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Massive anti-war protest in Rome
By a correspondent
22 March 2004
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Rome saw the biggest antiwar demonstration worldwide, with
over one million demonstrators participating in a march through
the centre of the Italian capital. The protest was jointly organised
by trade unions, anti-globalisation groups and parties of the
official Italian left. Demonstrators came by special buses and
trains from all regions of Italy. The march, which had to be started
earlier than scheduled, lasted over seven hours.
Alongside contingents of trade unionists, anti-globalisation
protesters and political parties (the Greens, parties of the Olive
Tree coalition), there were great numbers of working class families,
students and youth. The demonstration was headed by several caravans
of peace that had started on February 28 from Venice, Genoa
and Sicily, organising antiwar protests along the way.
One prominent slogan was the demand for the withdrawal of Italian
troops from Iraq. Another was Your war, our dead,
a slogan used by anti-Aznar demonstrators in Spain last week and
aimed on Saturday against the Berlusconi government. Italy has
3,000 troops in Iraq, and Italian soldiers were hit by a devastating
attack at the hands of the Iraqi resistance in November of 2003.
Some wives of US soldiers spoke against the war at a rally at
the Circo Massimo [Circus Maximus].
The huge turnout, which surprised the organisers themselves,
stood in sharp contrast to an official anti-terror
demonstration held on March 18 in Rome. The official bipartisan
demonstration sponsored by the National Association of Italian
Municipalities (ANCI) and attended by political parties from the
right (including government parties) and the left, attracted virtually
nobody. It was derided by speakers at Saturdays mass protest.
Piero Fassino, leader of Democratici di Sinistra (Democratic
Left), the successor of the Italian Communist Party, who was present
at the March 18 demonstration, tried to join Saturdays march.
He made his appearance, surrounded by numerous bodyguards, and
was verbally and physically challenged by marchers and forced
to leave. Part of the youth organisation of Democratici di Sinistra
also had to leave.
While the demonstration was said to be unitarian
in the name of peace, and the overwhelming majority
of demonstrators showed sincere hatred of imperialist war, statements
by politicians and other antiwar leaders who took
part made clear that they were following a different agenda. The
presence of Democratici di Sinistra on the march was deemed a
victory for the movement by the leader of the Social
Forum, Vittorio Agnoletto.
The general line of the politicians of the official left and
the union leaders was to replace the US-led military occupation
of Iraq with one carried out under the auspices of the United
Nations. The leader of the CGIL trade union, Guglielmo Epifani,
declared that his union demanded the withdrawal of Italian troops
from Iraq not in order to create a vacuum, but to aim at
filling one: with the UN.
The leader of the Greens, Alfonso Pecoraro Scanio, said, The
withdrawal of the troops from Iraq is the courageous and really
reformist option. Staying is a conservative act. He added
that maintaining Italian troops in Iraq means to support
the positions of the American right and Bush. Only withdrawal
can force the right to understand that the way must be cleared
for the UN.
Francesco Rutelli, the leader of the Margherita, a coalition
of opposition parties, said, What matters today is that
we are all against the war in Iraq, and that we remember that
what is needed is for the UN to move in as soon as possible, so
as to create better conditions to fight terrorism with greater
efficiency.
The right-wing government parties reacted angrily to the march,
saying it was aiding terrorism. It is possible that some
today ... demonstrate for peace in good faith, but the fact is
that with marches of this kind one only helps the terrorists,
said Roberto Calderoli, a leader of the Lega Nord and the vice
president of the Senate.
The leader of the Christian Democratic Union, Marco Follini,
said, It is wrong to imagine that the enemy is on the other
side of the Atlantic or in Palazzo Chigi (the seat of the Italian
government) rather than in the caves of Afghanistan.
The government deployed large numbers of police to protect
government and official buildings, including Prime Minister Berlusconis
Roman residence, and surveillance helicopters hovered over the
demonstration.
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