Battles, pageants at May Day rallies
5.12 p.m. ET (2112 GMT) May 1, 1998

LONDON --- Seven people were killed in May Day demonstrations against military rule in Nigeria and left-wing marchers fought pitched battles with police in Turkey and South Korea.

In the German city of Leipzig, it was anti-immigrant right-wingers who held a May Day rally and leftists trying to disrupt them who fought with police.

Elsewhere, parades marking the workers' holiday ranged from orderly pageants to nostalgic mourning for communism.

In Nigeria, opponents of military ruler Sani Abacha called for nationwide protests on May Day after seeing this year's promised return to democracy headed for a one-candidate election expected to transform him into a civilian president.

But the main protests were in the southwestern city of Ibadan, an opposition stronghold where rioters tried to burn the offices of a pro-Abacha newspaper and other building owned by Abacha supporters.

Witnesses said police opened fire in at least two places and seven bodies were taken to hospitals.

In Istanbul, Turkish "Robocops'' encased in armor, wielding batons and firing water cannon dispersed stone-throwing leftists at a 70,000-strong rally.

Dozens of protesters were injured, most beaten by police, and more than 100 detained.

Reuters Television film showed "Grey Wolf'' rightists hanging a leftist protester out of the first-floor window of the Nationalist Action Party building as police and other members of a 100-strong crowd of rightists beat him.

May Day in Turkey has a legacy of confrontation. In 1977, 37 workers were shot by suspected rightist gunmen and three demonstrators died in fighting with riot police in 1996.

May Day was first declared a worker's holiday by the Second Socialist International in 1889 and since then has been celebrated by labor, especially socialists and communists.

In Seoul, the South Korean capital, riot police fired tear gas at thousands of rock-throwing workers protesting against growing layoffs caused by the economic crisis that has swept east Asia.

South Korea this week announced unemployment had soared to a 16-year high of 6.5 percent, against 3.4 percent a year earlier.

In Japan, police said about 275,000 marched nationwide to demand better treatment, at the end of a week in which figures showed unemployment had jumped to 3.9 percent, the worst figure since the end of World War Two.

Police in Moscow put the turnout at a communist May Day march at 30,000. Elderly marchers carried portraits of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin or banners attacking President Boris Yeltsin's government.

It was a far cry from the millions who thronged the city on May Day in Soviet times to mark one of the great festivals of socialism. After Yeltsin became president, he put an end to official parades on Red Square.

A separate rally organized by trade unions attracted some 15,000. In an updated echo of the sort of official pageantry that accompanied Soviet parades, it was led by workers from the Moskvich car factory, showing off their latest model and urging people to buy local products.

"It is supposed to be a happy day,'' said 61-year old Maria Vasiliyevna, wearing a Soviet-era Veteran of Labor medal in the former Lenin Square in Almaty, capital of the former Soviet republic of Kazakhstan. "Yet what happiness is there? We're divided in two

In formerly communist East Germany, May Day was a showcase for the tensions raised by far-right gains in a state election last month.

Around 5,000 supporters of the National Democratic Party marched in Leipzig waving "Jobs for Germans First'' banners and shouting "The National Resistance is on the March.'' Police used water cannon and truncheons to disperse thousands of left-winger trying to disrupt the march.

In Poland, leftist May Day marchers exchanged insults and missiles with right-wing hecklers in several cities.

But in still-communist Cuba, hundreds of thousands took part in parades to show support for their one-party socialist system and rejection of the U.S. trade embargo.

At least half a million people took part in the main parade at Havana's Revolution Square, the first mass event there since Pope John Paul's ground-breaking open-air Mass in January.

China's Communist Party leaders marked the day with rallying cries to the proletariat, but there was bitter irony in the slogans for millions of workers facing redundancy.

Dressed in a hard hat and blue overalls, Chinese President Jiang Zemin was shown in the People's Daily shaking hands with workers at Chongqing Iron and Steel, which is about to sack 1,500 staff.

Newspaper editorials hailed workers as "the masters of the nation, the masters of enterprise,'' but urged them to support reforms of state industry expected to put 10 million people out of work.

Hong Kong, which returned to Chinese control last year, did not celebrate May Day, having abolished the holiday that the British colonial government brought in just before the handover.

Iraqi workers marked the day by burning U.S. flags in Baghdad and blaming the United States for the suffering of their people under United Nations sanctions.

German police used water cannon and truncheons to disperse a group of leftists heading for the site of a far-right May Day rally in the eastern city of Leipzig.

French far-right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen used his party's annual May Day rally to urge the French people to reject the single European currency and keep the franc as a symbol of their national sovereignty and values.

© Reuters Ltd.