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Wave of Peace Rallies Sweeps World

STAFF | British Broadcasting Corporation | February 16, 2003

"Rallies and marches have been held in hundreds of towns and cities worldwide, attracting millions of people opposed to a US-led war against Iraq."

Thousands are preparing to join in anti-war protests in San Francisco on the US west coast, as a weekend of global demonstrations draws to a close.

Rallies and marches have been held in hundreds of towns and cities worldwide, attracting millions of people opposed to a US-led war against Iraq.

On Sunday, a quarter of a million people demonstrated in the Australian city of Sydney — the biggest peace rally there since the Vietnam War.

Saturday saw huge protests in Berlin, London, Madrid, New York, Paris and Rome.

A big rally was also staged on Saturday in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, where state media have given blanket coverage to the anti-war demonstrations around the world.

And on Sunday a ceremony was held to inaugurate a memorial for more than 400 people Iraq says were killed when US missiles hit the Amariya bomb shelter in February 1991.

Celebrities

Security in New York was extremely tight during Saturday's demonstration, with the US still on heightened alert for possible attack.

The streets around the United Nations headquarters were packed with crowds, claimed by organisers to be well in excess of the 100,000 demonstrators they had hoped for.

Activists, trade unionists, students and church groups were among those taking part, bearing banners with slogans such as "Give Peace a Chance " and "No Blood for Oil".

Among those attending the rally were celebrities and activists such as Susan Sarandon, Danny Glover, South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Angela Davis.

Mr Tutu told the crowd that those who wished to wage war on Iraq "must know it would be an immoral war".

Demonstrations were also held in scores of other towns and cities across the US and Canada.

The weekend of demonstrations followed Friday's UN Security Council session, where chief weapons inspector Hans Blix issued a largely positive assessment of the UN's disarmament efforts in Iraq.

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This website is a tribute to Why War?, one of the nation's first and most innovative post-9/11 student antiwar organizations. Born on October 22, 2001 at Swarthmore College, we were a handful of freshmen and sophmores who vocally opposed the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere. And now, seven years later, we are retiring this website as we focus our efforts on new directions. We hope that it continues to serve future activists and we remain confident that humanity is on the verge birthing a better world.