If you know of other protests, send us details.
Leeds
Protesters toured shops in the City Centre such as Gap, Nike and
McDonald's. They hand out thousands of leaflets. They were accompanied by a
police riot van and police recorded the action on video.
Bristol
Protesters toured the
City Centre, stopping outside the police station and Reed Employment
Agency. Flyposting of RAF Recruitment Office.
Glasgow
Around 1000 people marched to Glasgow Green in an
anti-capitalist demonstration.
Liverpool
Protests outside Gap and McDonald's.
York
Protest at railway station, demanding renationalisation.
Newcastle
Two hundred joined protest on Saturday 28 April, including large
contingent of asylum seekers.
Manchester
Initially beginning at 12noon outside Manchester City Council.
Involved up to 300 people and brief occupation of Warner Bros. store and a
sit-down protest in McDonald's until police forcibly removed protesters.
Most major roads into city centre were blocked including trams (one of
which hit a police van).
Police used section 60 to contain 100 of us near to Piccadilly railway
station for over an hour and frequently used stop-and-search on many
people. At 4pm a demonstration at Balfour Beatty took place before a chase
through Portland Street by hundreds of police including horses and riot
police. Further details from www.geocities.com/march1stsociety.
There were also protests in
Swansea, Birmingham
and Sheffield,
but we have no details.
Belfast
Several hundred people protest outside Gap with balloons, banners,
whistles, placards and drums. Many passers-by joined action. 50 protesters
got into the store and stayed there chanting for about 20 minutes.
Protesters then staged a sit-down protest in McDonald's. Full report here.
Dublin
Six hundred protesters force the Irish Stock Exchange to close early,
the first time in history this has happened. After this they march through
City Centre to parliament. Three hundred people later attended a rally at
Trinity College. GR Ireland write that "today marked the birth of the
anti-capitalist movement in Ireland."
Germany
Anti-capitalist march in Berlin
banned, while far-right demo was allowed to go ahead. Five thousand
protesters
marched against the ban (picture, right.) Nine thousand police on
streets, clashes with protesters.
Austria
100,000 people marched for greater
job security.
Poland
Around 700 anarchists march in central Warsaw, chanting "away
with authorities" and beating drums.
South
Korea
Over ten thousand workers and
students joined protests calling for job security (picture, right).
Turkey
Demonstrations in fifty cities
against the IMF's austerity programme, poverty and corruption. 50,000
marched in Instanbul, 10,000 in Ankara. Police prevented meetings and
demonstrations in the Kurdish area of Turkey.
Pakistan
Around a hundred pro-democracy protesters defied a ban on marches in
Karachi.
France
Hundreds of thousands of trade
unionists marched for workers' rights. Protests opposed mass sackings by
multinationals like Marks and Spencer. (picture, right)
Australia
Protests at stock exchanges in
Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, Adelaide and Perth. Anti-capitalist
demonstrators joined with trade unionists in Melbourne, linking arms to
force the closure of several streets. Indonesia
Thousands of workers demonstrate in Jakarta for trade union rights and
against globalisation and debt repayments (picture, right.)
Japan
Nearly half a million people joined a workers' march in Tokyo, including
delegations from Burma as well as main Japanese unions. Portugal
Immigrants march for legal rights and residency permits (picture,
right.)
Palestine
Trade unionists marched to protest against Israeli occupation. Italy
Half a million people due to attend a rock concert organised by the
trade unions.
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