BY PIP HINMAN
SYDNEY — The 45,000-strong anti-war rally in Melbourne on October
14 has spurred anti-war groups here to unite to build the largest possible
rally on November 30. A meeting of some 60 people on October 21 agreed
to organise a “Walk against the War” to demand “No war on Iraq” and “No
Australian involvement”.
The Sydney Palm Sunday Committee first suggested November 30 as the
date for the next major anti-war mobilisation. The No War on Iraq group,
which jointly organised the successful September 28 anti-war rally with
the Palestinian Human Rights Network, and the Sydney Network for Peace,
which organised the national protest at Pine Gap on October 4-5, have decided
to support November 30 as the next major anti-war action.
The October 21 meeting was a joint meeting of delegates from the three
anti-war groups, as well as many other organisations. Given the short notice,
the large number of people who attended indicated the huge level of interest
in opposing an attack on Iraq.
Other organisations represented included the Greens, the Socialist Alliance,
the Italian Migrant Workers' Federation and their Families (FILEF), the
Australian Peace Committee, Action in Solidarity with Asia and the Pacific
(ASAP), the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union, Labor for
Refugees, the NSW Labor Council, Socialist Alternative, Resistance, the
Progressive Labor Party, the Communist Party of Australia, the Uniting
Church, Politics in the Pub, the International Socialist Organisation and
the National Union of Students.
The meeting discussed the march route and recommended fees for affiliate
organisations. Most discussion was around who should speak at the November
30 event. While these are yet to be finalised, it was agreed that the platform
should reflect the breadth of the opposition to the war.
Peter Murphy, representing the Sydney Palm Sunday Committee, proposed
a ban on speakers from political parties. Others argued that this would
disqualify the Greens, the only political party to have won an election
on an anti-war platform (in the Cunningham by-election), while the ALP,
which has an ambiguous position on the war on Iraq, would be represented
on the stage via the trade union spokesperson. The next meeting on October
28 will decide the speakers.
From Green Left Weekly, October 30, 2002.
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