London marches for 'hope not hate'
Follow @Mazana17There were mothers, wives, sisters, daughters, husbands, fathers, brothers and sons; their ages ranged from those in strollers to people with walkers and they were united in a message of solidarity with women around the world.
On Saturday, thousands demonstrated in London, marching from the US embassy on Grosvenor Square
to Trafalgar Square, to send a message to the incoming administration that "women's rights are human rights," according to organizers.
to Trafalgar Square, to send a message to the incoming administration that "women's rights are human rights," according to organizers.
Speakers told crowds
at Trafalgar Square that at least 100,000 people had turned out.
London's Metropolitan Police do not provide crowd estimates, but aerial
footage showed large numbers of people in the square.
The protest -- a "sister march" to demonstrations in the US -- attracted a diverse crowd with a variety of concerns.
Here are some of their voices:
Tanya Jahnke-Baxter
Flight
attendant Tanya Jahnke-Baxter, 59, from California told CNN she was
marching in London
"I
was 13 years old when they legalized abortion in our country. I'm 59.
It's still a subject that we're
debating, which I just find abhorrent."
"For
me it's been depressing," she said. "I couldn't imagine that my fellow
countrymen wouldn't come
out to vote and we would end up with someone
like Donald Trump as the president of our country."
Mariam Khan
Khan,
23, a publicist from Birmingham, told CNN she was marching because she
wants people
regardless of where they are from to be heard and
appreciated.
Women should "have the right to be in this world without fear," she said.
When asked about Trump's statements about Muslims, Khan described them as "aged, and old, and ridiculous."
"To
have such an ignorant point of view he must not have ever appreciated a
woman who is more than
just what she wears," she said.
"It makes him less of a man."
Natalie Le Brun
Author
Natalie Le Brun, 34, from West Yorkshire told CNN she decided to march
because she's
concerned "as a disabled person and an LGBT person."
"Things
are genuinely scaring me at the moment and things need to change across
the board (on)
both sides of the pond," Le Brun, whose girlfriend lives
in Alabama, told CNN.
"The
government doesn't seem to understand the disability issue, it doesn't
seem to understand that
it's not giving disabled people enough
help...we're being classed as lazy."
Anna Webber
Nurse
and mother-of-three Anna Webber told CNN she was marching with her
seven-year-old
daughter Freya because she wanted to "protest against the
racism" that Trump "stands up for."
"I want to demonstrate and say that we're against that...for our children and future generations."
Webber said that after Brexit she's worried "that we're becoming really inward looking."
"That's not what we want," she added.
Natalie Tellwright
Natalie
Tellwright, 26, a sustainable fisheries and marine conservation officer
told CNN she was
at the march with her girlfriend because they believe
very strongly in "the environmental movement" and "LGBTQ rights."
"Hopefully people will listen and our rights are not taken away," said Tellwright.
Girlfriend
Ruthie Musker, 28, originally from California, said she wanted to be at
the march to
"unite with the rest of the world."
Rachel Callender
Rachel
Callender a lawyer born in Trinidad and Tobago, raised in Venezuela and
educated in
the US told CNN she was marching because there's a
"patriarchy that needs to be smashed."
"Inclusion is really important in these women's issues," she said.
"Everyone
is looking at America but it's a global problem and by standing in
solidarity with Washington today, I think that message will be sent."
Ben Dickson
"Women's rights are everyone's rights," said 38-year-old Ben Dickson a commodity trader living
in London.
"We're
not happy that somebody like Trump can be elected. We can understand
that democracy
is what we have, but democracy also allows you to express
your displeasure"
Dickson said he felt lucky to be able to protest.
"This is not a right that everyone has," he said.
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