- WASHINGTON (YellowTimes.org)
- In recent days, disenchanted citizens across the world are demonstrating
against the policies of the Bush Administration. After months of silence
following the September 11 attacks, the anti-globalization effort has been
revitalized. In cities across the United States, concerned Americans are
speaking out against policies of the Bush Administration; they claim these
policies cause unnecessary death and destruction in countries that the
Administration accuses of terrorism.
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- Demonstrators feel they cannot support the "collateral
damage" that will develop if the Bush Administration attacks Iraq.
These concerned citizens make reference to the damage brought to Afghanistan,
where thousands of innocent Afghanis were murdered by stray U.S. missiles
and bombs, along with unexploded cluster bomblets; these bomblets are spread
throughout the Afghani landscape and act as quasi-landmines.
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- On Friday, September 27, the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) meeting in Washington D.C. met mass protests from individuals who
consider the Fund to be a tool of Washington in creating economic slavery
for poor nations whose economies are dependent on IMF loans. According
to D.C. law enforcement figures, 2,000 people demonstrated and 649 of them
were arrested.
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- Some of those arrested threw rocks at law enforcement;
however, the bulk of the arrests were for non-violent charges such as:
"failure to obey a lawful order," "participating in a riot,"
and "parading without a permit." According to the Independent
Media Center (http://www.IndyMedia.org), one religious group was arrested
for "obstructing a sidewalk."
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- Witnesses explained that D.C. police would surround a
group of non-violent demonstrators, converge on them, and then arrest every
person present. The high levels of arrests were very unusual for a largely
non-violent demonstration. Using U.S. law enforcement's own numbers, about
33 percent of all people protesting were arrested.
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- Friday's actions by law enforcement sent a message to
those who plan on publicly showing their objections to the Bush Administration
and their control of the International Monetary Fund.
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- On Saturday, September 28, the protests continued despite
the threat of more arrests. CNN reported that only 300 people protested
that Saturday afternoon. The Independent Media Center claimed that while
only 300 to 400 people marched from the U.S. Treasury to the Washington
Monument, a total of 7,500 people were in the streets in Washington D.C.
protesting the International Monetary Fund and the Bush Administration,
accused of neo-liberal economic policies that prevent global justice and
democracy. Sharply contrasting with the previous day, the police only arrested
five people on Saturday.
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- Washington D.C. was not the only city where protestors
spoke out against what they consider injustice. In London and Rome, anti-war
demonstrators marched through the streets protesting the proposed U.S.
and British assault on Iraq. The number of demonstrators at these events
far outnumbered those demonstrating in the United States, showing yet another
example of the recent shift in peace activism from the United States to
Europe.
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- According to official police figures, 150,000 people
marched in London against Prime Minister Tony Blair's support for President
Bush's plans of attacking Iraq. London protest leaders claimed that the
actual number of protesters were around 300,000.
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- In Rome, protest organizers said that 100,000 people
marched against President Bush's policies and their government's acceptance
of them.
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- On Sunday, September 29, the protests continued in Washington
D.C., as 2,500 people marched toward Vice President Dick Cheney's residence,
according to police figures.
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- The U.S. government response to these major protests,
the first since the days before September 11, 2001, offer an uncertain
future for demonstrators. U.S. military and government personnel were seen
monitoring the protests; they were videotaping groups of demonstrators
and snapping close up pictures of individual faces.
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- These strict measures may be a sign from the Bush Administration
that demonstrations will be met with fierce government resistance. By arresting
over 30 percent of protesters on Friday, along with scaring others by having
the military film and gather intelligence on citizens merely exercising
their Constitutional rights to free speech and assembly, the Bush Administration
is increasing the risks for any citizen who disagrees with government policy.
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- First Printed Monday, September 30, 2002
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