Protests & Celebrations Mark Events Worldwide
Tensions marked some events, with demonstrators arrested in
Kyrgyzstan and a bomb detonated at a ceremony in Cameroon.
People around the world have marked International Women’s
Day with calls to end exploitation and increase equality.
Tensions
marred some celebrations on Sunday, with police arresting demonstrators at a
rally in Kyrgyzstan and separatists detonating a bomb during a ceremony in
Cameroon.
No-one was hurt in the attack.
“In
many different ways or forms, women are being exploited and taken advantage
of,” Arlene Brosas, the representative of a Filipino advocacy group said during
a rally that drew hundreds to the area near the presidential palace.
Protesters
called for higher pay and job security, and demanded Philippines president
Rodrigo Duterte respect women’s rights.
In
Pakistan, women rallied in cities across the country despite petitions filed in
court seeking to stop them.
The
opposition was stirred in part by controversy over a slogan used in last year’s
march: “My body, my choice.”
Some
conservative groups had threatened to stop this year’s marches by force but
Pakistani officials pledged to protect the marchers.
The
rallies are notable in a conservative country where women often do not feel
safe in public places because of open harassment.
The
main Islamic political party, Jamaat-e-Islami, organised its own rallies to
counter the march.
They
kill us, they rape us and nobody does anything
Chants in Chile
One of
the largest demonstrations occurred in Chile, where tens of thousands flooded
the streets of the capital with dancing, music and angry demands for gender
equality and an end to violence against women.
“They
kill us, they rape us and nobody does anything,” some chanted.
Many
demanded a proposed new constitution strengthen rights for women and thousands
wore green scarves in a show of support for activists in neighbouring
Argentina, which is considering a proposal to legalise elective abortion.
Thousands
of women also marched in Madrid and other Spanish cities, despite concern over
the spread of the new coronavirus.
A
massive banner reading “with rights, without barriers – feminists without
frontiers” in Spanish was carried at the front of the march in the capital.
Spanish
health authorities did not put any restrictions on the march but recommended
anyone with symptoms similar to those of the coronavirus stay home.
But
safety was in short supply at some events to mark the day.
The
detonation of explosives triggered panic at a ceremony in Bamenda, an
English-speaking town in the north-west of Cameroon.
Suspicions
focused on separatists who had vowed to disrupt the events.
No-one was killed or wounded.
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