Media Workers Against War report on London protest
MWAW | 18.11.2001 20:56
Some 100,000 anti-war protesters marched in London today, doubling last month's turn-out of 50,000, and reflecting the full breadth, depth and diversity of anti-war feeling in Britain.
The Stop the War Coalition, which organised the march, hailed the turn-out as well beyond expectations. After a week in which sections of the media indulged in misplaced triumphalism in relation to the war in Afghanistan and subjected anti-war dissenters to misrepresentation and calumny, the huge numbers were particularly significant.
After the large demonstration in London on 13 October, the Guardian reported that government ministers were surprised and concerned. Tonight, they will be even more concerned.
Some 100,000 people, undoubtedly representing the views of millions, have seen through the hypocrisy and the double-standards, and reject the war being waged in their name.
Despite all the government's advantages in the propaganda war, more and more people are asking hard questions about this military action - and they are increasingly unsatisfied with the spin-doctors' answers.
Among the marchers were a wide range of people from trades unions, Muslim organisations, community and anti-racist groups, colleges, schools and universities, human rights, peace and anti-globalisation organisations, and political parties.
Protesters came by the coach-load from across the country, including Newcastle, Manchester, Plymouth, and the Foreign Secretary's own constituency of Blackburn. Forty coaches came from Birmingham. As the head of the march reached Trafalgar Square, the tail was still leaving Hyde Park.
"After today's demonstration, no-one can doubt both the scale and the diversity of anti-war feeling in this country," said Suresh Grover of the National Civil Rights Movement and the Stop the War Coalition steering committee. "This is a ground-breaking event, a massive display of opposition to the military action.
"This protest is also against the attack on human rights in Britain. The government is slipping in the suspension of habeas corpus and the introduction of internment and detention without trial. We are also seeing a proliferation of racist assaults.
"This huge turn-out represents the tip of the iceberg of disquiet running through British society. Despite the media attacks, we've doubled our numbers in a month. The message of the demonstration is that we are not going away. This movement will only get bigger."
Among the speakers were John Pilger, Bianca Jagger, Tony Benn, Tariq Ali, Yvonne Ridley, New York City trade unionist Michael Letwin, Dr Jonathan Farley (a Tennesee-born American scholar currently at Oxford), MPs Jeremy Corbyn, Paul Marsden, Alan Simpson, George Galloway, and Adam Price, Asad Rehman (Newham Monitoring Project), Germaine Greer, George Monbiot, Morning Star editor John Haylett, Socialist Alliance chair Dave Nellist, human rights lawyers Louise Christian and Mike Mansfield, NATFHE general secretary Paul Mackney, NUT Executive member Bernard Regan and people from Palestine, Kurdistan and Afghanistan itself.
The march was organised by the Stop the War Coalition and was supported by a wide range of peace and political organisations, community groups, trades unions and individuals (including CND, Labour MPs, RMT, ASLEF, the Muslim Parliament, the National Civil Rights Movement, the Newham Monitoring Project, the London Council of Mosques, Labour Against the War, Media Workers Against the War, Lawyers Against the War, and Artists Against the War).
At sunset, demonstrators - Muslim and non-Muslim - joined in iftar, the evening fast-breaking ritual of the month of Ramadan. The crowd revelled in its own diversity, and in the unity that so many found in calling for peace and justice - for Afghanistan, and people everywhere.
http://www.mwaw.org/
Stop the War Coalition
PO Box 3739, London E5 8EJ
07951 235 915
office@stopwar.org.uk
After the large demonstration in London on 13 October, the Guardian reported that government ministers were surprised and concerned. Tonight, they will be even more concerned.
Some 100,000 people, undoubtedly representing the views of millions, have seen through the hypocrisy and the double-standards, and reject the war being waged in their name.
Despite all the government's advantages in the propaganda war, more and more people are asking hard questions about this military action - and they are increasingly unsatisfied with the spin-doctors' answers.
Among the marchers were a wide range of people from trades unions, Muslim organisations, community and anti-racist groups, colleges, schools and universities, human rights, peace and anti-globalisation organisations, and political parties.
Protesters came by the coach-load from across the country, including Newcastle, Manchester, Plymouth, and the Foreign Secretary's own constituency of Blackburn. Forty coaches came from Birmingham. As the head of the march reached Trafalgar Square, the tail was still leaving Hyde Park.
