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The March from Waterloo

R Parks | 15.02.2003 23:49

A pictorial account of the London anti-war demonstration starting at Waterloo station. (article 2)

The March from Waterloo
The March from Waterloo


Our march started on Platform 18 at Waterloo station at 11:35am. Two trains full to bursting with demonstrators arrived at the same time and just getting onto the main station concourse was a feat in itself.

Our plan was to cross the Hungerford footbridge to join Embankment at the start of the march, but the police had closed it. Moments later, it became clear why. The whole South Bank was heaving with protesters who were simply on the wrong side of the river to start the march. Far too many for this small bridge!

Waterloo Bridge was the next logical crossing point to approach, however the police had also closed several of the accesses to it, and others were jammed solid with demonstrators. We found a suitably safe way up on the approach to the National Theatre and joined the lengthy queue of demonstrators waiting to get up onto the bridge.

The first part of the bridge crossing was moving freely, however, as we approached the Embankment side we ground to a halt in a huge sea of protestors. Progress from this point was stop-start nearly all the way.

Eventually we got down the stairways onto Embankment itself and were able to set off down the route of the march. A while later we arrived at the official start of the route, at the north end of the Hungerford Bridge, by Embankment tube station.

We got our first glimpse of Westminster Clock at just about 1:35pm as we approached the Ministry of War. The density of the crowd was almost overwhelming and scarcely a policeman in sight.

An hour and a half later we had passed the Ministry of War and made it to the Houses of Parliament. Yes, those 500 metres really did take 90 minutes!

Once on Whitehall, the pace quickened and flowed well through Trafalgar Square. On Regent Street, the march slowed right down again and by now it was approaching 4:00pm.

At about 4:45pm we reached Green Park tube station on Piccadilly. By this time, there were demonstrators coming in the opposite direction having clearly been to Hyde Park, listened to the speeches and left. It would have taken us at least until 5:30pm to reach Hyde Park Corner at the rate we were moving, and with our two very patient young sons finally starting to get cranky, we left the march and took the tube back to Waterloo.

Given that there was standing room only for so much of the route and that Hyde Park was full (and emptying) before we ever got there, the number of demonstrators was truly awesome.

Tony Blair had better take note and he underestimates the numbers present and those who could not make it at his peril - the British electorate's votes are up for grabs and unless he changes his stance, they won't be going his way again.

R Parks
- e-mail: indymedia@sandvika.co.uk

Comments

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one in thirty

16.02.2003 18:17

if we accept conservative estimates of the numbers to be one million protesters at yesterdays demo in london, then that equates to one in every sixty people of britain being present. and if, like me, every person their knew of one person, or more, that was unable to attend for what ever reasons...a friend of mine was lying in hospital with broken ribs...my brothers girlfriend on a training course...
then thats one in thirty of the population opposed to this war.
namaste.

kevin
mail e-mail: barefootwarrior@hotmail.com


Pressurise your MP

16.02.2003 21:35

Relying on Mr Blair to take note of the massive turnout on Saturday is by itself not enough, in my opinion. We should be pressurising our MPs by bombarding them with letters/emails/telephone calls. Their jobs/pensions/lifestyles depend upon our votes. Mr Blair will certainly take note of what they are saying to him because he would not want them to do to him what Tory MPs did to Mrs Thatcher back in 1991!

Badar
mail e-mail: bak20@hotmail.com