Protests against Iraq war continue
Demonstrators marking fourth anniversary of the launch of the war in Iraq.

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“Iraq has no future unless this illegal occupation is ended” |
In Europe, about 5,000 people demonstrated in the Belgian capital, Brussels, on Sunday demanding the withdrawal of US forces from Iraq and the end of the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory.
‘Voice of the people’
Vietnam war veterans joined students and musicians in a march through Manhattan, chanting “Troops out now” and calling for Bush to be impeached.
Tim Robbins, US actor and critic of the Iraq war, helped lead the march. He said: “This is the voice of the people.
“American people want this war to end, so when are we going to start listening to them? The main message is to stop this immoral war.”
Jose Vasquez, a conscientious objector US army staff sergeant who refused to be deployed to Iraq, said he believed the anti-war movement was seeing renewed vigour with the weekend protests.
“If people are willing to listen to what the troops have to say, they’ll find that the military itself is turning against the war, not unlike what happened during Vietnam,” he said.
Pentagon protest
On Saturday, thousands of people demanding a US withdrawal from Iraq
marched on the Pentagon, the US defence department’s Washington DC headquarters.
Ramsey Clark, the former US attorney general who was among those at the rally, called for Bush to be impeached over his handling of the war.
About 3,200 American soldiers have died since the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, according to Reuters news agency.
Iraq Body Count, an organisation estimating the number of civilian deaths since the US-led invasion of Iraq based on news reports, says up to 65,000 Iraqi civilians have died.
An estimate in October by the Lancet, the British medical journal, and the John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, US, estimated about 655,000 Iraqis, or 2.5 per cent of the population, had been killed as a result of the invasion, although some academics and politicians disputed the figures.