"After today's demonstration, no-one can doubt both the scale and the diversity of anti-war feeling in this country," said Suresh Grover of the National Civil Rights Movement and the Stop the War Coalition steering committee. "This is a ground-breaking event, a massive display of opposition to the military action.
"This protest is also against the attack on human rights in Britain. The government is slipping in the suspension of habeas corpus and the introduction of internment and detention without trial. We are also seeing a proliferation of racist assaults.
"This huge turn-out represents the tip of the iceberg of disquiet running through British society. Despite the media attacks, we've doubled our numbers in a month. The message of the demonstration is that we are not going away. This movement will only get bigger."
Among the speakers were John Pilger, Bianca Jagger, Tony Benn, Tariq Ali, Yvonne Ridley, New York City trade unionist Michael Letwin, Dr Jonathan Farley (a Tennesee-born American scholar currently at Oxford), MPs Jeremy Corbyn, Paul Marsden, Alan Simpson, George Galloway, and Adam Price, Asad Rehman (Newham Monitoring Project), Germaine Greer, George Monbiot, Morning Star editor John Haylett, Socialist Alliance chair Dave Nellist, human rights lawyers Louise Christian and Mike Mansfield, NATFHE general secretary Paul Mackney, NUT Executive member Bernard Regan and people from Palestine, Kurdistan and Afghanistan itself.
The march was organised by the Stop the War Coalition and was supported by a wide range of peace and political organisations, community groups, trades unions and individuals (including CND, Labour MPs, RMT, ASLEF, the Muslim Parliament, the National Civil Rights Movement, the Newham Monitoring Project, the London Council of Mosques, Labour Against the War, Media Workers Against the War, Lawyers Against the War, and Artists Against the War).
At sunset, demonstrators - Muslim and non-Muslim - joined in iftar, the evening fast-breaking ritual of the month of Ramadan. The crowd revelled in its own diversity, and in the unity that so many found in calling for peace and justice - for Afghanistan, and people everywhere.
http://www.mwaw.org/
Stop the War Coalition
PO Box 3739, London E5 8EJ
07951 235 915
office@stopwar.org.uk
MWAW
Comments
Hide the following 8 comments
Corporate Liars
18.11.2001 23:43
Stronger
...and in the U.S.
19.11.2001 23:46
Carlos Malvado
what US activists actually did
20.11.2001 06:16
see
atlanta.indymedia.org
www.soaw.org
Colin
You're right, Carlos
20.11.2001 15:45
Then again, I can explain your 100,000 and our relative silence with 2 words: your BBC and our CNN.
American activists like myself regularly read your Mirror, your Guardian, and others. OUR NEWS ISNT REPORTING JACK SHIT, as usual.
I'm not surprised that Brits are left doing the bulk of the anti-war protesting, but I am sorry.
*Sj
Spider Jerusalem
Get your union off the fence
21.11.2001 00:08
So if your union is still on the fence, get along to your next branch meeting and put forward a simple resolution calling on your national union executive, and on your local trades council, to affiliate to the Stop the War Coalition. If as many people as possible to this, we will build a firm structure to the peace movement, and ensure that the labour movement is on board too.
dajampsta
This March should happened earlier
21.11.2001 23:09
The trouble with this demo was that people didn't stay long enough in Trafalgar Square and started walking off just half an hour after they got to the Square. Had they all stayed till the end of the rally at 5pm we would have been able to completely pack out all of Trafalgar Square.
steelgate
Homepage: http://www.informationwar.org
The mass demonstration
22.11.2001 00:07
You can find more about the demonstration on http://www.geocities.com/inuk_NoWar
pictures, galleries and more, see for yourself that 100,000 people really were there and it was very diverse too!
For those who couldn't make it (like in the USA), the site should give you an insight, send your messages of support for the UK people to: inuk_media@hotmail.com
Thanks.
Peace,
In:UK
In:UK
e-mail: inuk_media@hotmail.com
Homepage: http://www.geocities.com/inuk_NoWar
stop the cobblers
22.11.2001 17:42
also 50,000 does not represent the views of millions. the vast majority of people still think military action is justified. just because we don't like it doesn't make this any less true.
and what is this bollox about protestors joining in islamic ceremonies? I thought most libertarians were against religion - christian, islam, judaism, hinduism whatever. why didn't demonstrators cap it all off by joining in saying a few Hail Marys?
clearly some very sloppy thinking going on.....
Tom