
Tens of thousands participated in the traditional peace marches held throughout Germany over the Easter weekend, organizers reported on Monday.
Events had been held in more than 100 locations, the Bonn-based Peace Cooperative said.
Demonstrations in Frankfurt, Hamburg and Nuremberg were planned for Easter Monday.
The three-day march through the Ruhr Region that began in Duisburg was due to end in Dortmund on Monday.
Police put attendance at the Stuttgart march on Saturday at around 3,000, with 1,000 counted in Berlin.
Network spokesman Kristian Golla said strong participation indicated a broad-based wish for a politics of peace. "We call on the German government to at last back diplomacy over rearmament," he said.
The focus this year was on a call for ceasefires in Ukraine and the Middle East.
Participants also protested against the stationing of medium-range missiles in Europe and the reintroduction of conscription in Germany. Many speakers were young people opposed to conscription.
The marches are organized regionally by trade unions and leftist and Christian groups. They have declined in scope since the heyday of the peace movement in the early 1980s when hundreds of thousands participated.
latest_posts
- 1
FDA proposes use of sunscreen ingredient popular in other countries - 2
Activists: Venezuela released just nine prisoners despite promise - 3
Corcept Therapeutics shares surge as lead drug gets FDA nod for ovarian cancer - 4
Flu cases are rising with a strain that makes older people sicker - 5
Most loved VR Game for Wellness: Which Keeps You Dynamic?
More parents refusing this shot that prevents serious bleeding at birth
Record-breaking 'space laser' erupts from merging galaxies 8 billion light-years away
UK consumer confidence plunges amid escalating Iran conflict
NASA says Maven spacecraft that was orbiting Mars has gone silent
Which Carrier Do You Suggest? Vote
6 Agreeable Earphones To Wear
The Magnificence of Extraordinariness: Presenting Valuable Adornments and Gemstones
Germany paves the way for tighter EU asylum rules
Surveys of Thrillers That Re-imagined the Class













