Tens of thousands on Saturday took to the streets in cities across Europe and Australia as anger mounted over fresh restrictions imposed against a resurgent COVID-19 pandemic.
Dutch police faced a second night of rioting — this time in The Hague — after the previous night’s violence in the port city of Rotterdam.
Clashes erupted after a day of mainly peaceful protests elsewhere in the Netherlands, with rioters throwing stones and fireworks at police and setting fire to bicycles. Several people were arrested.
Photo: AP
Europe is battling a fresh wave of infections and several countries have tightened curbs, with Austria on Friday announcing a nationwide partial lockdown — the most dramatic restrictions in Western Europe for months.
The Netherlands went back into partial lockdown on Saturday last week with at least three weeks of curbs, and is now planning to ban unvaccinated people from entering some venues.
Several thousand protesters angry at the latest measures gathered in Amsterdam. Another thousand marched through the southern city of Breda near the Belgian border, carrying banners with slogans such as “No Lockdown.”
Organizers said they opposed Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s plans to exclude unvaccinated people from bars and restaurants.
“People want to live, that’s why we’re here,” organizer Joost Eras said.
“We’re not rioters. We come in peace,” he said, distancing himself from the chaos the previous night in Rotterdam, in which police said they had fired warning and targeted shots, and used water cannon.
In Austria, about 40,000 people came out to protest in central Vienna near the Chancellery, responding to a call from the far-right Freedom Party of Austria.
They held up banners decrying “Corona dictatorship” and slamming the “division of society.”
“It’s not normal that the government deprives us of our rights,” said 42-year-old teacher Katarina Gierscher, who traveled for six hours to attend the rally.
Some protesters wore a yellow star reading the words “not vaccinated,” a nod to the Star of David many Jews were forced to wear during the Nazi era.
Austrian Minister of the Interior Karl Nehammer expressed his outrage, saying in a statement that it “insults the millions of victims of the Nazi dictatorship and their families.”
From today, 8.9 million Austrians are not allowed to leave home except to go to work, shop for essentials and exercise. The restrictions are initially to last 20 days with an evaluation after 10 days.
Vaccination against COVID-19 in the Alpine nation is to be mandatory from Feb. 1 next year.
Thousands also marched in Croatia’s capital, Zagreb, while in Denmark about 1,000 people protested against government plans to reinstate a COVID-19 pass for civil servants going to work.
“Freedom for Denmark,” cried some of the marchers at a rally in Copenhagen organized by the radical Men in Black group, who believe COVID-19 is just a “scam.”
In Australia, about 10,000 marched in Sydney, and there were also protests in other major cities against vaccine mandates applied to certain occupations by state authorities.
“In Australia where a fanatical cult runs our health bureaucracies, they say it’s OK” to vaccinate children, right-wing United Australia Party leader Craig Kelly told the Sydney crowd to large cheers.
On Saturday, France dispatched dozens of elite forces to its Caribbean island of Guadeloupe after arson and looting overnight in the overseas territory, despite a newly imposed night curfew.
In Iran, the health ministry said that more than half of the population had been fully vaccinated against COVID-19, as infection and death rates in the country have begun to drop.
Winter sports have again been hit by the pandemic. Germany has ordered next month’s Ski Jumping World Cup in Klingenthal to be held behind closed doors.
However, it was not all bad. In France, skiers hit the slopes as resorts fully opened their doors for the first time in almost two years.
“We’re delighted to be able to get the lifts up and running again and to be able to do our job 100 percent,” rescue worker Emmanuel Laissus said at the Val Thorens resort in the southeast.
A fire caused by a burst gas pipe yesterday spread to several homes and sent a fireball soaring into the sky outside Malaysia’s largest city, injuring more than 100 people. The towering inferno near a gas station in Putra Heights outside Kuala Lumpur was visible for kilometers and lasted for several hours. It happened during a public holiday as Muslims, who are the majority in Malaysia, celebrate the second day of Eid al-Fitr. National oil company Petronas said the fire started at one of its gas pipelines at 8:10am and the affected pipeline was later isolated. Disaster management officials said shutting the
US Vice President J.D. Vance on Friday accused Denmark of not having done enough to protect Greenland, when he visited the strategically placed and resource-rich Danish territory coveted by US President Donald Trump. Vance made his comment during a trip to the Pituffik Space Base in northwestern Greenland, a visit viewed by Copenhagen and Nuuk as a provocation. “Our message to Denmark is very simple: You have not done a good job by the people of Greenland,” Vance told a news conference. “You have under-invested in the people of Greenland, and you have under-invested in the security architecture of this
UNREST: The authorities in Turkey arrested 13 Turkish journalists in five days, deported a BBC correspondent and on Thursday arrested a reporter from Sweden Waving flags and chanting slogans, many hundreds of thousands of anti-government demonstrators on Saturday rallied in Istanbul, Turkey, in defence of democracy after the arrest of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu which sparked Turkey’s worst street unrest in more than a decade. Under a cloudless blue sky, vast crowds gathered in Maltepe on the Asian side of Turkey’s biggest city on the eve of the Eid al-Fitr celebration which started yesterday, marking the end of Ramadan. Ozgur Ozel, chairman of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), which organized the rally, said there were 2.2 million people in the crowd, but
JOINT EFFORTS: The three countries have been strengthening an alliance and pressing efforts to bolster deterrence against Beijing’s assertiveness in the South China Sea The US, Japan and the Philippines on Friday staged joint naval drills to boost crisis readiness off a disputed South China Sea shoal as a Chinese military ship kept watch from a distance. The Chinese frigate attempted to get closer to the waters, where the warships and aircraft from the three allied countries were undertaking maneuvers off the Scarborough Shoal — also known as Huangyan Island (黃岩島) and claimed by Taiwan and China — in an unsettling moment but it was warned by a Philippine frigate by radio and kept away. “There was a time when they attempted to maneuver