Gender equality, rights on agenda on
International Women's Day
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[March 08, 2019]
(Reuters) - Campaigners for gender
equality marked International Women's Day on Friday with protests,
discussion panels and celebrations.
In one of the first protests of the day, several hundred women gathered
in central Madrid around midnight to bang pots and pans and demand more
rights for women in a society they say is still dominated by men.
Gender inequality has become a deeply divisive issue in Spain ahead of
its April 28 parliamentary election. A new far-right party, Vox, which
opinion polls show winning seats, has called for the scrapping of a
landmark law on gender violence.
The Spanish capital saw another protest against gender violence and
patriarchy later on Friday morning involving around 200 women cyclists.
Before getting on their bikes to demonstrate outside the headquarters of
the conservative People's Party (PP), the women read a manifesto and
performed a choreographed dance, singing: "Without violence they can't
control us".
Many wore purple - on jackets, trousers and bags - a symbolic color used
by women's rights activists.
"I can't imagine not being here, I'm a woman and this concerns me
directly," said 40-year-old Lucía Sánchez, who came by bike with other
friends.
In Paris, demonstrators from Amnesty International gathered outside
Saudi Arabia's embassy to wave placards that read "Honk for women's
rights" and calling for the release of jailed women activists, including
those who campaigned for the right to drive in the deeply conservative
kingdom.
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Women bang pots and pans during a protest at the start of a
nationwide feminist strike on International Women's Day at Puerta
del Sol Square in Madrid, Spain, March 8, 2019. REUTERS/Susana Vera
In London, Meghan, Britain's Duchess of Sussex, was due to join
singer Annie Lennox, model Adwoa Aboah, former Australian prime
minister Julia Gillard and others in a panel discussion about issues
affecting women today.
The session was convened by the Queen's Commonwealth Trust, an
organization of which Meghan was announced vice-president on Friday.
(Reporting by Sabela Ojea in Madrid and Marie-Louise Gumuchian in
London; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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