Home » today » Entertainment » The Romanians organized the largest protest in the pandemic. The leaders AUR and Diana Şoşoacă are calling for an uprising. Worldwide wave of protests LIVE VIDEO

The Romanians organized the largest protest in the pandemic. The leaders AUR and Diana Şoşoacă are calling for an uprising. Worldwide wave of protests LIVE VIDEO

UPDATE wave of protests: “I am just happy to be able to protest. These restrictions are totally unconstitutional. We, the people, are beginning to wake up and take action. I think policemen should also understand that they serve their country.

As for the vaccination law, I think we are dealing with an uneducated legal parliament.

I talked to my colleagues in the Chamber of Deputies and we studied the vaccination law together. On my page I posted these provisions regarding the mandatory vaccination. I was told I was too high. And if it adopts the law, it is unconstitutional and violates the constitution. We are dealing with some legally uneducated people.

When I hear about the third wave, I think a tsunami hit them in the head. Which third wave? hence, as the first was not. I consider Mr Arafat guilty of aggravated murder. Raed Arafat imposed some protocols that doctors do not abdicate, “said Diana Şoşoacă.

UPDATE wave of protests: Diana Şoşoacă reached the end of the protests, after the AUR leaders left the demonstration.

UPDATE wave of protests: The organizers were fined 7,000 lei for allowing access to a number of people who violate the rules of the pandemic.

UPDATE wave of protests: People marched to the Senate.

UPDATE wave of protests: “Not against vaccination, but for FREEDOM to decide,” was the slogan announced by the initiators of the action – the Alliance of Parents and four other associations, Pro Consumers, Doctors for Informed Consent, United Nations and Pro Informed Decisions.

Protest wave Update. The GOLD leader, George Simion, was extremely outraged due to the fact that Bucharest returns to the red scenario and claims that it is time for large-scale protests.
“Red scenario again! Restaurants and schools close in Bucharest, Timis and other areas. The state of alert and these scenarios in Parliament cannot even be rejected. Others decide on behalf of Romanians. It’s time for protests! ”Said George Simion.

Wave of protest. Dozens of parents gathered to protest against the law on compulsory vaccination, which, according to representatives of the Alliance of Parents, is to be adopted by Parliament. Protest leaders are expecting as many as 5,000 participants in today’s event. George Simion, the AUR leader, is also protesting.

A wave of protests around the world. In Bucharest, the Alliance of Parents is calling the world to a protest. “On Sunday, March 7, starting with 15.00, we are waiting for you at Izvor Park in front of the Parliament for the demonstration, for Freedom”, announced the Alliance of Parents in an event promoted on Facebook. The announcement comes after a red scenario was announced in Bucharest, there is quarantine in Timisoara, and other large cities in the country are under restrictions.

Coordinator of the national vaccination campaign against SARS-COV-2, Valeriu Gheorghiță, declared on Tuesday, in a press conference, that until March 1, 5,458 adverse reactions were registered, the incidence rate of adverse reactions being 3.5 adverse reactions per 1,000 doses of vaccine, informs SPS.

According to the official, in February the “median age” of Romanians who had side effects after being vaccinated is 39 years. He said there was a “trend towards young people” in terms of side effects. Gheorghiță mentioned that women represent 64% of the vaccinated people who had side effects. Diana Şoşoacă and AUR announced that they support the protest.

Coronavirus: Thousands protested in Vienna against the restrictions

Wave of protest. Thousands rallied in central Vienna on Saturday to protest restrictions on fighting the COVID-19 epidemic. AFP.

Diana Şoşoacă, message for Romanians: “Take to the streets and protect your children!”. The senator also called Ciolacu to protest

Police said they had made “several” arrests, while isolated clashes between protesters and left-wing counter-protesters were reported.

Most participants did not wear masks and did not respect physical distance as they crossed the city center to Prater Park, where the far-right FPO party called for a rally.

The last lockdown in Austria was relaxed in February with the reopening of schools, shops and museums. But protesters are protesting against measures still in place, such as closing restaurants and cafes and mandatory tests for students who are physically present in schools.

In a speech to the crowd, former FPO Interior Minister Herbert Kickl accused the government of pursuing a “crazy and bizarre” policy.

Protesters chanted slogans and displayed placards demanding the resignation of center-right Chancellor Sebastian Kurz.

Members of the far right, including neo-Nazis, were also present at previous demonstrations against masks and restrictions.

The number of reported cases of contamination each day has increased in recent weeks. More than 2,500 new cases were registered on Saturday.

