http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20040320/wl_nm/iraq_britain_tower_dc_1


http://tinyurl.com/2deb6


Two anti-war protesters evaded tight security to climb London's
landmark Big Ben clock tower at the Houses of Parliament as thousands
marched on the first anniversary of the invasion of Iraq on Saturday.
The pair unfurled a banner which read "Time for Truth" before
rappelling down from the clockface 328 feet above the capital six
hours later. They were arrested on suspicion of causing criminal
damage.


"We want to send a clear message to (Prime Minister) Tony Blair that
we and the British people are fed up with the half-truths and evasions
on Iraq," said Stephen Tindale, executive director of environmental
group Greenpeace, which organized the stunt.


The climbers scaled two fences at the base of the tower, which is
subject to some of the tightest security in Britain.


Armed police guard parliament and concrete blocks ring the building to
prevent suicide car bombings. Britain is on high alert for attacks
after Madrid bombings that killed 202 people.


"There will be questions being asked about how they managed to get
over the fence and up the building," a Scotland Yard spokeswoman said.


"MAKE TEA, NOT WAR"


Thousands gathered in London for a peace march, one of many taking
place across Asia, Europe and the United States against the U.S.-led
war backed by Britain that toppled president Saddam Hussein, and an
occupation marked by guerrilla resistance.


In London, protesters carried "Wanted" posters bearing the faces of
Blair and President Bush. Banners declared "Make tea, not war."


People dressed as weapons inspectors carried an inflatable nuclear
missile to highlight the failure to find weapons of mass destruction
in Iraq and Britain's retention of a nuclear deterrent.


Hundreds of black balloons were due to be released in memory of those
who died in Iraq and in Madrid.


"We don't want any more lies or wars," said Ruth Tanner, a spokeswoman
for the march's joint organizer, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
(CND).


Numbers were well down on a pre-war demonstration in London last year
which attracted hundreds of thousands.


The CND said up to 100,000 were due at the London march. A police
source said they expected 30,000.





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