reader:
I think the writing is extremely good and the analysis clearly
brings out the truth of the situation in Iraq and elsewhere. Demonstrations
like this are great, but clearly theyre not enough. We need
to do more to capture the hearts and souls of people to really
build this movement and to oppose war and the policies of the
Bush administration.
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