According to Health Minister Rudolf Anschober, the much more contagious British version of the coronavirus is currently dominant in Austria. Hundreds of people gathered in Vienna on Saturday afternoon to protest against measures to stop the spread of the coronavirus, with many protesters coming by bus from outside the capital, local media reported, taken over by the DPA.

Some protesters carried various banners, and some wrote a message demanding the resignation of Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, according to the Austrian news agency APA.

Police checked to see if the protesters complied with health protection rules, such as social distance and wearing a mask.

About 200 counter-demonstrators gathered for a bicycle march.

The far-right opposition FPO and other voices called for a demonstration for the second part of Saturday, under the slogan ‘Democracy, fundamental rights and freedom’.

About 3,000 people are expected at the event, and former Interior Minister Herbert Kickl would give a speech.

A wave of protests in Stockholm as well

Hundreds of people protested in Stockholm on Saturday against restrictions on the coronavirus pandemic in Sweden, in violation of a ban on public gatherings, the DPA reported.

The demonstration was not authorized. Shortly after protesters gathered in one of the main markets in the Swedish capital, law enforcement called for them to disperse.

Police said spokespersons that no more than eight public gatherings could be held during the pandemic.

The protest was prepared on social networks by a group called Free Sweden, whose supporters are critical and skeptical about the restrictions and information of the authorities.

“So many people in Sweden are fed up with these unfounded restrictions and want to take a stand,” one of the organizers, Filip Sjostrom, told Stockholm’s Expressen daily.

After a while, the crowd left Medborgarplatsen Square in the Sodermalm district and marched towards Kungstradgarden Central Park behind a large banner that read ‘For Freedom and Truth’.

Some protesters had placards criticizing vaccinations.

In Kungstradgarden, police resumed calls for the crowd to disperse, according to Agerpres.

Gradually, the assembly dispersed, according to images broadcast by television. By Friday, about 7 percent of Sweden’s adult population had received the first dose of the vaccine, the Public Health Authority said.

In Sweden, a country with 10.3 million inhabitants, there have been 684,000 cases of infection and 13,003 deaths related to coronavirus.

Wave of protests in Paraguay and Argentina over the authorities’ response to the health crisis

A series of demonstrations took place on Friday night in cities in Paraguay and Argentina regarding the way the authorities manage the health crisis caused by Covid-19. The protests became violent after law enforcement intervened with tear gas and rubber bullets, Reuters reports.

In the capital Asuncion, thousands of people expressed their dissatisfaction with the measures taken by the leadership on Friday night, and under pressure the Minister of Health resigned.

Law enforcement forces used rubber bullets and tear gas to disperse the crowd gathered in front of the Congress building in the center of Paraguay’s capital, where protesters crossed barriers, set fire to barricades and threw stones at police officers.

The number of daily SARS-CoV-2 contaminations has peaked in Paraguay, where hospitals are collapsing.

“It is a pity that young people have taken this too far. There are people who only seek to destroy, “Interior Minister Arnaldo Giuzzio told Telefuturo. “This violence makes no sense.”

On Friday, the Minister of Health, Julio Mazzoleni, resigned, after a day since the parliamentarians asked him to do so.

Mazzoleni is one of Latin America’s top health officials who has been forced to resign in recent weeks.

President Mario Abso has appointed Dr. Julio Borba, Deputy Prime Minister, to replace Mazzoleni. He said he would immediately start finding a solution to get medicines and supplies.

In the last seven days, 115 contaminations per 100,000 people have been recorded in Paraguay. Less than 0.1% of the country’s population has been vaccinated.

Since the beginning of the pandemic, more than 165,800 cases of Covid-19 and more than 3,270 associated deaths have been reported in Paraguay, a country of about 7 million people.

On the other hand, in Argentina, people took to the streets to challenge the restrictions imposed in the context of the increasing number of cases of infection with the new coronavirus.

Several international human rights groups have condemned the widespread use of force by police in Argentina’s Formosa province.

According to images released by local media, law enforcement fired rubber bullets on Friday and fired tear gas at protesters in the capital Formosa, after authorities decided to close several economic units in an attempt to stop the increase in cases.

Several people were injured, including journalists, and several arrests were made.

President Alberto Fernandez’s chief of staff wrote on Twitter that “the state must guarantee the free and peaceful expression of citizens… violence is never the way.”

Formosa, in northern Argentina, is one of the poorest provinces in the South American country and has been hit hard by the recession exacerbated by the health crisis.

Argentina, with about 44.5 million inhabitants, has registered more than 2.14 million cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection since March last year, and more than 52,780 associated deaths.

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