WORLD> America
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Protests in Washington, Calif. call for war's end
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-03-22 09:09 WASHINGTON -- Before war protestors ended their demonstration Saturday afternoon, several placed cardboard coffins in front of the offices of northern Virginia defense contractors such as KBR Inc. and Lockheed Martin Corp. as riot police stood by.
"Lockheed Martin you can't hide, we charge you with genocide!" they chanted as part of a demonstration that began in Washington to mark the sixth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq.Arlington County, Va., police estimated there were 2,500 to 3,000 protestors and said no arrests were made.
Meanwhile, at a similar protest in San Francisco, tension grew after four or five dozen activists surrounded a group of riot-equipped police, throwing sticks and water bottles. Police responded by regrouping in riot formation and physically detaining several protestors who pushed and shoved with officers. Protest leaders shouted from the stage, urging police to leave. Barriers were quickly erected between police and protestors as an organizer urged calm and the activists started to disperse. In Washington, protestors demanded that President Barack Obama immediately withdraw all US troops from Iraq, saying thousands of Iraqis have died and thousands of American troops have been wounded or killed. "We think it's especially important for this new administration to feel the pressure from people that we don't want more war," said Obama supporter Pat Halle, 59, of Baltimore. Anti-war activists said even though former President George W. Bush is out of power, they are disappointed with what they see as stalled action from Obama. "Obama seems to be led somewhat by the bureaucracies. I want him to follow up on his promise to end the war," said 66-year-old Perry Parks of Rockingham, N.C., who said he served in the Army for nearly 30 years, including in Vietnam. Obama has said he plans to withdraw roughly 100,000 troops by summer 2010. He promises to pull the last of the US troops by the end of 2011, in accordance with a deal Iraqis signed with Bush. There were about 138,000 troops in Iraq as of March 13. In southern California, hundreds of protestors gathered in Hollywood. Among them were peace advocate Cindy Sheehan - whose son was killed in Iraq - Oscar-winning screenwriter Paul Haggis and Ron Kovic, a paralyzed Vietnam veteran whose story was chronicled in the book and film "Born on the Fourth of July." protestors in Los Angeles were expected to follow a rally with a march and then a symbolic "die in" where they would lie down in a major Hollywood Boulevard intersection to symbolize the soldiers who have died in the war. |