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VIDEO: Berliners on what Women’s Day means to them

On March 8th, 2019, International Women's Day was celebrated for the first time as a bank holiday in Berlin. Not every woman in the capital was celebrating the move, though.

VIDEO: Berliners on what Women's Day means to them
Women went on strike in the middle of Berlin for a variety of feminist causes. Photo: DPA

We spoke to locals about what the holiday means to them, and if and how they will be honouring the day.

In the capital, Women's Day was celebrated as holiday for the first time on this Friday, with the liberal government of Berlin the first state to introduce this day off.

SEE ALSO: What you should know about Frauentag, Berlin's newest public holiday

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WOMEN'S DAY

Women’s Day demos held across Spain but banned in Madrid

Small demonstrations were held across Spain on Monday to mark International Women's Day -- except in Madrid where gatherings were banned to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

Women's Day demos held across Spain but banned in Madrid
A small group of women take part in a Women's Day demo in Valencia on Monday. Photo: José Jordan/AFP

Demonstrators gathered in front of the regional parliaments of Andalusia, Catalonia and Navarre with protests planned for dozens of other cities.

But events in Madrid were called off after the Constitutional Court rejected rights groups’ appeals against a ban on demonstrations, imposed last week by the Spanish government in a region that has one of the country’s highest infection rates.

Last year over 100,000 people marched in Madrid, including three ministers from Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s government who subsequently tested positive for Covid-19.

Days later his government imposed one of Europe’s strictest lockdowns as infections and deaths soared.

Conservative opposition parties blasted Sanchez for allowing the march to go ahead, blaming it for a spike in infections in Madrid.

Despite the ban, a few dozen people gathered in Madrid’s central Puerta del Sol square, standing at a distance from each other as they held up signs with feminist slogans.

Speaking at an official event to mark the day, Sanchez said “much work remains to be done” to advance women’s rights.

“The agenda for change that our country needs is the feminist agenda, with people’s lives at the centre, public services and the fight against all forms of male violence,” he added.

Spain has a thriving feminist movement which in 2018 saw five million people taking part in a nationwide strike on International Women’s Day to call attention to gender disparities.

But the movement has faced a backlash this year, with several street murals celebrating prominent women vandalised over the weekend in Madrid and elsewhere.

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