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1.5 Million
March Against Attack
on Iraq Anti-War Rallies Change Italy on Iraq?
by Eric J. Lyman
Published on Sunday, October 6, 2002 by the United Press International
ROME -- More than 1.5 million
Italians took to the streets of dozens of cities Saturday afternoon
and evening to protest possible U.S. military action against
Iraq -- a surprise show of discord that could be fervent enough
for the Italian government to re-think its support of Washington.
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Demonstrators show placards
in front of Rome's U.S. Embassy during an anti-war protest, Saturday,
Oct. 5, 2002. Several demonstrations took place in major Italian
cities against possible U.S. military action in Iraq. (AP Photo/Gregorio
Borgia)
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The larger-than-expected protests
took place without violence, despite speculation from some fronts
that the gatherings could become dangerous, especially to U.S.
citizens. On Friday, the U.S. Embassy in Rome circulated a warning
to citizens residing in or visiting Italy to stay away from the
demonstrations because of fears that they could become targets
for violence.
But even though the protests
were peaceful, demonstrators made it clear that they opposed
U.S. action against Baghdad. The stance is significant because
up to this point, Rome and London have been President George
W. Bush's strongest allies in Europe.
Most European leaders -- most
vocally France's Jacques Chirac and Gerhard Schroeder of Germany
-- have called on diplomatic means to diffuse tensions between
the United States and Iraq.
"For several weeks, Italians
have been saying that they are opposed to action against Iraq,
but this is the first time they have put those words into action,"
Maria Rossi, co-director of the polling firm Opinioni, told United
Press International. "The site of thousands of Italians
on the streets protesting against the potential war in Iraq has
to be a sobering sight for government
Government officials were not
available for comment on their stance on U.S.-Iraq relations
on Saturday, but local television drew the same conclusion as
Rossi.
"If the government can ignore
this ... it can ignore anything," said one on-the-scene
journalist for the network La 7 in Milan. "On this day,
the Italian people have spoken ... and they say they are against
support for the American position."
Opinion polls support that view,
with a week-old survey from Opinioni showing that more than two
out of every three Italians opposed any armed conflict over Iraq,
and nearly four out of five Italians opposed to Italian participation
in such action unless it was as part of a United Nations-sponsored
force.
Most of the anti-war demonstrations
took place on Saturday morning, with the biggest of those in
Milan, drawing a crowd that police estimated at between 60,000
to 100,000 people.
Signs in the crowd showed Bush's
head on the body of a hawk -- a reference to the president's
hawkish stance toward Iraq's Saddam Hussein -- and others that
showed Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and British leader
Tony Blair as Bush's pets, referring to their support of U.S.
policies. Other large morning rallies took place in Bologna,
Florence, Naples and Palermo.
But the day's biggest march was
held in the evening in Rome, where police said as many as 200,000
people gathered in protest.
"Our point is that we cannot
support the United States's plan to kill innocent Iraqis in order
to win the upcoming (Congressional) elections," Marco Filiberti,
38, a protester who came to Rome with six friends from the nearby
city of Latina, told UPI.
Claudia Bacigalupo, 24, a teacher
from Rome, said she hoped the day's unexpectedly large rallies
would convince the government to backtrack on its support of
Washington.
"We cannot control what
the United States does, but we can tell them that if they want
to march into Iraq they will have to do so without the support
of the Italian military," Bacigalupo said.
Whether that will be the case
or not is unclear. In the past, Berlusconi has paid only limited
attention to public opinion -- which, combined his eagerness
to support Washington on a variety of issues -- might make a
change of plans unlikely. But pollsters say that because of the
support the government will need to address an array of domestic
issues, the public's view on Iraq could create a degree of doubt
about the course the prime minister has chosen.
"Over the coming months,
the government will try to pass a so-far unpopular budget, revisit
controversial labor reform legislation and start to tackle painful
pension reforms," Rossi, the pollster, said. "With
the economy weakening, the government may have to pick its most
important battles ... (and) what we don't know is whether Iraq
is one of them."
The United States has taken an
aggressive stance against Iraq -- including calls for Hussein's
government to be toppled -- on fears that the Iraqi leader is
building an arsenal of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons.
Copyright © 2002 United Press International
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