Millions join women’s marches worldwide vowing to resist US President Trump
More than two million people flooded the streets of Washington and other US cities and demonstrators around the world joined in as women opposed to Donald Trump led a peaceful, stunning rebuke against the new US president.
As a sea of protesters brought downtown Washington to a standstill, streaming past the White House in pink “pussyhats,” Trump launched a withering attack on the media, accusing it of downplaying or even lying about the attendance at his swearing-in a day earlier.
The new president was certainly aware of the hundreds of thousands of people who poured into Washington and brought the downtown area near the White House and the National Mall to a standstill for hours.
Although the US capital does not release crowd counts, organisers of the Women’s March on Washington told AFP they estimated turnout at one million - quadrupling initial expectations - with huge crowds joining sister marches around the country.
More than half a million people also swarmed the streets of Los Angeles, according to police there, and a similar number gathered in New York. Other marches took place in Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco, St. Louis, Denver and elsewhere.
Roused by fiery speeches, the protesters sent out a resounding message of rebuke and resistance the day after the Republican hardliner took office with a vow to roll back the legacy of his predecessor.
Watch: Women’s march on Washington
“It feels amazing” to join women pushing back against Trump’s divisive, discriminating and threatening rhetoric, said 16-year-old Maria Iman, who travelled to Washington with fellow high school students from Illinois.
“I’m part of history and one day will tell my children about this.”
A sea of women and men -- teens, pensioners, parents with toddlers on their shoulders -- swarmed the streets in a determined show of unity.
Educator Tanya Gaxiola, 39, who flew in from Tucson, Arizona, expressed concern that Trump will seek to restrict abortion laws and otherwise clamp down on women’s rights.
“He’s a narcissist and seeks approval, and this is a big display of disapproval,” Gaxiola said. “Hopefully, it catches his attention.”
“Women won’t back down,” “Women’s rights are human rights” and “Thank you Trump -- you turned me into an activist,” read some of the thousands of handmade signs held aloft in the capital.
In Boston, where up to 175,000 people demonstrated, fiery Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren took aim at Trump’s campaign of “attacks” on women and minorities.
“We can whimper. We can whine. Or we can fight back!” Warren said to a loud roar.
Saturday’s rallying cry was heard far beyond America’s shores, with organisers saying over 2.5 million people signed up for one of more than 600 marches worldwide.
One of the largest was in London, where tens of thousands of women, men and children marched chanting “Dump Trump.”
Many wore knitted “pink pussyhats” in an allusion to Trump’s videotaped boasts of being able to grab women’s genitals with impunity because he is famous.
Trump’s defeated rival Hillary Clinton tweeted her support to the protesters, while former secretary of state John Kerry was spotted in the crowd -- a day after leaving office -- with his dog on a pink leash.
Pop diva Madonna, wearing her own black pussyhat, made an impromptu appearance on the Washington protest stage to deliver an expletive-laden indictment of the president.
“Welcome to the revolution of love,” the 58-year-old intoned. “To the rebellion. To our refusal as women to accept this new age of tyranny.”
On his first full day in the world’s most powerful office, Trump visited the headquarters of the CIA, an agency he feuded with bitterly before taking office.
But he bizarrely turned his speech toward an assault on the media for their reporting on inauguration crowd size.
Trump’s inaugural speech on Friday set the tone for his presidency: proudly populist, fiercely nationalist and determined to break with Obama’s legacy.
His first act in office - signing an executive order aimed at freezing Obama’s signature health care law -- was a potent gesture in that direction, with more such actions expected to follow.
But if Friday was Trump’s day - marred by sporadic outbreaks of vandalism and more than 200 arrests - Saturday belonged to demonstrators with fresh memories of his fat-shaming a former beauty queen, sex assault allegations and a controversial stance on abortion.
The Women’s March began with a simple Facebook post from Hawaii grandmother and retired lawyer Teresa Shook to about 40 friends - but word travelled quickly and the event took on a life of its own.
Millions turn out worldwide in solidarity with US women’s march
From Capetown to Tokyo, from Dublin to Melbourne, more than 2 million activists inspired by the women’s march in Washington turned out worldwide in a show of solidarity following the inauguration of Trump as US president.
Worldwide more than 670 marches were planned, according to the organisers’ website which says more than 2.5 million marchers were expected to protest against Trump.
Long before the sun rose in Washington on the first full day of the Trump administration, marches were already on the streets Saturday in the Australian cities of Melbourne, Canberra and Sydney with a variety of messages, some supporting abortion rights, some pressing for women’s equality and some driven chiefly by an anti-Trump message.
In Sydney, where as many as 10,000 marchers turned out, organiser Mindy Freiband told the crowd, “This is the beginning of something, not the end.” She said hatred, bigotry and racism are not only America’s problems: “Women of the world resist.”
In Canberra’s Garema Place, where 1,000 people turned out, speakers from unions, the YWCA and student bodies along with American expats addressed the crowd to raise issues ranging from LGBT rights to the wage gap to sexual assault, The Canberra Times reports.
Another 7,000 took to the streets in Melbourne carry signs that included “Feminism is my trump card” and “Fight like a girl,“ The Australian reports.
Elsewhere, events were planned in Botswana, the Czech Republic, Russia, Saudi Arabia. and even a ship off the coast of the Antarctic Peninsula.
In London, where an estimated 100,000 marchers turned out, a banner reading “Build bridges not walls,” was unfurled across the Tower Bridge shortly after sunrise Friday. At Westminster Bridge, near Parliament, protesters hung banners saying “Migrants welcome here” and “Migration is older than language,“ The Guardian reports.
The scale of the demonstrations in each locale reflected the country’s political climate.
In Yangon, Myanmar), organisers stressed the need to project a positive, non-political message.
“This is not a protest, so please do not bring any signs, banners, or other props that would cause the event to be perceived as a one, as political activities by foreigners in Myanmar are strictly forbidden, and those of Myanmar nationals are frequently prohibited or high risk,” the organisers said on the worldwide website.
In Ljubljana, Slovenia, home country of first lady Melania Trump, organisers said they could not get permission from the city in time for a march and instead encouraged supporters to “get together with friends on this day and to walk but we are no longer able to host an official march.”
Some 2,000 people marched in Vienna, according to estimates by the police and organisers, but the crowd quickly dropped to a couple of hundred in the sub-zero temperatures., Reuters reported.
In Africa, hundreds of protesters in Nairobi’s Karura Forest to wave posters and sing American protest songs.
In Paris, thousands rallied in the Eiffel Tower neighbourhood in a joyful atmosphere, singing and carrying posters reading “We have our eyes on you Mr. Trump” and “With our sisters in Washington.” Hundreds gathered in Prague’s Wenceslas Square in freezing weather, mockingly waving portraits of Trump and Russia’s Vladimir Putin.
Other smaller gatherings were held around the world, including Tel Aviv, Barcelona, Mexico City, Berlin and Yellowknife in Canada’s Northwest Territories .
Additional reporting by Tribune News Service