SAN DIEGO -- The third anniversary of the U.S.-led war in Iraq drew tens of thousands of protesters around the globe, from San Diego to hurricane-ravaged Louisiana to Australia, with chants of "Stop the War" and calls for the withdrawal of troops.
In San Diego, a contingent of about 1,000 church members and clergy from all over the region, including North County, gathered at St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral to call for an end to the war.
The crowd listened to speakers, then marched to Balboa Park.
"We came here because … we need to stand for peace," said the Rev. Beth Johnson of Vista's Palomar Unitarian Universalist Fellowship. Johnson attended the vigil with some 90 members of her congregation. "We need to raise our voices and to use our hands and feet to work for peace, compassion and justice for all people."
The San Diego event was organized by a group of clergy members called "San Diego Faith Leaders for Peace." The group, made up of leaders from about 20 congregations in the county, formed last December.
The group's platform is that the war has created widows and orphans in both the United States and Iraq, is increasing the risk of terrorism, and using up resources that could have been spent on domestic social programs.
That theme resonated 2,000 miles from San Diego in hurricane-torn Louisiana, where about 200 war veterans, hurricane survivors and demonstrators gathered Sunday at the Chalmette National Cemetery to protest how the military conflict overseas had hurt the country's ability to help the Gulf Coast recover from last year's hurricanes.
"We attacked a country who never did anything to us," said Philadelphia resident Al Zappala, whose 30-year-old son was killed in Iraq in April 2004.
He said his son joined the National Guard to help his community. "He was sent to Iraq based on lies," Zappala said.
Many of the weekend demonstrations across Australia, Asia and Europe drew smaller-than-anticipated crowds -- far short of the millions worldwide who protested the initial invasion in March 2003 and the first anniversary in 2004.
Only about 200 joined a march Sunday down New York's Fifth Avenue, with signs including: "We the People Need to do More to End the War." Seventeen people were arrested for disorderly conduct, police said. Saturday's rally drew more than 1,000 people.
A protest march in downtown Portland, with demonstrators carrying signs that said "Impeach the Evildoer," took nearly an hour to pass through the streets. Police estimated the turnout at about 10,000 and reported no arrests.
"It is time now for you to take back your country," said Steven DeFord at a pre-march rally. His son, Oregon National Guard Sgt. David Johnson, 37, was killed in Iraq by a roadside bomb in September 2004.
Anti-war rallies in Japan drew about 800 protesters chanting "No war! Stop the war!" and banging drums as they marched peacefully through downtown Tokyo toward the U.S. Embassy. A day earlier, about 2,000 rallied in the city.
"The Iraq war was President Bush's big mistake and the whole world is against him," said organizer Ayako Nishimura. "Iraq must decide its own affairs."
Protesters also gathered outside the U.S. Embassy in Malaysia, and at least 1,000 people turned out in Seoul, South Korea, which has the third-largest contingent of foreign troops in Iraq after the U.S. and Britain.
Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez, a strident Bush critic, said world opinion is turning against the war as he offered some of his harshest criticisms of the U.S. president in months.
"The world is opposed to your war, Mr. Danger," Chavez said Sunday on his weekly television and radio program. He also called Bush a "coward," a "donkey" and a "drunkard."
Joining the marchers in Chalmette was former Florida National Guard Staff Sgt. Camilo Mejia, a conscientious objector from Miami Beach, Fla., who was court-martialed and jailed for desertion.
"I joined the military because it seemed to offer stability and camaraderie," he said. "No soldier signs up for a war for oil."
His fellow demonstrators had set out Tuesday on a 140-mile march from Mobile, Ala., to New Orleans to draw attention both to the war and to the federal response to Hurricane Katrina.
David Cline, president of Veterans For Peace, said the nation can't have both "guns and butter," a reference to President Lyndon Johnson's statement that the country could fight the war in Vietnam and enjoy the good life at home.
"The reality is you get either A or B, you don't get A and B," he said.
President Bush marked the anniversary Sunday by touting the efforts to build democracy in Iraq. He avoided any mention of the continuing daily violence there and didn't utter the word "war."
"We are implementing a strategy that will lead to victory in Iraq," Bush said in a brief statement to reporters outside the White House.
Activist Cindy Sheehan, who energized the anti-war movement last summer with her monthlong protest outside Bush's Texas ranch, joined the Gulf Coast marchers in Mississippi on Friday, but left early Sunday for events in Washington.
"Katrina only happened because of the incompetence and callousness of the (Bush) administration, just as we've seen in Iraq," Sheehan said Sunday.
Posted in Local on Monday, March 20, 2006 12:00 am Updated: 1:50 pm.
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