The Manila Times

Thousands mark Women’s Day worldwide

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Several thousand demonstrat­ors massed in this Spanish city on Monday (Tuesday in Manila) for a socially-distanced Internatio­nal Women’s Day march after a day of national rallies except in Madrid, where gatherings were banned over the virus.

Wearing purple masks and brandishin­g placards with purple slogans reading “No means no” and “The real pandemic is machismo,” thousands of women packed the Barcelona’s Paseo de Gracia boulevard, many chanting “Long live the feminist struggle,” an the Agence France-Presse (AFP) correspond­ent said.

“The pandemic has made the difference­s clearer. Who’s been left to look after everyone at home? Who’s had problems going back to work?” asked Alys Samson, 29. “It’s time for us to make our voices heard in the face of the far-right violence, we have to find ways to stand up for ourselves and end the machismo and racism that’s growing everywhere.”

Other purple rallies also took place in the southern city of Seville, in the eastern coastal city of Valencia and dozens of other towns and cities.

Despite the ban on demonstrat­ions in Madrid, more than 100 people gathered in the city’s central Puerta del Sol square. The rally took place peacefully without any interventi­on from the police, an AFP correspond­ent said.

Madrid still has one of the country’s highest rates of coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19) infections and last week, the Spanish government imposed a ban on all such gatherings in the capital for Internatio­nal Women’s Day.

Last year over 100,000 people hit the streets of Madrid, including three ministers who subsequent­ly tested positive for Covid-19, just days before the government imposed one of Europe’s strictest lockdowns as infections and deaths soared.

The move sparked sharp criticism from the rightwing opposition, which blamed the leftwing government of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez for allowing the huge march to go ahead.

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

“If there is one thing we cannot give up, breaking down the prejudices that still persist, it is the feminist struggle, because everything is at stake — progress, decency as a country and economic growth,” the premier said.

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

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