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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!sgigate!sgi!cdp!NFMail!nyxfer.uucp!ww
- From: ww@nyxfer.UUCP
- Newsgroups: alt.activism
- Subject: Iraq Bombing Protests/Roundup
- Message-ID: <yZyyXB10w165w@nyxfer.uucp>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 07:52:00 GMT
- Sender: Notesfile to Usenet Gateway <notes@igc.apc.org>
- Lines: 156
- Nf-ID: #N:yZyyXB10w165w@nyxfer.uucp:1931095293:000:6562
- Nf-From: nyxfer.uucp!ww Jan 25 23:52:00 1993
-
-
- Subject: Iraq Bombing Protests/Roundup
- From: nyxfer!ww (Workers World Service)
-
-
- Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
-
- U.S. ATTACKS ON IRAQ SPUR PROTESTS
-
- By Leslie Feinberg
-
- For days, outrage over the renewed attacks on Iraq by U.S. planes
- and missiles has spilled into the streets of cities across the
- country and around the world. Protesters raised their voices to
- be heard over the monolithic pro-war drone of the capitalist
- media, which has acknowledged barely a sound bite of dissent.
-
- Orchestrated nostalgia over the exiting Bush forces and the
- inauguration of the Clinton administration didn't stop these
- activists, who chanted, "Hey Bill Clinton, Hey Al Gore, we say no
- to Big Oil's war!"
-
- RUSH-HOUR PROTESTS
-
- In New York City, about 200 people gathered at the Times Square
- Recruiting Station at 42nd Street and 7th Avenue Jan. 14 during
- evening rush hour.
-
- The protest was called by the International Action Center, a
- group that opposes U.S. military intervention and was initiated
- by former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark.
-
- A demonstration on Martin Luther King Day to demand jobs and an
- end to racism and bigotry also strongly denounced the bombings.
- (See accompanying article.)
-
- Over 200 people demonstrated in San Francisco Jan. 13. The area
- was experiencing a torrential rainstorm at the time. People had
- been put on alert over the weekend by the Emergency Committee to
- Stop the U.S. War in the Middle East and the International Action
- Center, the two sponsoring organizations. Speakers at the rally
- included Richard Becker and Gloria La Riva of the International
- Action Center; Azania Howse, an African-American military
- resister; Rosa Penate, Salvadoran community activist; Keith
- McHenry of Food Not Bombs/Homes Not Jails; and a representative
- OF Middle East Children's Alliance.
-
- In San Jose, Calif., 60 people participated in a picket line in
- front of the Federal Building. Carrying picket signs reading "No
- blood for oil," "U$ out of Iraq" and "Our taxes are NOT for war,"
- they were seen by downtown rush-hour drivers and other passersby.
- A brief march through the heart of the downtown area followed the
- picket line.
-
- Hours after the bombing of Iraq on Jan. 13, the New England
- Coalition to Stop U.S. Intervention in the Middle East organized
- a demonstration of 100 people in Boston in freezing temperatures
- and driving wind. They emphasized demands that money be spent
- fighting wars against poverty, homelessness, racism, sexism and
- lesbian/gay oppression rather than against other oppressed people
- overseas.
-
- Three days later, the Coalition organized a second demonstration
- with the Movement for a Peoples Assembly (MPA), demanding that
- the U.S. withdraw military equipment and troops from both Iraq
- and Somalia and end sanctions against Iraq. Coalition organizers
- appeared on two local radio talk shows, one of which featured a
- television hookup from New York with former U.S. Attorney General
- Ramsey Clark.
-
- TO THE STREETS!
-
- One hundred anti-war activists gathered at the Federal Building
- in downtown Seattle on Jan. 13 to protest the bombing of Iraq.
- Thirty-five people took the streets and blocked traffic for 20
- minutes before police forced the protest back on the sidewalk.
- The organizing groups included MPA, Seattle NOW, Fellowship of
- Reconciliation, Seattle Women Act for Peace and CISPES.
-
- A woman disrupted Gov. Mike Lowry's inaugural address to protest
- the bombing of Iraq. She was removed by a state trooper.
-
- "U.S. OUT NOW!"
-
- About 40 anti-war activists endured the wind and cold in downtown
- Cleveland. They picketed the federal building on Jan. 16, the
- second anniversary of the start of the Gulf War. "People all over
- the world are remembering this anniversary, not with ticker tape
- parades and yellow ribbons, but with protests," Peoples Fightback
- Center spokesperson Martha Grevatt told the crowd.
-
- Outrage at the Pentagon aggression against Iraq was also
- expressed by Pearl Simon, President of Women Speak Out for Peace
- and Justice, who joined with the Fightback Center to organize the
- demonstration. Hiram College students drove over an hour to be
- part of the protest.
-
- Another picket line was planned for Jan. 22 outside British
- Petroleum's downtown headquarters. In the words of Grace
- Waite-Jones, "from LA to Haiti to Baghdad, this genocidal policy
- must stop."
-
- MONEY FOR JOBS!
-
- In Baltimore on Jan. 14, members of the Movement for a Peoples
- Assembly, Baltimore Emergency Response Network and Jonah House
- gathered in front of the Federal Building to demand an end to the
- attacks on Iraq and that the money spent bombing Iraq be spent on
- jobs in this country.
-
- In Minneapolis, Women Against Military Madness (WAMM) activated
- their Emergency Response Network to swiftly organize
- demonstrations on Jan. 15 and 18. Each protest drew 200 people.
-
- Other protests and press conferences took place in San Diego,
- Calif.; Charlottesville, Va.; Los Angeles; Portland, Maine;
- Springfield, Mass., and Nashville, Tenn.
-
- AROUND THE WORLD
-
- There had already been a number of coordinated demonstrations and
- meetings around the world scheduled to protest the continuing
- embargo against Iraq. They turned into stronger protests due to
- the current bombing. In Paris, France, 1,200 people turned out to
- protest.
-
- Some 300 from several countries gathered in Geneva, Switzerland.
- The Young Lawyers Association staged a walkout in Tunis, Tunisia.
- The National Federation of Algerian Farmers held a large
- demonstration in Algiers, Algeria. Other protests took place in
- Berlin; Brussels, Belgium; Rome; Rabat, Morocco and other Arab
- capitals; Mexico City; Jakarta, Indonesia; Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia;
- Warsaw, Poland; and Reykjavik, Iceland.
-
- Groups meeting in Naples, Italy, on Oct. 3 and 4 had initiated
- the call for this coordinated initiative among diverse movements
- who oppose the embargo against Iraq.
-
- Information from International Action Center, Robert Rice, Jane
- Cutter in San Francisco, S. Muysenberg in San Jose, and the
- Seattle, Cleveland, Boston and Baltimore bureaus of Workers
- World.
-
- -30-
-
- Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted if
- source is cited. For more info contact Workers World, 46 West 21st
- Street, New York, NY 10010; e-mail: ww%nyxfer@igc.apc.org or
- workers@mcimail.com.
-
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