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Muslim Women Make their Voice Heard in Wash. March

WASHINGTON โ€“ Linda Sarsour, a Muslim activist and a national co-chair of the Womenโ€™s March on Washington, told the crowds she stood before them as an โ€œunapologetically Muslim-American.โ€

Hundreds of thousands of people poured into cities across different American cities to march in opposition to President Donald Trump, a day after the Republican took office, as sister demonstrations took place in cities across Africa, Asia and Europe.

Protesters held signs like โ€œWomenโ€™s rights are human rightsโ€, โ€œBreak down walls, donโ€™t build themโ€, and โ€œHell hath no fury as a nasty woman scornedโ€, referencing the time Trump called his opponent, Hillary Clinton, a โ€œnasty womanโ€ during a debate.

Zahra Billoo, the executive director of the San Francisco Bay Area chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) spoke on Saturday, January 21,  at the Womenโ€™s March on Washington in the nationโ€™s capital.

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Although authorities in Washington, DC, do not release crowd counts, organizers told AFP news agency they estimated turnout at one million โ€“ quadrupling initial expectations โ€“ with huge crowds joining sister marches around the country.

More than half a million people also took to the streets of Los Angeles, according to police there, and a similar number gathered in New York. Other marches took place in Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco, Denver, St Louis and elsewhere.

Demonstrations against Trumpโ€™s discriminatory rhetoric were also held in Australia, the UK, Germany, Japan and France, and others.