FLORENCE,
Italy, November 9 (News Agencies) - Hundreds of thousands of
demonstrators marched through Florence Saturday to oppose a war on Iraq
in what could prove to be the world's biggest street protest yet against
U.S. sabre-rattling toward Baghdad.
Between
400,000 and one million people -- according to respective police and
organizers' estimates -- braved the cold to march through this heavily
policed Renaissance capital, but the mood was festive with no reported
incidents, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
Organizers
had promised a peaceful rally though officials and locals feared it
could turn into a violent repeat of last year's G-8 summit riots in
Genoa and many shops were closed and shuttered.
The
rally had been called to mark the climax of the European Social Forum, a
five-day gathering of the anti-globalization movement that drew 50,000
people, more than twice original estimates.
But
with events on Iraq moving quickly, the war theme took precedence. The
protest came a day after the UN Security Council passed by unanimity a
U.S.-proposed resolution which required Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein to
abolish Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction.
The
mostly Italian demonstrators -- anti-globalists, union activists,
pacifists -- marched behind banners proclaiming "No to War" as
they wove their way along a three-kilometer (1.8 mile) stretch that
skirted Florence's historic center and ended up at the city's football
stadium. An evening concert was to close events for the day.
Although
police have not closed off the center of this Tuscan capital, more than
4,000 officers were mobilized to protect its treasures and monuments --
including Michelangelo's famous sculpture David -- many dating back to
the Renaissance. Officials have also prepared a hundred cells in a
nearby prison.
The
city's famed museums and central cathedral, Il Duomo, with its landmark
15th-century dome by Brunelleschi were also kept open, but many shops
had boarded up tight.
The
march through Florence has come under heavy criticism from Italy's
center-right government and conservatives, who fear a repeat of the
violence at last year's Group of Eight summit in Genoa, in which a
demonstrator was killed and hundreds were injured. About 300,000
demonstrators attended the Genoa summit.
The
CGIL -- Italy's largest trade union and the group charged with the
delicate task of maintaining order at the march -- has said the march
will not end like the Genoa demonstrations.
The
head of the EU executive, the European Commission, Italian Romano Prodi,
said he would watch and see what happens Saturday.
"I
will be watching what happens in Florence," he said at a congress
in the northern city of Bologna. "The young people must be heard,
which does not mean their opinions must always be shared."
"But
in this time of change, the voice of youth is of major importance,"
Prodi said.
The
anti-globalization movement, which includes a vast range of groups from
environmentalists and pacifists to anarchists, argues that governments
and international institutions like the International Monetary Fund put
the interests of big companies ahead of those of ordinary people.
Protests
were staged in several capitals at the end of September against the Bush
administration's stance on Iraq. The largest of these -- in London and
Rome -- drew about 100,000 people each.
Last
year, One male protester was killed, one young woman demonstrator
seriously injured and a police officer "very seriously
injured" during clashes outside the G8 summit in Genoa last year.
Witnesses
in Genoa told AFP that a young man had been shot in the head in the Via
Caffa, a street leading to the summit venue.
A
body was lying under a white sheet in the street with blood visible at
about head height, an AFP reporter said