Showing posts with label march. Show all posts
Showing posts with label march. Show all posts

Monday, 11 October 2010

enjoy Rioters target gay pride march

Rioters target gay pride march

A gay rights activist flashes a victory sign during a rally in Belgrade. About 5 000 Serbian police clashed with anti-gay protesters on Sunday, leading to arrests and many injuries as Belgrade hosted its first gay rights rally in nearly a decade.
Belgrade - Riot police in Serbia clashed with hundreds of far-right supporters who tried to disrupt a gay pride march in downtown Belgrade on Sunday. More than a dozen people were injured, officials said.

Thousands of police officers sealed off the streets in the capital where the march took place, repeatedly clashing at several locations with rioters who were trying to burst through security cordons.

The protesters, chanting “death to homosexuals”, hurled bricks, stones, glass bottles and firecrackers at riot police. Several parked cars and shop windows were damaged and at least one police vehicle was set on fire.

Hospital officials said at least 18 people, about half of them police officers, were injured. Police said several rioters were arrested.

Sunday's march is viewed as a major test for Serbia's government, which has launched pro-Western reforms and pledged to protect human rights as it seeks European Union membership.

Right-wing groups broke up a pride march in 2001 and forced the cancellation of last year's event.

Vincent Degert, the head of the EU mission in Serbia, addressed around 1 000 gay activists and their supporters who gathered at a park in downtown Belgrade which was surrounded by riot police, including armoured vehicles.

“We are here to celebrate this very important day to celebrate the values of tolerance, freedom of expression and assembly,” Degert told the crowd waving rainbow flags.

The brief 15-minute march ended without violence, with the participants heading into a downtown hall for a party. Some chanted, “We have succeeded.”

Hospital officials said a group of young men attacked the headquarters of a women's human rights organisation early on Sunday, injuring one activist. The “Women in Black” organisation said the men were looking for gays.

The US Embassy in Belgrade said there was a high potential for violence before, during and after the march and strongly recommended that its personnel avoid the downtown area for the day. The same right-wing group set the embassy on fire during riots in 2008 to protest US support for Kosovo's independence.

Right-wing groups say the gay events are contrary to Serbian family and religious values. Most of the rioters on Sunday were young football fans whose groups have been infiltrated by neo-Nazi and other extremist organisations. - Sapa-AP
coppied by http://www.iol.co.za/news/world/rioters-target-gay-pride-march-1.685140

Friday, 27 August 2010

Watch Daniel Sunjata Rocks New York - NYC CAN 9/11 Truth March 09/27/09

We are saw this Daniel Sunjata Rocks New York - NYC CAN 9/11 Truth March 09/27/09



Coppied by http://www.youtube.com/user/Steeper33

Thursday, 26 August 2010

S Africa workers hold mass protests

Million set to march in S Africa

Strikes began last week and saw clashes between protesters and police [
South African civil servants are marching across the country over a wage dispute, with more than one million people expected to participate in strikes.

Labour unions planned the action on Thursday as part of continued pressure on the government to agree to improved pay terms and benefits.

Around 1.3 million state workers have been on strike since last Wednesday, picketing outside schools, hospitals and government offices.

A day after they began, the strikes became violent with police using rubber bullets and water cannons against teachers and other civil servants, who threw stones and bricks at them when trying to enter a hospital in Johannesburg.

The unions have set a deadline of September 2 for the government to provide a 8.6 per cent rise in salaries and a 1,000 rand ($138) monthly housing allowance, otherwise more state workers are slated to join the strikes.

Government 'worried'

The South African government is offering a seven per cent pay hike and 630 rand for housing.

Government services and the economy have already been disrupted by the strikes.

Themba Maseko, the government spokesman, said the strike had raised concern and efforts were being made to resolve it.

"We're obviously worried about the strike, especially the impact it is having on the lives of ordinary South Africans. We're actually at a point where our students are supposed to be writing their examinations in about 50 days' time," he told Al Jazeera.

"Many South Africans who are ill [and] need urgent medical treatment are being deprived of the opportunity to get that treatment. We also have a lot of South African citizens who want to volunteer their services by assisting hospitals; by assisting learners to prepare for their examininations and yet they are being prevented from doing so.
coppied by http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2010/08/20108265325707917.html