NEW YORK
- Anti-war protesters on Wednesday predicted "literally
millions" of people in New York, San Francisco and more than 30
international cities would march the weekend of Feb. 15 against war in
Iraq.
A day after President Bush said in his State of the Union address that
he was ready to disarm Saddam Hussein's Iraq, organizers brought
politicians, church leaders and Oscar-winning filmmakers Jonathan Demme
and Mercedes Ruehl out to announce the protest.
"We can, when we stand up together, actually stop this war from
happening," said Leslie Cagan, a co-chairwoman of New York's United
for Peace and Justice chapter.
Cagan wouldn't predict how many people would attend the New York
demonstration, but said it would be the largest protest against Iraq to
date.
Peace rallies on Oct. 26 drew 250,000 participants around the world,
while tens of thousands rallied in Washington on Jan. 19 to protest the
Bush administration's stance on Iraq.
The city has not yet provided a permit for the event, and Cagan said
organizers were negotiating a march that would go past the United Nations.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa, NAACP chairman Julian Bond,
Martin Luther King III and performers Harry Belafonte, Mos Def and Danny
Glover will be among the speakers, Cagan said.
San Francisco will stage a protest on Feb. 16, and more than 30 cities
from London to Tokyo to Johannesburg would hold similar rallies, she said.
"Literally millions of people will march in countries around the
world in a unified call for peace," she said.
Ruehl compared the intent to declare war on Iraq to giving
"massive doses of chemotherapy with all its devastating effect to a
body that hasn't been proven to have cancer."
Councilman Bill Perkins, whose cousin was killed in the World Trade
Center attack, said declaring war in Iraq is not the right response to
U.S. terrorism.
"This war should not be fought in my name," Perkins said.
Another peace organization, International Answer, planned an afternoon
rally in New York City. Organizers said the group would also participate
on Feb. 15.