Tens of thousands of people took to the streets of London, Paris and other cities worldwide yesterday in solidarity with women-led marches in the United States, opposed to President Donald Trump the day after his inauguration.
In London, a largely female crowd that also included many men and children packed Trafalgar Square, chanting “dump Trump” and waving banners demanding equal rights.
Some of the demonstrators had earlier gathered outside the American embassy in Grosvenor Square before heading to Trafalgar Square.
Celebrities including rights activist Bianca Jagger, singer Charlotte Church and actor Ian McKellen expressed their support for the protest on social media.
“Our Rights Are Not For Grabs – Neither Are We” were among the banners held aloft, along with “We shall overcomb” – a reference to Trump’s hair – and “Make bigotry wrong again”.
Others read “Love is stronger”, “Unite not divide”, “No to racism”, and “I am woman, hear me roar!”
Hannah Bryant, a 34-year-old museum worker, brought her four-year-old daughter – both of them wearing the bright pink “pussy hats” worn by US demonstrators.
“I’ve been teaching her about equality and prejudice,” she said.
“It’s a feeling of solidarity – not in our name,” said Jill Pickering, a 56-year-old American student. “I’m angry – I didn’t vote for Trump.”
Organisers said 100,000 attended the London march, although there was no independent verification as police do not give an estimate.
“Proud to be one of 100,000 Londoners who came together today to stand in solidarity with women across the world,” said London Mayor Sadiq Khan.
Opposition Labour lawmaker Yvette Cooper, who addressed the crowd, also estimated that around 100,000 people joined the march to London’s Trafalgar Square.
“Now is the moment we will make history in the fight for equality,” the organisers, Women’s March London, said on Twitter.
“The whole of London has come to a standstill because of the unbelievable turnout,” the group said. “Never underestimate the power of the masses uniting.”
Similar events were held in Cardiff, Manchester, Edinburgh and other British cities, and in the Irish capital, Dublin.
The Dublin protest was backed by groups including the anti-abortion Coalition to Repeal the Eighth Amendment, which safeguards the rights of an unborn child in Ireland, equating those rights with the mother’s rights.
“As articulated so well by our convenor Ailbhe Smyth at Womens’ March today, women will resist Trump and any threat to women’s rights,” the group said following the Dublin protest.
In Paris, at least 7,000 people gathered near the Eiffel Tower, according to police, holding up banners that read “liberty, equality, sorority”, in a reference to France’s national motto.
“I am here for women and for all minorities because Trump is a threat to all humanity,” said a US national Kendra Wergin, who is in her mid-30s.
Andreia Rossi, a 39-year-old Brazilian, told AFP that she was taking part “because I am a woman, but also because I want to protest against everything Trump represents”.
She added: “It’s very dangerous, he has lied to all those who voted for him, and that can happen in France too.”
Françoise Seme Wallon, 70, a member of the European Union of Women, said that for her Trump is “a nasty guy and he’s dangerous for the whole world”.
Right-wing populists and nationalist groups in France and elsewhere in Europe have been emboldened by Trump’s victory as well as by Britain’s vote last year to leave the European Union.
While Trump won 42% of the women’s vote in the US, many worry that gender rights and other progress on women’s health, contraception and abortion could be chipped away.
In Barcelona, Rome, Amsterdam, Lisbon, and Geneva too, protesters were enraged by Trump’s derogatory remarks on women.
“We are here for women and for human rights,” one of a large contingent of American expatriate women told SkyTG24 news channel in Rome.
“We must defend democratic values,” said Karen Olson, who organised the Swiss march, as motorists driving by honked their horns in support.
“When injustice becomes law, resistance becomes duty,” read a banner held up by a Barcelona protester.
“Make America sane again,” said a banner in Amsterdam.
In Budapest, up to 400 people gathered in solidarity with the Washington marchers.
“Bridges not walls,” read one of their banners, a reference to Trump’s threat to build a wall separating the United States from Mexico to stop migrants from entering the country – and to have Mexico pay for it.
Hundreds rallied in front of the US embassy in Berlin, chanting pro-migrant slogans in a nation that welcomed nearly a million people fleeing war and poverty in 2015.
“No hate, no fear, immigrants are welcome here,” they cried.
Also in Lisbon, a rally was held in front of the US embassy there with hundreds of Americans and Portuguese nationals chanting: “He is not my president!”
“Trump’s rise reminds me of what my mother used to tell me about the arrival of Hitler,” said Bert Wiesel, 69, a Swiss-American protester.
In Prague, protest organiser Johanna Nejedlova branded Trump’s rhetoric “hateful” and said that they wanted to express support “for values such as democracy, human rights, ecology and women’s rights”.
There were also solidarity marches beyond Europe too, with protests in Johannesburg, South Africa, where marchers held up banners reading “Black lives matter” and “Love trumps hate”.
Anti-Trump protests also took place in Australia with several thousand marching in Sydney and Melbourne.
And in New Zealand, hundreds joined demonstrations in the capital Wellington as well as in Auckland.