BY KAREN FLETCHER
30,000 people shut down the centre of Melbourne three hours after
the first cruise missiles were launched on Baghdad on Thursday. Victorian
Peace Network (VPN) volunteers told Green Left Weekly that many
of the peace activists they phoned throughout the afternoon to call the
emergency rally burst into tears when told that bombing had commenced,
but all pledged to activate their networks to take action in the streets.
The mood of the emergency rally was sombre but determined.
By contrast, the mood of the similar-sized rally on March 21 was angry
and radical. It converged on the Victorian State Parliament to protest
Premier Steve Bracks' failure to come out against the war. VPN convenor
David Spratt told GLW that the VPN invited Bracks to speak at the
rally but were told that no state government minister will speak on a VPN
platform. Spratt, an ALP member, gave a fiery speech from the steps of
the Parliament, saying that the failure of federal ALP leader Simon Crean
to clearly oppose the war had left the way open for Howard to do what he
liked. He said: “To Simon Crean we say: For 6 months you sat on your hands
and gave no support to the anti-war movement. You squirmed and you did
not say that this war was always going to be wrong, with or without the
UN. And now you say you are against this war and we say to you: Don't expect
us to welcome you with open arms. Your weakness gave John Howard free reign
to support this war.” Melbourne Resistance organiser and Youth Against
War representative Marcus Praban also stirred the crowd with his passionate
declaration that it was the “duty” of students and all young people to
strike against the war on 26 March. The crowd responded, as one, when Praban
asked whether the peace movement supported the right of school students
to walk out of school on Wednesday for a mass youth rally against the war.
A massive roar of “yes” echoed throughout the city streets surrounding
the state parliament.
From Green Left Weekly, March 26, 2003.
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