Thousands Protest War at U.S. Embassies

By NADIA ABOU EL-MAGD
The Associated Press
March 20, 2003

-"We are protesting the attack against Iraq because we
cannot accept the cowboy stance of the supposed planet
lord [Planitarchis]," Athens teacher Christos Gotzias
said of Bush. "The end result will be the
disappearance of the planet lord."


Hundreds of thousands of people marched on American
embassies in world capitals Thursday to protest the
war against Iraq, including a violent clash in Cairo,
where demonstrators hurled stones and metal barricades
and pounded on cars.

Riot police in the Egyptian capital used water cannons
to keep about 1,000 stone-throwing demonstrators,
mainly students from the American University in Cairo,
from reaching the U.S. Embassy.

The protesters began throwing metal barricades when
riot squads tried to block them from joining about 500
Muslim Brotherhood and communist anti-war
demonstrators about 50 yards from the downtown
embassy. Police took swings at demonstrators' heads
with batons, but some also were heard to shout: "Don't
hit them! Don't hit them!"

Soon, demonstrators broke through and more than 2,000
people were surrounded by riot police. Demonstrators
shouted "Down with Arab leaders!" and "Leave, leave
Mubarak!" in reference to Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak - an indication of the anger many Arabs feel
toward their own governments for failing, in their
view, to act strongly enough to avoid war.

By late afternoon, about 5,000 people had regrouped in
downtown Cairo's Tahrir Square. As they set out again
toward the embassy, police sprayed them with soapy
blue water and stone-throwing resumed.

Essam el-Eryan, a prominent Muslim Brotherhood member
among the protesters, said: "American interests
shouldn't feel safe in the Arab region. Iraq should be
supported to transform the swift war that the U.S.
wants to gang and city fights, to make Iraq a
graveyard to the Americans."

"This way, American people will revolt against this
war," he said.

As demonstrators scattered, charging through downtown
streets, many shops and restaurants closed, including
a Hardee's fast-food restaurant. A nearby KFC,
however, was open, and demonstrators hadn't damaged
any businesses.

Violence also erupted in Manila, Philippines. Police
used shields and truncheons to disperse about 300
anti-war activists trying to approach the U.S.
Embassy, injuring at least 12 demonstrators, protest
leaders said.

Although small in number, anti-war protests at the
tightly guarded seaside embassy have become more
aggressive and boisterous, and police have responded
this week with dispersals and arrests.

Throughout the day, a phalanx of police kept
protesters on a road several yards away from the
embassy, where they burned a U.S. flag and portraits
of President Bush and Philippine leader Gloria
Macapagal Arroyo, one of the staunchest Asian allies
of the U.S.-led war on terrorism.

More than 100,000 people, many of them high school and
university students, marched to the U.S. Embassy in
Athens, Greece, chanting "No to the war" and
"Americans, killers of people." More demonstrations
were planned for Friday and the weekend.

In Italy, a two-hour nationwide general strike was
called for late afternoon.

Earlier, students, labor union members and other
protesters marched in several Italian cities. An
estimated 45,000 people turned out in Milan. Police in
Rome blocked anti-war demonstrators marching up Via
Veneto toward the U.S. Embassy, while tens of
thousands of students, workers and other Italians
blocked highways and train tracks elsewhere.

More than 15,000 protesters marched through Dhaka,
Bangladesh, chanting anti-U.S. slogans and burning
American and British flags. Bangladesh's leftist
forces joined hands with Islamic demonstrators.

Demonstrators also tried to get their points across
outside busy capitals. More than 11,000 people marched
to the U.S. Consulate in the northern Greek port of
Thessaloniki, while 10,000 rallied outside the British
Consulate in the western port of Patras.

"We are protesting the attack against Iraq because we
cannot accept the cowboy stance of the supposed planet
lord," Athens teacher Christos Gotzias said of Bush.
"The end result will be the disappearance of the
planet lord."




_________________________________________________

KOMINFORM
P.O. Box 66
00841 Helsinki
Phone +358-40-7177941
Fax +358-9-7591081
http://www.kominf.pp.fi

-------------------------------------------
Macdonald Stainsby
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/rad-green
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/leninist-international
--
In the contradiction lies the hope.
                                     --Bertholt Brecht



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