Almodovar joins Guantánamo protest

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Mar 18, 2007, 10:12:43 PM3/18/07
to Peace and Justice 2005
Miami Herald
Posted on Sun, Mar. 18, 2007

Almodovar joins Guantánamo protest
By CIARAN GILES

Spanish film director Pedro Almodovar joined tens of thousands of
people in
a march through the Spanish capital on Saturday to protest the war in
Iraq
and to demand closure of the U.S. prison camps at Guantánamo Bay,
Cuba.

Chanting ''No to War'' and ''The People of Madrid with the People of
Iraq,''
the protesters marched along a 2 ½-mile route from central Cibeles
Plaza to
Atocha Square. Organizers estimated the crowd at 400,000; eyewitnesses
put
the attendance at less 100,000. Police did not give an estimate.

Other rallies were held around Spain, with some 2,000 gathering in
Barcelona
and 500 in Seville, according to news reports.

Almodovar told the private Europa Press news agency he was protesting
``the
barbarities they have been committing in Iraq for the past four
years.''

''We're here for peace and for the closure of Guantánamo because it is
a
disgrace for civilization,'' he added.

Spain was the scene of major anti-war protests in the run-up to and
during
the first months of the war, with demonstrations in Barcelona and
Madrid
attracting more than 1 million people apiece.

Former Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar was one of the strongest
supporters
of the U.S. invasion Iraq in 2003. His party was voted out of office
in
March 2004, days after 191 people were killed in bomb attacks claimed
by
Islamic radicals to avenge the presence of the country's troops in
Iraq and
Afghanistan.

The country's new prime minister, Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero,
immediately
withdrew Spanish troops from Iraq, claiming it was an illegal war.

Elsewhere Saturday, thousands crossed the Potomac River from the
Lincoln
Memorial in Washington to rally near the Pentagon. More than 3,000
people
protested the war in two separate demonstrations in Istanbul, Turkey,
and
1,000 people marched in Athens, Greece.

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