The Borneo Post

Trump critics, backers march around globe over climate, Russia

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WASHINGTON: Sharp political passions over President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris climate accord and his links to Russia brought people onto the streets of cities around the globe, mostly to condemn but some to praise him.

They came as Nikki Haley, the US ambassador to the United Nations, ended days of confusion to make clear that ‘President Trump believes the climate is changing’ and that man-made pollutants are partly responsibl­e.

She insisted in a CNN interview that Trump, who has often called global warming a ‘ hoax,’ was concerned about the changing climate. “Just because the US got out of a club doesn’t mean we aren’t going to care about the environmen­t,” she said.

But Trump’s decision to pull out of the Paris treaty, which is designed to cut harmful emissions and slow the Earth’s warming, sparked a wave of global condemnati­on and helped fuel some of the many protest marches.

The largest of the many US rallies organised as a March for Truth appeared to be in New York, where as many as 3,000 anti-Trump protesters descended on Foley Square in Lower Manhattan, with some shouting ‘Liar!’ or ‘Lock him up!’ or ‘ Take back America!’

Nearly as many people converged around the Washington Monument in the US capital to similarly demand a full and independen­t investigat­ion of the allegation­s

The president works for the American people, and not for a foreign entity around the world. Linda Sarsour, Women’s March co-chair and organiser

that Trump or his aides might have colluded with Russia ahead of last year’s US presidenti­al election to help Trump win.

“The president works for the American people, and not for a foreign entity around the world,” said Linda Sarsour, an organiser of the march and a co- chair of the Women’s March on Washington in January.

Added Savannah Stark, a 22year- old from Ohio, “We need to keep working hard and raise our voices until he’s impeached.” Other rallies were held in cities from Portland, Oregon on the US West Coast to Munich, Germany and Lima, Peru. Demonstrat­ors also demanded that Trump release his tax returns, a tradition among US presidents which Trump has steadfastl­y refused to follow.

The US demonstrat­ions appeared to be mostly peaceful. They were far smaller than some of the earlier anti-Trump protests. They took place just days before the highly anticipate­d appearance June 8 before a Senate committee of James Comey, who as FBI director was leading an investigat­ion of the Russia matter before Trump fired him early in May.

Trump has denied placing pressure on Comey or the FBI, as well as denying any collusion with Russia. Former FBI chief Robert Mueller has been named as a special counsel to investigat­e any links between Russia and the Trump campaign.

“We want to get to the bottom of this,” Leon Chen, a 32-yearold Texan and self- described Republican taking part in the Washington march, told AFP. “It’s not only Russia, it’s also his business ties, how him and his family are profiting from this presidency.”

At the same time as the other rallies, a few hundred Trump supporters gathered on the street in front of the White House to applaud the president’s withdrawal from the Paris treaty – a move criticised around the world – and to demonstrat­e their backing for the Republican president.

That rally was dubbed ‘ Pittsburgh, Not Paris’ – a reference to the president’s statement, in announcing his plan to withdraw from the internatio­nal climate treaty, that “I was elected to represent the citizens of Pittsburgh, not Paris.”

The Trump supporters included Vince Harrison, 56, a burly retired firefighte­r from Washington, who said it was his first rally ever. — AFP

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