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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Hundreds of thousands join in international protests against
Iraq war
Demonstrations in more than 45 countries
By Chris Marsden
22 March 2004
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The anniversary of the Iraq war witnessed a global outpouring
of opposition to the invasion and occupation of the Persian Gulf
country by the US and its allies. The single largest protest marking
the first anniversary of the war took place in Rome, but altogether
many hundreds of thousand of people took part in hundreds of demonstrations
in cities and towns on every continent.
Demonstrations were held in more than 45 countries. According
to Reuters, More than a million anti-war protesters poured
into the streets of cities around the globe on Saturdays
anniversary of the invasion of Iraq to demand the withdrawal of
US-led troops. (See on-the-spot reports from New
York, the West Coast and Michigan,
Canada, Rome,
Spain, London,
Germany and Australia.)
According to US peace activists, there were more than 575 protests
around the world against the war and occupation. Expressing the
full depth of hostility to the Bush administration, more than
300 events took place in the United States, including a rally
in New York City that drew an estimated 100,000 participants.
Supporters of the World Socialist Web Site and Socialist
Equality Party distributed thousands of copies of the statement
One year since the US invasion
of Iraq at rallies in many cities in North America,
Europe and Australia.
Europe
In Rome, at least 1 million (organisers say 2 million) marchers
gathered to oppose Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconis
support for the war. A truck pulled a giant caricature of Berlusconi,
portraying him as the lap dog of President Bush. Over 1,500 coaches
and 12 chartered trains brought demonstrators from across Italy,
who marched under a banner reading Together for peace.
The Italian demonstrators had drawn strength from the actions
of the Spanish people in voting the pro-war Peoples Party government
out of office on March 14in large part due to the swell
of anger produced by the deaths of 202 people in the March 11
bombings in Madrid, believed to have been carried out by Islamic
terrorists.
In Madrid, 100,000 gathered for an evening rally demanding
the removal of Spains 1,300 troops from Iraq. In Barcelona,
up to 200,000 marched. Earlier, Spaniards protested across the
country against the Iraq occupation. Demonstrations began in about
a dozen towns at noon and continued throughout the day. Commemorations
were also held in remembrance of the Madrid victims.
In London, upwards of 25,000 people protested against the war.
Two Greenpeace activists climbed the Big Ben clock tower near
the Houses of Parliament, unfurling a banner reading Time
for Truth.
Leaving from Hyde Park, the marchers rallied in Trafalgar Square,
shouting slogans such as Anti-Bush, Anti-Blair, Anti-war
everywhere. Thousands of balloons were released in memory
of those killed in the Iraq conflict and the Madrid bombing atrocities.
Campaigners inflated a model of a Trident missile, accompanied
by activists dressed up as weapons inspectors.
In Scotland, hundreds of anti-war demonstrators marched in
Glasgow from George Square to St Enochs Square.
In Germany, thousands demonstrated in about 70 cities and towns,
with 3,000 attending a rally in Berlin and thousands more gathering
outside a US airbase in Ramstein.
In France, anti-war rallies took place in Paris, Marseille,
Lyon, Toulouse and elsewhere. About 1,000 people took part to
the Paris demonstration.
In Greece, some 10,000 protesters marched on the US embassy
in Athens, where they were confronted by hundreds of riot police.
In Ireland, a protest took place in Dublins Parnell Square,
marching on to the Department of Foreign Affairs.
In the Netherlands, thousands protested in Amsterdams
Dam Square. It was a semi-official day of mourning because of
the death of Queen Mother Juliana.
In Switzerland, 3,000 demonstrated in the capital city of Berne.
In Denmark, hundreds demonstrated, holding placards that read
Do like Spain, pull out the troops.
In Ankara, Turkey, around a thousand protesters marched to
the US embassy and handed over a giant symbolic ticket for Bush
to take a trip into outer space. Banners read Down with
American imperialism, US, get lost from the Middle
East and End the occupation. In Istanbul, a
thousand protesters demonstrated against the occupation of Iraq
and their citys hosting of a NATO summit in June.
In Hungary, protesters holding blazing torches formed a human
peace sign in Budapests Heroes Square.
In Sofia, Bulgaria, protesters gathered in front of the National
Palace of Culture and marched to the National Theatre.
In the Czech Republic, some 300 people demonstrated in the
capital city of Prague. Representatives of the American, Arab
and Czech communities started a protest march towards the US embassy
under heavy police guard. On Charles Bridge, they created a human
chain from black-clad figures to pay homage to all victims of
the war. A number of smaller demonstrations were also held in
the country.
In Ljubljana, Slovenia, there were anti-war demonstrations
in front of the US embassy. The marchers rallied under the slogan
Its Your War, The Victims Are Ours.
In Russia, thousands took to the streets in 11 cities to protest
the US invasion. Protesters gathered outside the US embassy in
Moscow.
The US and the Americas
The demonstration in New York City exceeded the expectations
of the march organisers. Around 100,000 people joined in a march
that stretched for 45 blocks. The demonstrators were so numerous
that the front of the march almost merged with the back of the
march, and the procession had to come to a 15-minute stop as it
returned to the rally site.
There were other major demonstrations, including 50,000 in
San Francisco, 20,000 in Los Angeles and 10,000 in Chicago.
Latin American countries including Chile, Venezuela and Brazil
also held protests.
