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International activists, Iraqis protest Bush in large marches in Bagdad

IrakJournal.org - Jeremy Scahill | 22.02.2003 16:45

Tens of thousands of Iraqis, many of them brandishing Kalashnikov rifles, marched through Baghdad today chanting, “Hey Bush, listen well, we love Saddam.” Security at the march was tight and snipers stood on rooftops. In a different twist to the generally secular protests in Iraq, some of the demonstrators chanted verses from the Koran. Meanwhile, in a separate action, some 200 international activists marched past UN offices along the Tigris River.

International activists, Iraqis protest Bush in large marches in Bagdad
International activists, Iraqis protest Bush in large marches in Bagdad


Several Iraqi tribes also participated in the rallies, dancing traditional dances while holding rifles above their heads. Similar demonstrations took place in other cities throughout Iraq. The marches were broadcast live on Iraqi television.Meanwhile, in a separate action, some 200 international activists marched past UN offices along the Tigris River. Many of the signs at the demonstration stressed the international calls for a continuation of UN inspections. The international march included the US-based Voices in the Wilderness, the Italian group Bridges to Baghdad, dozens of activists who say they have come to Iraq as “Human Shields,” as well as drummers and dancers from Okinawa, Japan. Activists also came from Sweden, Slovenia, Poland, Germany, Bulgaria and Turkey.

Some of the marchers processed silently through the streets, others chanted antiwar slogans in their native tongues. The march wrapped up with a long human chain across the Al Rasheed Bridge over the Tigris River. The activists coordinated their action with the worldwide day of protest against Washington’s drive toward war. On the bridge, they called on people around the world to, “Stop for a minute, stop the war.”


New groups of activists have been pouring into Baghdad from countries around the world in an attempt to stop the war. Over the past week, there have been regular vigils at civilian infrastructure sites that activists and others fear will be targeted by Washington in a war against Iraq. Voices in the Wilderness has also set up a tent across from the main United Nations compound in Baghdad. A massive banner outside the tent reads: “UN Inspections Yes, US Invasion No.”

From Baghdad, Iraqjournal.org filmmaker Jacquie Soohen and videographer May Ying Welch transmitted videotaped messages from two Iraqis to the US where they will be played at demonstrations in New York and other cities. They will also be broadcast at other international demonstrations, as well as on Free Speech Television in the US.



[Editor's Note - other videos from Iraq by May Ying Welch can be seen at the Free Speech TV website.]
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Jeremy Scahill is an independent journalist, who reports for the nationally syndicated Radio and TV show Democracy Now! He is currently based in Baghdad, Iraq, where he and filmmaker Jacquie Soohen are coordinating Iraqjournal.org, the only website providing regular independent reporting from the ground in Baghdad.

IrakJournal.org - Jeremy Scahill
- Homepage: http://iraqjournal.org/