Thousands across Europe protest over Russia’s invasion

Thousands across Europe protest over Russia’s invasion
Thousands across Europe protest over Russia’s invasion

We show you our most important and recent visitors news details Thousands across Europe protest over Russia’s invasion in the following article

Hind Al Soulia - Riyadh - BRUSSELS — Thousands of people took to the streets in cities across Europe, and all around the world on Saturday, to protest against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

In Georgia, a country that was the victim of a Russian invasion in 2008, some 30,000 people turned out in the capital Tbilisi.

“We have compassion for Ukrainians, perhaps more than other countries, because we have experienced Russia’s barbaric aggression on our soil,” said 32-year-old taxi driver Niko Tvauri, as crowds waved Georgian and Ukrainian flags and sang the national anthems of both countries.

In the Estonian capital Tallinn, several thousand people congregated at Freedom Square to hear a music and a speech from President Alar Karis. Estonia was an occupied part of the Soviet Union and shares a border with Russia.

Across the Baltic Sea in Helsinki, police say at least 10,000 people took to the streets of the Finnish capital at several anti-war protests on Saturday.

Many demonstrators gathered at Helsinki’s Senate Square, while others marched on the Russian Embassy in the capital’s Eira neighborhood.

“President Zelenskyy called on all people around the world to come out and protest Putin’s war crimes,” Coel Thomas, a Green party activist and deputy Helsinki city counselor told Euronews.

“Marching to the Russian embassy to bring our message of peace is the very least we can do to support the people of Ukraine.”

“Bombs of a Russian dictator have fallen on Helsinki as well, which lives in our collective memory. It’s hard to grapple with the enormous injustice of this happening in Ukraine right now.”

The Finns share the EU’s longest external border with Russia and Russians are the single largest group of foreigners living in Finland, mostly in the capital city region and in the east around the city of Lappeenranta a few kilometers from the border crossing into Russia.

At the Place de la République in Paris, several hundred demonstrators chanted “Putin assassin”, “Putin terrorist”. Liliya Gryshuk, a 29-year-old Ukrainian living in Paris, was one of them.

People in France “didn’t expect it (at war). We were right: Putin is garbage”. “And no one is going to help us?” asks the young woman. In the crowd, singing in Ukrainian, women are crying.

Thousands more people gathered in Strasbourg to protest against the war; hundreds more came out on the streets of Montpellier.

“What he is doing today in Kiev, he can do it again tomorrow in Warsaw or Bucharest,” said Edgar Parant, 21, a law student.

In Marseille there were chants of “Cursed be the war” and “Putin is bombing my beautiful Ukraine” as hundreds of people gathered in the city’s Old Port area on Saturday afternoon.

France’s second city, twinned with Odesa in south-west Ukraine, mayor Benoît Payan adorned the facade of the town hall on Thursday with the blue and yellow flag of Ukraine, which flies beside the French, European and Marseille flags.

“We are all in shock, we are just trying to understand, my family is bombarded, nowadays, it seems so improbable,” says Ludmila Tonka Fannière, a Ukrainian who has been living in France for the past 11 years.

“I came because it is important that the French are present, to defend Ukraine is to defend Europe, France, democracy and it is to put a stop to Putin who is outside of all the treaties international,” explained Olivier Baudry.

He adds: “We can’t let it happen, we are really on the verge of a war in Europe”.

In London on Saturday protesters outside the Consular Section of the Russian Embassy were joined by Conservative MP Matt Hancock, a former health minister.

In Rome on Friday night thousands of people marched in a torchlight procession to the Colosseum.

“Putin, assassin!”, “Yes to peace, no to war”, “Banish Swift’s Russia”, could be read on banners. Other placards showed Russian President Vladimir Putin with a bloodstained hand on his face, or comparing him to Hitler with the words: “Do you recognize history when it repeats itself?”

“We have always been close to the Ukrainian people... From here, our feeling of helplessness is huge. We can’t do anything else at the moment” said Maria Sergi, an Italian who was born in Russia.

Vladimir Putin “has done a lot of harm, even to his own people. We have a lot of friends who have suffered a lot because of his policies,” she added.

In Athens on Friday evening, in front of the Russian Embassy, more than 2,000 people gathered at the call of the Greek Communist Party and the radical left party Syriza. Traditionally pro-Russian, these parties denounced “Russia’s invasion of Ukraine “ and an “imperialist war against a people”.

These demonstrations of solidarity are not confined to Europe: other protests in Seoul, Tokyo, Taipei, Australia, Montreal, Israel and Kenya also voiced their opposition to the war, even as Russian forces continued to attack targets in Ukraine. — Euronews


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