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hello,
Below is an article that is the lead story on the front page of the early Sunday edition of the Washington Post.
-Shane
D.C. Protest Organizers Join Arms Middle East Turmoil Becomes Uniting Force
-- Actions in DC on 4/20/02
By Manny Fernandez Washington Post Staff Writer Sunday, April 14, 2002; Page A01
The escalating violence in the Middle East has given a new emotional urgency to social activism, uniting a diverse mix of demonstrators headed to downtown Washington this week.
Those opposed to global capitalism and the U.S. policies that support it, others who have decried the war in Afghanistan, and activists who objected to widespread arrests of Muslims in the United States have joined pro-Palestinian groups to march for a common cause.
"We're giving a government [Israel] that has been found by the United Nations to be in violation of human rights $3‚billion, while at the same time we are cutting back on social infrastructure projects in the United States," said Salem McCarron, 30, an Adams Morgan Web developer who plans to take part! in demonstrations next weekend. "We see that as a local issue, especially here in D.C."
Working together under a room-for-all banner of anti-oppression, four broad contingents plan four days of demonstrations focused on marches and rallies next Saturday, which have concerned police and are likely to snarl traffic. Police have said that although they do not expect trouble, they will be prepared.
At least four marches are planned for Saturday and will wind through downtown from rally points including the grounds of the Washington Monument, the Ellipse south of the White House, and the Foggy Bottom headquarters of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.
A confluence of events – part happenstance, part strategy – led several coalitions to link their plans, their people and their marches.
When a wave of demonstrations took over Washington's streets two years ago, the focus was the spring meetings of the World Bank a! nd the IMF. The themes were largely opposition to the institutions' lending practices, which the protesters said impoverished Third World countries and damaged the environment.
This year, although the protests again will fall on the weekend of the spring meetings, when anti-globalization activists will renew their drive, the themes have taken on a more urgent edge. Now, violence in the Middle East – and U.S. support of Israel – has moved to the forefront, yet still comfortably tucked under the anti-oppression umbrella.
A visit to Washington by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon that had been planned for April 22 further padded an April protest calendar already booked with marches against support for Colombia's regime; against the meetings of the IMF and World Bank; and against the Bush administration's domestic and foreign policies. Whether Sharon actually visits during the Middle East upheaval remains a question.
Organize! rs of the various groups say they became aware of each others' demonstration plans and decided to unite to create a larger, broader presence for their causes.
Organizers in the various coalitions maintain that the wide variety of issues grow from the same root – the role that U.S. corporate and government leaders play in worldwide oppression.
"All of the issues are related," said Peta Lindsay, 17, a senior at the District's School Without Walls and a volunteer organizer with International Answer, a coalition calling for support of Palestinian rights. "We couldn't have an antiwar demonstration and not talk about Palestine. It would be hypocritical of us."
No one is sure how many protesters will show. Police estimate that 10,000 to 20,000 will participate Saturday; organizers expect from a few thousand to tens of thousands at the larger marches.
"We're mobilizing to bring thousands and thousands," said Terra Lawson-Remer,! 23, of the National Youth and Student Peace Coalition, one of many groups coordinating another march Saturday from the Washington Monument to the Capitol. "There's no RSVP policy . . . so we don't have an exact number."
The protests will cap an unusually busy week, even by Washington standards, including Monday's pro-Israel rally at the Capitol, a parade on Tuesday commemorating the emancipation of slaves in the District and a flag-waving demonstration Saturday to show support for U.S. troops.
The variety of protest demonstrations scheduled from Friday through April 22 has drawn both new and familiar players to the social protest circuit.
Julie Ren, a freshman from Wesleyan University in Connecticut, will be participating in her second major protest, coming in one of the many bus and carpool caravans of college students from across the country. Ren is taking part in Saturday's antiwar demonstration, which will be led by the N! ational Youth and Student Peace Coalition and other youth and adult progressive groups.
"I think marching on Washington, D.C., is symbolic historically of the freedoms in this country, of the freedoms to protest," said Ren, 19. Ren and others are calling for an end to the Bush administration's war on terrorism at home and abroad, an issue that includes the treatment of Muslims after the Sept. 11 attacks.
Christy Pardew, a 25-year-old D.C. activist who described the April 2000 demonstrations as a pivotal point in her "radicalizing," will be there, too. She was on hand when the anti-globalization protests erupted in clashes with police, prompting mass arrests and complaints of unconstitutional police tactics. On Saturday and Sunday, Pardew plans to join a demonstration heavy on street theater to oppose the policies of the World Bank and IMF.
She and other activists with Mobilization for Global Justice, a D.C.-based anti-globa! lization coalition, have been busy hanging "More World, Less Bank" flags and finding volunteers to walk on stilts.
Many protesters, including D.C. organizer Hendrik Voss, see the causes of the various movements as closely connected and their convergence as a watershed in grass-roots activism. Voss, 27, is helping to organize marches demanding a change in U.S. foreign policy with Colombia and the closure of an Army school whose graduates, activists contend, are responsible for human rights abuses.
"It's historic that all of these movements are coming together," said Voss, who works for School of the Americas Watch, one of several groups organizing the National Mobilization on Colombia. "There is a very strong connection with economic repression, as it's symbolized by IMF and World Bank policies, and military repression, as it is carried out by School of the Americas-trained soldiers throughout Latin America."
