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Pro-Palestinian demonstrators rally across Europe

Thousands of protesters rallied across France Saturday calling for a ceasefire in Gaza, while hundreds of others turned out again in cities across Europe.

Protesters of the Collectif Urgence Palestine, holding placards which read as
Protesters of the Collectif Urgence Palestine, holding placards reading "From Gaza to Paris, Resistance!", take part in a demonstration to demand an "immediate ceasefire in Gaza" organised by French unions in Paris, on November 18, 2023. (Photo by Bertrand GUAY / AFP)

Protests have been held across Europe since the unprecedented October 7 Hamas attacks on Israel unleashed the latest Gaza war.

Several thousand people marched through central Paris in torrential rain behind a banner saying “Halt the massacre in Gaza and West Bank, immediate ceasefire”.

“France must immediately call for a ceasefire so that the guns go silent,” said CGT union secretary general Sophie Binet, one of several union leaders to speak at the rally.

Protesters, holding a placard reading “A shared dream, To see free Palestine!” (C), march behind a banner of the Collectif Urgence Palestine as they take part in the demonstration. (Photo by Bertrand GUAY / AFP)

The CGT estimated that 60,000 people rallied in the capital and a further 40,000 gathered in dozens of other towns across the country.

The interior ministry however said 7,000 people marched in Paris and 45,000 nationwide for the third straight Saturday.

In Marseille, AFP saw several hundred people stage a minute’s silence for Palestinian victims of the war, while in Toulouse more than 1,200 people took part in a march, according to police.

Israel says Hamas militants killed more than 1,200 people, mainly civilians, and took 239 hostage when they stormed across the border on October 7.

The Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza says around 12,300 people have died in the Palestinian territory in Israel’s relentless military response, more than 5,000 of them children.

‘Free Palestine’

Elsewhere in Europe, organisers said around 4,000 people marched in Geneva, lighting candles displayed as a map of Gaza in front of the United Nations’ European headquarters.

One large banner read “Stop Genocide in Gaza” and many shouted “Free, free Palestine!” in English.

Two rallies were held in Amsterdam, one urging a ceasefire for Gaza, another demanding the release of the Hamas-held hostages, though police said the protests were calm and no arrests were made.

Several thousand marched in Germany, too.

Around 5,000 marched through Berlin with some demonstrators shouting slogans, such as “Germany media lie, don’t be deceived,” and “Freedom for Gaza”, the Berliner Zeitung reported.

People march behind a banner reading “Free Palestine” as they take part in a rally in solidarity with Palestinians in Berlin, Germany, on November 18, 2023. (Photo by CHRISTIAN MANG / AFP)

Several thousands marched in Lisbon, many also shouting in English “Palestine will be free”.

“I think the injustice toward Palestine, for the past 75 years, is incredibly severe,” said Maria Joao Ralha, 64.

A few hundred people marched through Warsaw, with the protest culminating in a rally in front of Israel’s embassy in Poland.

In Istanbul, which has seen massive protests called by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan urging an end to Israel’s campaign, about 100 people lit flares and held up anti-war banners under heavy rain outside the Israeli consulate.

The rally was called by football supporter groups, which often play an important role in Turkish protests.

All Israeli diplomatic staff left Turkey last month as a security precaution.

A demonstrator holds up a sign reading ‘Free Palestine’ during a rally in solidarity with Palestinians in Berlin, Germany, on November 18, 2023. (Photo by CHRISTIAN MANG / AFP)

Targeting Labour

In Britain, the protest numbers were smaller after more than 300,000 people staged a pro-Palestinian march in London last Saturday.

One targeted an office where the leader of the main opposition Labour party, Keir Starmer, holds meetings, with protesters waving Palestinian flags and chanting “Ceasefire now”.

Some held placards reading “Stop the war in Gaza” and “Starmer — blood on your hands” amid a heavy police presence in the Camden area of north London.

Starmer, a former human rights lawyer whose party is predicted to win an election expected next year, has refused to call for a permanent ceasefire, sparking a string of resignations from his top team.

Instead, he has called for a humanitarian pause to Israel’s bombardment to allow aid in for the 2.4 million people in Gaza.

One protester at the London event, Nicoleta, 36, held a placard reading “Bombing hospitals is a crime”.

“Because I’m a health care provider I’m here to defend the hospitals, the innocent civilians, the children in incubators,” she said.

The rally was one of many smaller protests organised nationwide by the Stop The War Coalition.

London police said on Saturday they had now made 386 arrests since the October 7 attacks.

Showing support for Hamas is an offence in Britain, as the organisation is considered a terrorist group.

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PROTESTS

Paris museum files complaint over MeToo graffiti on nude painting

A top French museum has filed a police complaint after two women spray-painted a famous 19th-century painting by Gustave Courbet which it had loaned to another gallery, official said Friday.

Paris museum files complaint over MeToo graffiti on nude painting

The women have been charged with spraying the words “MeToo” on “The Origin of the World”, a nude painted by French artist Courbet, and four other works.

The 1866 painting was on loan from the Musee d’Orsay in Paris to the Pompidou-Metz in the northeastern city of Metz. It was protected by a glass pane on which the words were scrawled.

“Stained with red paint, the work was taken down for examination by a qualified restorer. The frame has received numerous splashes of paint that could have lasting marks even after restoration,” the Musee d’Orsay said in a statement, adding that it had “filed a complaint”.

The museum said the painting would not return to the Metz exhibition that closes in May.

Metz prosecutor Yves Badorc said five works had been sprayed with the words “MeToo” and one was stolen.

French-Luxembourg performance artist Deborah de Robertis told AFP she organised the operation carried out by two other people, as part of a performance titled: “You Don’t Separate the Woman from the Artist”.

In a video sent to AFP by de Robertis, one woman tagged Courbet’s work with red paint and then a second sprays another. They then chant “MeToo” before being dragged away by security guards.

In an open letter, de Robertis denounced the behaviour of six men in the art world, describing them as “predators” and “censors”.

De Robertis said they had also seized an embroidery work by French artist Annette Messager as “reappropriation”.

The prosecutor said a third person — who was not arrested — could have been behind the disappearance of the 1991 Messager work titled “I Think Therefore I Suck”.

De Robertis has a work on display at the venue in Metz — a photograph of a 2014 performance at the Musee d’Orsay in which she posed naked underneath Courbet’s painting.

A French court in 2020 ordered de Robertis to pay a €2,000 ($2,150) fine for appearing naked in 2018 in Lourdes in southwest France, a Catholic pilgrimage site for those who believe the Virgin Mary appeared there.

She has also shown herself naked in front of the “Mona Lisa” painting at the Louvre in Paris.

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