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Students protest the police response to the 2014 Blarney Blowout celebration.
Photo by Justin Surgent
A Filipino protesting the burial of former president Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippines' Heroes Cemetery checks her smartphone.
Picture taken on November 18 at the People Power Monument in Quezon City, Philippines.
Kuwaitis take part in a sit-in at Freedom Square in Kuwait City, Kuwait, 28 November 2011. More than 50 thousand participants took part in the protest. According to media reports on 28 November 2011, Kuwait's Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Sabah and his cabinet have stepped down amid months of protests calling for his resignation. EPA/RAED QUATENA
Palestinian Land Day Rally at DuPont Circle, NW, Washington DC on Saturday afternoon, 30 March 2024 by Elvert Barnes Photography
Follow Shut It Down For Palestine 30 March 2024 LAND DAY events at www.instagram.com/queenofpalestine/p/C5GgGXtgJRA/
Learn about PALESTINE LAND DAY at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_Day
Elvert Barnes PROTESTS 2024 at elvertxbarnes.com/protests
Elvert Barnes March 2024 at exbphoto.com/2024
Got some good crowd shots again at the Kelly Thomas protest. It's a great place to practice people-shooting and not worry about people wondering why you are taking their picture.
Love the Guy Fawkes/V masks....they are so dramatic!
HSS!
Annual protest in Hebron for the reopening of Shuhada Street (aparthied street). Shuhada Street lies at the centre of the ancient city of Hebron. For many years it was a busy shopping precinct, full of life. Today it is deserted. When the radical Israeli settler Baruch Goldstein shot dead 29 Palestinian worshippers at Hebron's Ibrahimi mosque in 1994, the Israeli army feared reprisals against three nearby Israeli settlements. It closed off the street to Palestinian vehicles and later Shuhada Street was blocked even for most Palestinian pedestrians.Most of the people who once lived here have left their homes. All the shops have closed, and Palestinians living in the area have to climb over roofs to reach their neighbours. In addition, they suffer violence and harrassment by settlers and soldiers, who often neglect to intervene to protect them from settler violence.
Some miscreants set ablaze a vehicle of a BJP leader in Gandhi Nagar during second day of 'Jail Bharo' agitation in Jammu on Wednesday. Tribune photo Anand Sharma.
Protest supporters and spectators gathered on a fence set up on the south side of Lafayette Park watching the unfolding drama whilst MPD bicycle officers maintained a cordon on the street.
Washington, DC / March 18, 2010
Students protest the police response to the 2014 Blarney Blowout celebration.
Photo by Justin Surgent
The government are once again threatening to fence off Philoppapos Hill, and the citizens of Koukaki and Petralona are having none of it.
Thousands of protesters converged on Vancouver to voice their opposition to a proposed expansion of the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain pipeline.
Shouting anti-pipeline slogans and waving placards, the protesters made their way north from city hall across the Cambie Street Bridge.
Annual protest in Hebron for the reopening of Shuhada Street (aparthied street). Shuhada Street lies at the centre of the ancient city of Hebron. For many years it was a busy shopping precinct, full of life. Today it is deserted. When the radical Israeli settler Baruch Goldstein shot dead 29 Palestinian worshippers at Hebron's Ibrahimi mosque in 1994, the Israeli army feared reprisals against three nearby Israeli settlements. It closed off the street to Palestinian vehicles and later Shuhada Street was blocked even for most Palestinian pedestrians.Most of the people who once lived here have left their homes. All the shops have closed, and Palestinians living in the area have to climb over roofs to reach their neighbours. In addition, they suffer violence and harrassment by settlers and soldiers, who often neglect to intervene to protect them from settler violence.
International Conference Center, COP 17, Durban, South Africa, 9th December, 2011
Greenpeace's Kumi Naaidoo talks to the media. In solidarity with the millions of people already feeling the impacts of climate change, hundreds of people protested in the halls of the UN Climate Talks this afternoon to demand that nations not sign a “death sentence” in Durban. The march filled the hall outside of the main negotiating room in Durban just as the afternoon round of talks were scheduled to begin. Standing side-by-side with delegates from some of the world’s most vulnerable countries, civil society representatives sang traditional South African freedom songs and chanted slogans like, “Listen to the People, Not the Polluters.”