The A22 Collective! , a D.C.-based anti-capitalist group, is calling for activists to take part in civil disobedience on April 22 outside the Washington Hilton on Connecticut Avenue NW, where Sharon has been scheduled to speak as part of the annual policy conference of the pro-Israel lobby group, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. "All I can really say is that it'll be nonviolent direct action," McCarron said.
He added that Sharon is drawing the condemnation of protesters for some of the same reasons people turn out in opposition to multinational corporations and the military industrial complex: for their treatment of labor and human rights. "You have only one viewpoint in Israel forming policy – the military viewpoint," he said.
Scores of other pro-Palestinian activists, including those in a coalition called the Committee in Solidarity with the Palestinian People, are planning marches and protests in connection with Sharon's visit, even i! f he cancels.
More than 50 buses from mosques across the country – in addition to caravans carrying other activists from Texas, Minnesota and New York, among other places – are planning to come to the District for International Answer's demonstration. Answer's organizers said they expect about 125 buses. About 100 more buses are expected for the student-led peace march.
Some activists will spread their message by marching on foot, pedaling through downtown during evening rush hour or performing street-theater skits with costumes and fake blood.
Since the Sept. 11 attacks, international demonstrations against world financial bodies have been less aggressive, and there has not been as much violence. Some demonstrators plan to mark April 22 with civil disobedience, blocking entrances to the Capitol, marching in an unpermitted downtown procession and staging other undisclosed "direct actions." Organizers insist that all of their a! ctivities – even civil disobedience – will be nonviolent yet head-turning.
Last week, at a D.C. meeting of Mobilization for Global Justice, someone mentioned needing toy-gun props for a skit mocking corporate greed, but the idea was quickly shot down. "Make them out of cardboard," one activist said, hoping to prevent any trouble with police.
A single moment at that meeting illustrated how the Middle East issue has given emotional muscle to the group's often-esoteric demands on labor and human rights in faraway places.
Inside the hall of the Mount Pleasant church, Serian, a 25-year-old Palestinian woman who did not want her last name published, described the devastation of the Israeli occupation in the West Bank – of fearing for her family in Ramallah, of homes turned to rubble, of day-to-day survival overriding all else.
"It's extremely terrifying," the District resident told about 40 activists, who sat riveted to their! seats as she talked and applauded her when she was finished.
"It's beyond imagination at this point," she said. "We need to let our voice be heard." She said she, too, will join the protests.
© 2002 The Washington Post Company
| COLOMBIA |
Nov
8 2001 |
Estudiante Muerto el Miércoles
en Colombia en Protesta Contra Guerra / Student Killed in Anti-War
Protest in Colombia Wednesday
Update: 9nov01
dos
más fueron matados | two
more were killed
[en] Carlos Geovanny Blanco Leguzamo
was studying medicine at Colombia National University.
Yesterday he was shot dead during an anti-war
protest in Bogota.
A group of students were protesting the bombings
in Afganistan when police responded to the demo with violence. A group
of students were confronting police forces who had invaded university
campus when Carlos was shot at around noon. Police
commander denies police are responsible for the shooting but
a number of witnesses confirm the shot came from behind police lines.
Police occupied the campus for the whole afternoon. By night a lot of
students were camping in the university and preparing protests for
Thursday.
The University will be closed today and tomorrow.
Reports of this have yet to appear in Corporate media anywhere.
[ colombia imc | brasil
imc ] |
| WORLDWIDE:
PEACE AND JUSTICE |
Oct
31 2001 |
Peace
and Justice Marches, Vigils and Demonstrations Occur Worldwide on
October 27
Marches, vigils,
teach-ins and demonstrations took place around the world on October 27
to continue questioning the "war on terrorism." The
International Action Center reports that actions, most sposored by the
coalition known as International A.N.S.W.E.R. -- Act Now to Stop War and
End Racism, occurred in 75 U.S. cities and over twenty countries.
Reports have come in to Indymedia from cities like Los
Angeles, San
Francisco, Atlanta
(watch
video), Portland,
the Twin
Cities, St.
Louis, Chicago,
Philadelphia
and Albuquerque.
Visit the IAC
site for reports about the actions, and Protest.net
for news about upcoming peace and justice actions
and events. Stop by IMC sites like the IMC-UK,
which features a calendar
of upcoming actions, the Barcelona
IMC which features multilingual reports, and
other IMCs throughout the world for ongoing coverage of anti-war
demonstrations internationally.
[ Reports about
the October 25 anti-war protests in Hartford, Connecticut | Global
Peace Actions Calendar ] |
Mixed reaction to NYC peace march
BBC
article 10/28/01
Street sweeper Desmond Antubam from Ghana could not believe his eyes as he
watched the marchers troop down 8th Avenue with their police escort.- He said
that he knew friends and colleagues who had died on 11 September and called
the marchers "a disgrace".
"There's too much freedom here," he said.
In Hartford, CT: Police,
Protesters Clash In Demonstration Over U.S. Military Policy In Afghanistan;
Protesters Say Charges, High Bail Stifle Dissent.
Hartford Courant. 26 and 27 October 2001.More than 200 marchers
protesting U.S. military action in Afghanistan blocked afternoon rush-hour
traffic in downtown Hartford Thursday, before police used batons and pepper
spray to arrest 16 demonstrators. More
5
reasons not to go to war - Michael Albert & Stephen
Shalom -questions and answers and event timeline on
same page
Lots
of other relevant articles and posts listed by date here
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