
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
The Force of Organic product: 10 Assortments That Improve Your Wellbeing
Vote in favor of your Favored Kind of Scarf
What's your biological age? Experts explain the benefits and risks of at-home tests
'Heated Rivalry' is just the tip of the iceberg. How hockey became the sexiest sport
The architect of Iran’s military survival remains defiant
Revealing the Incomparable Realms: An Excursion through Power and Inheritance
UN estimates over 2,000 Sudanese pregnant women have fled el-Fasher to escape conflict
Israeli forces kill one person in series of attacks on southern Lebanon
What really happens when 140 reality stars come face to face with their biggest fans