Asia
The days worldwide protests began in Australia and New
Zealand, and other demonstrations followed across Asia.
In Australia, an estimated 5,000 rallied in Sydneys Hyde
Park and marched through the citys central business district.
Two thousand rallied in Melbourne, with smaller protests taking
place in other major centres such as Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide
and Canberra.
The main demand of the Sydney and Melbourne rallies was for
the withdrawal of all foreign troops from Iraq, including the
850 Australian troops still in the country, and an end to the
occupation.
In Sydney, protesters carried a five-foot-high effigy of Prime
Minister John Howard in a cage, to represent Australian suspects
detained at the US military prison camp in Guantanamo Bay.
Terry Hicks, the father of Guantanamo Bay detainee David Hicks,
spoke in Melbourne.
In New Zealand, there were marches and rallies in the main
centres of Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch involving around
2,000 people. In the New Zealand capital, Wellington, 300-400
people marched through the central business district to the Cenotaph,
near the parliament buildings, accompanied by drumming and a brass
band. The lead banner read Keep NZ out of George Bushs
wars.
In Japan, an estimated 120,000 took part in protests, including
two rallies in Tokyo that drew 30,000 people each and two in Osaka
that each attracted 10,000. In Tokyo, some participants wore masks
painted to look like skulls, and waved placards reading Drop
Bush, Not Bombs! Others chanted Get the Japanese Self-Defence
Forces out of Iraq! Japan has 250 ground troops in southern
Iraq on a mission that could eventually involve up to 1,000 personnel.
In Hong Kong, about 100 demonstrators marched to the US Consulate
General, chanting slogans such as Just peace, not war
and Stop the war in the Middle East, for justice for peace.
In the Philippines, around 500 protesters clashed with riot
police as they tried to push their way to the US embassy. The
demonstrators, opposing what they called The Coalition of
Liars, hurled stones at security personnel, who responded
with water cannon. The previous day, a rally urging the government
to withdraw forces from Iraq was held by the Bayan Muna (Nation
First) party at the Quezon City Memorial Circle in Manila.
In South Korea, thousands took part in rallies across the nation
that combined opposition to the war in Iraq with opposition to
the impeachment of President Roh Moo-hyun. In Seoul, the rallies
mobilised tens of thousands, while smaller rallies took place
in Taegu, Busan and Kwangju.
In Pakistan, anti-war demonstrators staged rallies in 20 cities,
demanding the immediate withdrawal of US and foreign troops from
Iraq. About 2,000 protestors gathered in the eastern city of Lahore,
chanting Americans get out of Iraq and Afghanistan
and Foreign troops leave Iraq.
In India, activists attacked a US bank. About 10 people barged
into Citibank in Cochin in the southern Indian state of Kerala,
damaging computers and windows with iron rods wrapped in newspaper.
They shouted slogans such as Down with US imperialism!
before running away.
In Kashmir, about 700 people marched through Srinagar, chanting
Americans, quit Iraq.
In Dhaka, 100 activists staged rallies demanding that the Bangladeshi
government not hold talks with US Ambassador Harry Thomas.
Middle East
Hundreds of demonstrators took to the streets of Middle Eastern
capitals to denounce the war, although in Iraq itself there were
no public demonstrations for or against the war. The previous
evening, however, Iraqi Sunnis and Shiites staged joint anti-US
protests calling for an end to the US occupation of their country.
Up to 3,000 took part in a peaceful march after weekly midday
prayers, saying they were opposed to the US military presence
in Iraq as well as to the deposed regime of Saddam Hussein.
No to Saddam. No to the Americans. Yes to Islam,
the worshippers chanted before leaving the Kazimiya mosque, which
is home to the mausoleum of Imam Mussa al-Kazem and is the holiest
Shiite shrine in Baghdad. They headed for the neighborhood of
Azamiya across the Tigris River to link up with Sunni protesters
gathered outside one of their mosques. They united together, holding
up placards in Arabic and English denouncing American terrorism,
calling for an end to destruction in Iraq and condemning
the indiscriminate firing of US troops on Iraqis.
On the Occupied West Bank, five Palestinians were injured on
Friday after Israeli Defence Forces fired rubber bullets at them
during demonstrations against the West Bank separation fence near
Modiin. Israeli and foreign protesters took part in the
demonstration near the village of Hirbata, and some 500 people
protested along the fence route.
Africa
Between 2,000 and 3,000 people gathered in Egypts capital,
Cairo. Protestors at the Tahrir Square carried banners ridiculing
the US and Britain for failing to find weapons of mass destruction.
One banner in English read No WMD, but 20,000 Iraqi civilians
killed...this is Bushs democracy. Another read Inshallah,
Mr. Bush and Mr. Blair will follow Mr. Aznar. Some chanted
in Arabic Baghdad stand strong, make America miserable.
At least 5,000 riot police surrounded the protest, which denounced
the Arab regimes for failing to oppose the war. Protesters carried
a coffin draped in black cloth with the inscription Here
lie the Arab governments.
The demonstration, organised by a group calling itself The
International Campaign Against the Zio-American Occupation,
urged support for the Palestinian struggle against the Israeli
occupation.
See Also:
One year since the US invasion of Iraq:
Statement of the World Socialist Web Site and Socialist
Equality Party
[19 March 2004]
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