BY
TOM FLANAGAN
LISMORE — In what many participants described as the biggest political
event in this town's history, 5000 people — about a ninth of the town's
total population — overflowed Spinks Park to say no to any war on Iraq.
Lisa Yeates, well-known local singer and political activist of 25 years,
began the event with a compelling musical and political presentation, highlighting
the impact of the use of depleted uranium weapons in the last Gulf war
and Australia's involvement in the nuclear fuel cycle.
Other speakers included NSW Greens Senator Kerry Nettle, Reverend Cameron
Venables of the Anglican Church, Peter Lanyon, a Labor Party candidate
in the March 22 NSW elections, and Socialist Alliance candidate for Lismore
Nick Fredman.
After a street march, in which protesters carried giant Bush and Howard
puppets and hundreds of banners and placards, the anti-war protest clogged
Lismore's CBD for an hour to hear further speakers. These included World
War II veterans Arthur Pike, who saw action on the Kokoda Trail, and Phil
Davenport, who was a pilot and POW. The silence of the crowd as both veterans
spoke was an indication of the intense attention their anti-war messages
received.
One rally participant, Barbara Elliot, a Socialist Alliance member from
Collins Creek, said “it brought back memories of marching against the Vietnam
War 30 years ago — it was the same feeling, and people have found their
voices again”.
Upcoming anti-war actions in Lismore include the March 5 student strike
against the war and the International Women's Day rally on March 8.
This student strike has been endorsed by the Lismore No War group and
the Southern Cross University branch of the National Tertiary Education
Industry Union. An announcement of the planned student strike at the rally
by Resistance member Matt Egan was received an enthusiastic response and
dozens of high school students put their names on contact lists to help
with the strike.
From Green Left Weekly, February 19, 2003.
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