The Borneo Post

Australian kids skip school to demand action on climate change

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SYDNEY: Thousands of Australian students skipped school yesterday to join nationwide protests demanding government action on climate change.

The demonstrat­ions were held as more than a hundred bushfires blazed in scorching temperatur­es in the northeast and a day after Indian mining firm Adani vowed to go ahead with a massive and controvers­ial coal mine.

Primary and secondary students rallied in state capitals and rural areas across the country, in defiance of Prime Minister Scott Morrison who earlier said kids should stay in the classroom.

“Our prime minister thinks we should be in school right now and maybe you should be,” 13year-old student Siniva Esera told a crowd of more than a thousand in Sydney.

“But how can we sit by and not do anything to protect the future of this planet,” she added, to a rapturous applause.

Morrison told parliament earlier in the week that the government was committed to tackling climate change, “but I’ll tell you what we are also committed to: kids should go to school.”

Students creatively rebuked the prime minister, who goes by the nickname ScoMo, with humorous banners saying, “I hate ScoMo more than I hate school”.

They also carried placards calling for the government to block the Adani mine project, a day after the Indian mining firm had announced it would go ahead with a scaled-back version of the coal mine in northern Queensland.

“If we don’t stop temperatur­es going over two degrees we won’t have the Great barrier reef, Antarctica will melt and there will be no such thing as polar bears,” 11-year- old Lucie AtkinBolto­n told the crowd.

“My life will be so much more complicate­d than my parents’ life, because of one simple thing: climate change.”

The protests capped off a week of brutal weather in Australia.

More than a hundred fires continued to blaze Friday across Queensland state amid an unpreceden­ted scorching heatwave.

The crisis forced hundreds to flee their homes Wednesday at its peak.

On the same day, in the neighbouri­ng state of New South Wales, Sydney was hit by severe thundersto­rms and heavy rainfall forcing the cancellati­on of flights, closure of rail lines and leaving motorists stranded on flooded roads.

Scientists this week also launched the largest- ever attempt to regenerate the endangered Great Barrier Reef, where large swathes of coral on the 2,300- kilometre reef have been killed by rising sea temperatur­es linked to climate change. — AFP

 ??  ?? Students from different schools raise placards during a protest rally at Martin Place in Sydney. — AFP photo
Students from different schools raise placards during a protest rally at Martin Place in Sydney. — AFP photo

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