Skip to content or view screen version

Pictures from the Women's Day demo in London

indy london | 09.03.2003 00:27

(article 2)

Pictures from the Women's Day demo in London
Pictures from the Women's Day demo in London


The march assembled at 11.30 am at Parliament Square. A group of 100 that later grew up to 250 people marched from there to Victoria, then Hyde Park Corner and Grosvenor Square, in front of the U.S. Embassy.

The big puppet that is seen in some of the pictures wanted to symbolise all women around the world.

One of the demands were for military spending to be invested in caring - that military spending accounts for over $900 billion annually.

Some chantings were:

Investing in caring, not killing.
We want welfare, not warfare.
We want children, not body bags.
We want peace not war.
We want food not bombs.
Who makes weapons of mass destruction: UK, USA.

UK women say: no war
USA women say: no war
Iraqui women say: no war
Palestinian women say: no war
Israeli women say: no war
Muslim women say: no war
Jewish women say: no war
Christian women say: no war
Atheist women say: no war
ALL women say: no war.

At 2.00pm we arrived in Grosvenor Square, where women from various countries shared their experiences with those present- including police.

There we learned that:

some of the present today, had been in this square against the Vietnam war as well - back here to meet a new anti-war generation.

in USA, native american communities live as poorly as indigenous people in South America: no electricity, no running water, no sanitation - in the richest country on earth. The oil extracted from those lands was invested in arms, leaving devastation and suffering.

in Iraq, the genocide has continued for the last 12 years, with around 23 million people dead thanks to the economic sanctions. Women have seen the devastation left by US chemical weapons especially in Kurdish Iraq.

there are UN resolutions against Israel, but they are not fulfilled.

People in Iraq want to get rid of Saddam - but it is no one else's business.

there is a generation in Sri Lanka that has never seen peace in their country - women get the most abused, and especially for them, there is no way out.

mr. W. Bush went years ago to Argentina, to start off privatisation programs of water and other public services. This was how disaster began - the final blow came thanks to the IMF, WB and all banks.

in Venezuela, the last coup against the government was orchestrated by the USA - this country was the only one who recognised the military government that lasted 2 days - very much for democracy

70% of households are lead by women in Venezuela; this explains the overwhelming feminine presence in the popular upraising.

during the Gulf War 12 years ago, only 40 British soldiers died. in the months following the war, 600 men died in UK. 70% of them committed suicide.

indy london

Comments

Hide the following 7 comments

related pics:

09.03.2003 00:34

related pics:
related pics:

more pics

ana


related pics:

09.03.2003 00:34

related pics:
related pics:

more pics

ana


related pics:

09.03.2003 00:34

related pics:
related pics:

more pics

ana


related pics:

09.03.2003 00:34

related pics:
related pics:

more pics

ana


Factual correction

09.03.2003 00:54

Good stuff, but the facts need to be correct. For example,
23 million people have not died as a result of sanctions in
Iraq. 23 million is the entire population of Iraq. The
actual figure is thought to be somewhere in the region of
1 to 1.5 million.

Still horrific, but we just shoot ourselves in the foot if
we misquote statistics...

Matt

Matt S


just a mistake

09.03.2003 10:42

the 23 million stat is just a mistake in an otherwise excellent report, the speech had it right. but well spotted!

pescao


International Women's Day

18.03.2003 12:53

IAF-AFI demands Pay Equity Now!

Wage gaps between men and women persist, while women remain tied to underpaid jobs. On March 8, International Women's Day, and as part of the IAF-AFI's campaign, the anarchafeminist movement is launching a worldwide call for 'Pay Equity Now'!

Equal pay is a fundamental right, recognized in many international instruments. But worldwide, women are still paid between 10% and 50% less than men for doing similar work or jobs of comparable worth.

On Women's Day, the anarchafeminits are launching direct actions against this shameful reality that continues to persist by actively voicing women's demands.

Why for example should floor cleaners, who are mainly women, earn less than wall cleaners, who are mainly men, when they work in the same public hospital in the UK? Why should a female nursery nurse earn less than a male veterinary assistant who is in charge of pest control, working in the same hospital in the USA? Why should a female nursing assistant in a hospital in the Philippines earn more than the male car park attendant? We need to recognise and revalue the work that women do, in particular in health and education services.

Accordingly the anarchafeminists are building up their strategy to develop a clearer understanding of the nature of discrimination and to identify where it exists and how to bring women's wages up to the same level as their male counterparts, to do away with relative slavecontracts.

There have been major successes in the industrialised world, particularly in Canada, where the public sector unions won a very substantive pay award for women in the low paid sector. In New Zealand, primary teachers have achieved parity with secondary school teachers. In Britain, women in the school meal-service were able to win an equal pay case.
Successes like these make women want to join and participate in different direct actions, via unions and the feministmovement and the anarchist movement in general as well as the anarchafeminist movement in particular.

Anarchafeminist
- Homepage: http://www.anarchy.no/maf.html