proteste antiguerra in australia: 750 Women Go Nude in Protest



Published on Sunday, February 9, 2003 by The Sunday Mail (Brisbane,
Australia)


HUNDREDS of women bared all today in a visual anti-war demonstration on a
hillside near the northern NSW beach town of Byron Bay.
750 nude women form a heart around the words 'No War' on a hillside near the
town of Byron bay, 700 kilometers (435 miles) north of Sydney, Australia,
Saturday, Feb. 8, 2003. The women said they wanted to send Prime Minister
John Howard a message to recall Australian troops from the middle east. (AP
Photo/Icon Images)
More than 750 female protesters shed their clothing during the protest,
lying naked end to end on a grassy knoll on a private property, to form a
heart shape around the words "No War" for an aerial photograph.
Australia has sent troops and approved an RAAF fighter squadron deployment
to join US and British forces in the Gulf preparing for a possible war in
Iraq.
But it has yet to publicly commit itself to joining any UN-approved or
US-led military action in Iraq.
Today's larger-than-expected turnout for the 'Disrobe to Disarm', prompted
by a similar protest in the US, even surprised organisers.
"I was completely overwhelmed," Australian jazz and blues singer Grace
Knight, who led organisational efforts for today's protest, told AAP.
"I needed at the very least 67 women and I prayed for 250, and we got more
than 750.
"What that tells me is that 750 women came and took the opportunity to get
quite uncomfortable in a field - I know I felt quite uncomfortable - because
we thought that was the only way we could get the federal government's
attention."
The former Eurogliders lead singer, speaking while rushing to catch a flight
to Tasmania where she has a gig this weekend, said the nude protest group
included babies, teenagers and elderly women.
"There were 80-year-old women there whose husbands were Vietnam war
veterans," Knight said.
"We wanted to spell out a clear message very quickly, so we used the words:
'No War'."
She said that with hundreds choosing to bare all in the protest, and that it
was limited only to women, demonstrated that many Australians were
"extremely angry and frustrated" about involvement in a possible war on
Iraq.
Australian comedienne, Mandy Nolan, assumed the role of 'Mistress of
Undressing', synchronising the protesters and helping them through the
disrobing protest, which was done in seconds, Knight said.
Easing participants' nudity nerves with humour, Nolan dubbed the event the
"bush against Bush" protest.
One middle-aged woman had the words "Bare it all for the boys Down Under"
written down her back.
"The protest was not visible to any other public area, we were there to
ensure the women were not bothered by outsiders," a local policeman told
AAP.
Smaller anti-war protests were staged elsewhere on in NSW and Queensland
today.
The Byron Bay protest was one of a number of similar nude protests around
the world, in a climate of increasing anti-war sentiment.
Late yesterday (AEDT), about 30 women scurried into the heart of Central
Park in New York City, disrobing amid steady snowfall to display their deep
misgivings about war.
In shivering temperatures, the American women used their naked bodies to
spell out the words, "No Bush".
Prime Minister John Howard left Sydney on Saturday on a week-long trip in
which he plans to meet with US President George Bush as well as UN, British
and Indonesian leaders.

About 30 naked women lay down in the snow in Central Park forming the words
"No Bush" in an event described as a "nude political action photo shoot" in
New York on February 7, 2003. The protesters are opposed to U.S. President
George Bush's policies and possible U.S. led war against Iraq. REUTERS/Peter
Morgan


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Nello

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