Skip to main content

'Russia!' out Worldwide Protests In Solidarity with Ukraine


  

Pro-Ukraine protests erupted across the world on Saturday, as thousands took to the streets from London to Rome to Barcelona to denounce Russia’s assault on its neighbour. 

Moscow’s invasion has sparked global outcry and prompted punishing sanctions from the West, including some against Russian President Vladimir Putin himself.

On Saturday, rallies were held in cities across the world to join the chorus of condemnation and urge an end to the bloodshed.

Switzerland saw thousands of people gather across the country, including about 1,000 outside the United Nations’ European headquarters in Geneva.

Demonstrators draped in Ukraine’s national colours of blue and yellow flocked to the “Broken Chair” — a large sculpture symbolising the civilian victims of war.

The protesters demanded tougher actions from the government, which has so far shied way from imposing strict measures, choosing instead to stick closer to its traditional “neutral” stance.

Swiss-based Russians joined in to show their opposition to the war, holding signs saying “I am Russian”.

In Russia’s neighbour Finland, thousands of people gathered in the capital Helsinki shouting “Russia out, down with Putin!”

More than 1,000 demonstrators answered the call of trade unions and NGOs in central Rome, huddling around a podium bearing the words “Against War”.

‘Powerlessness’

Thousands of people had taken part in a torch-lit procession to the Colosseum, one of the Italian capital’s major landmarks, on Friday evening.

Putin was the march’s main target as banners caricatured him as an assassin with bloodstained hands and compared him to Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler with the words: “Can you recognise when history repeats itself?”

“We’ve always been close to the Ukrainian people. Our feeling of powerlessness is huge,” Maria Sergi, a 40-year-old Russian-born Italian, told AFP.

In the southern French cities of Montpellier and Marseille, hundreds marched on Saturday chanting “Stop war, stop Putin”, while further protests were also expected in Paris.

A member of South Africa's Ukrainian Association holds a during a protest in support of Ukraine in front of the Russian Embassy in Pretoria, on February 25, 2022. Phill Magakoe / AFP
A member of South Africa’s Ukrainian Association holds a during a protest in support of Ukraine in front of the Russian Embassy in Pretoria, on February 25, 2022. 
Phill Magakoe / AFP

 

Anti-war demonstrators were also out in force in Barcelona, numbering around 1,000 on Saturday according to local police.

Dimitri, a Russian designer living in Barcelona, said he feared sanctions would take Russia set Russia’s development back.

“We’re all going to suffer,” the 37-year-old told AFP.

In Britain, hundreds of protesters headed to Russia’s embassy in London, with some defacing the street sign of St Petersburgh Place opposite the embassy with fake blood.

‘Ukraine is bleeding’

In Georgia, almost 30,000 people hit the streets of Tbilisi Friday night, waving Ukrainian and Georgian flags and singing both countries’ national anthems.

Russia’s attack on Ukraine resonates strongly in Georgia, a fellow ex-Soviet republic that suffered a devastating Russian invasion in 2008.

“We have sympathy for the Ukrainians, perhaps more than other countries, because we’ve experienced Russia’s barbaric aggression on our soil,” Niko Tvauri, a 32-year-old taxi driver, told AFP.

A protester wipes a tear during a rally against Russia's military operation in Ukraine at "place de la république" in Rennes, western France on February 26, 2022. DAMIEN MEYER / AFP
A protester wipes a tear during a rally against Russia’s military operation in Ukraine at “place de la république” in Rennes, western France on February 26, 2022. DAMIEN MEYER / AFP

 

Teacher Meri Tordia added: “Ukraine is bleeding, the world watches and talks about sanctions that won’t stop Putin.”

More than 2,000 protesters gathered outside the Russian embassy in Greece’s capital Athens on Friday evening following an appeal by the traditionally pro-Russian Communist and left-wing Syriza parties.

More protests were reported in Athens and the northern city of Thessaloniki on Saturday.

‘Anger’

The shockwaves from Moscow’s invasion of its neighbour have reverberated beyond Europe.

In Argentina, Ukrainians and Argentines with Ukrainian ancestry were among the almost 2,000 people who descended on Russia’s embassy in Buenos Aires on Friday.

Wreathed in Ukrainian flags and wearing traditional Ukrainian clothing, protesters bore signs in Spanish, English and Ukrainian demanding a Russian withdrawal.

They chanted “Glory to Ukraine, glory to its heroes” and the national anthems of Argentina and Ukraine.

Among the crowd was Tetiana Abramchenko, who moved to Argentina with her daughter in 2014 following Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula.

“My overriding feeling is anger. The last thing I imagined was Russians coming to kill my people,” the 40-year-old told AFP as she fought back tears.

In Canada, dozens of demonstrators braved a snowstorm in Montreal to protest outside Russia’s consulate on Friday afternoon.

“I am against this war. I hope this is the beginning of the end of this regime,” said Russian Elena Lelievre, a 37-year-old engineer.

Ivan Puhachov, a Ukrainian student at the University of Montreal, said the situation “terrified” him as his family lives in Ukraine.

Protests also took place in New York, Washington, Taiwan and Brazil.

 


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Amaechi, Attah, demand constitution change

First Republic Minister, Chief Mbazuluike Amechi and the former governor of Akwa Ibom State, Obong Victor Attah on Thursday faulted the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria. They declared that the Constitution was imposed on the country by the military hence the mistrust among the different peoples of Nigeria. The elder statesman, who spoke separately at the 20thAnniversary of the Elliot Uko led Igbo Youth Movement held yesterday in Enugu with the theme “How to make Nigeria work,” called for a change of the current Constitution being used to run the country. Amechi, who just clocked 90 years said: “Today we are living in a country that is full of danger. We are living in a country where there is no peace;.......... Read More

Gov. Sule over workers’ welfare

The Nasarawa State Chapter of the Nigerian Labour Congress, NLC, has applauded Gov. Abdullahi Sule’s administration, for growing the civil service structure and improving workers’ welfare. NLC According to the state chairman of NLC, Mr Yusuf Sarki-Iya, ” the union wants the governor to do more for the workers in the state”. ADVERTISING ADVERTISING Sarki-Iya made the appeal while speaking with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Saturday in Lafia, on the just concluded celebration of the governor’s 100 days in office. I am not sick, still full of life – Abubakar Sarki-Iya said workers in Nasarawa State had continued to grow in geometric progression when compared with the previous governments in the state. He added that Gov. Sule had not only restructured the civil service but re-positioned and given hope to the workers in different ways inspite of the lean resources available to the state. “Recently, the governor constituted a committee comprising prominent sons and daughters of Nasara

North Korea Blames US For Ukraine Crisis

    North Korea has accused the United States of being the “root cause of the Ukraine crisis” while defending Russia, in Pyongyang’s first official response to Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. Russia ordered troops into neighbouring Ukraine this week, prompting global outcry and punishing sanctions from the West, some directed against Russian President Vladimir Putin himself. But North Korea, in a muted response issued in the form of a commentary posted on the Foreign Ministry’s website, said the United States was to blame for the unfolding disaster. Washington has pursued “military supremacy in disregard of the legitimate demand of Russia for its security” according to the commentary, attributed to Ri Ji Song, a researcher at the North’s Society for International Politics Study. “The root cause of the Ukrainian crisis also lies in the high-handedness and arbitrariness of the US,” said the post uploaded on the North’s foreign ministry website on Saturday. Ri slammed the US for holding a “