AFP. 27 September 2001. Thousands march in anti-war demo in Italian NATO
city.

Thousands of anti-war demonstrators began marching through the centre of
Naples on Thursday to protest a military build-up and the threat of a
global conflict in the wake of the attacks on the United States.

Around 3,000 anti-globalization and anti-war demonstrators gathered in
the centre of Naples, which is home to NATO's Southern Command, to lead
a march on
the city's municipal headquarters several kilometres (miles) away.

The protest had been scheduled in Naples when it was thought that a key
NATO meeting would be held in the city, but although the talks were
moved to Brussels,
where they took place on Wednesday, the protesters decided to maintain
their march.

Hundreds of Italian police and carabinieri kept a close watch on the
march, which was expected to attract up to 15,000 people, but the
gathering bore none of the tension which preceded the rioting that
marred the G8 summit in Genoa in July.

Neither police nor any of the demonstrators wore protective riot gear,
in marked contrast to the Genoa meeting.

However some demonstrators took the precaution of wearing T-shirts
emblazoned with the phone number of a lawyer in case of arrest.

The mainly student marchers blew whistles and chanted anti-war slogans
as they set off from Garibaldi Square, close to the main train station
in the port
city.

Those at the front chanted in English "one, two, three, four ... we
don't want another war. Five, six, seven, eight ... stop the violence,
stop the hate."

[N.B.] Many were from left-wing organizations and carried portraits of
Karl Marx and Che Guevara.

One banner, referring to US President George W. Bush and to fears that a
military strike could spark a retaliatory attack using biological
weapons, read: "Sure, W, we'll suck anthrax, so you can feel tough in
your bunker."

Classics student Tonia Capuano, 17, who handed out Communist party
pamphlets, claimed many demonstrators had arrived from the northern
cities of Turin and
Venice, as well as Rome, and the Sicilian city of Palermo.

Capuano claimed she would demonstrate anyway against anti-globalisation,
"because that's where the war and the violence comes from."

Another marcher, Giuliano Malet, 25, said: "I feel that war in
Afghanistan, or Pakistan, would only hit poor people."


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Barry Stoller
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews


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