Daily Tribune (Philippines)

‘Masks up, emissions down’ as climate demos restart

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BERLIN, Germany (AFP) — Thousands of young people across Europe joined a global day of climate protests on Friday, many wearing masks and keeping their distance against the coronaviru­s.

The rallies marked the resumption of street protests by the “Fridays for Future” movement, which had kept its actions mainly online in recent months because of the pandemic.

Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, who launched the school strikes two years ago, led the protest in Stockholm.

The goal was to “build up this pressure on people in power so that something happens,” the 17-year-old said outside the Swedish parliament, wearing a white mask emblazoned with the Fridays for Future logo.

With Sweden’s coronaviru­s rules limiting crowd sizes to 50 people, Thunberg said the demonstrat­ions would “focus on being few people in many places and keeping distance.”

Posting pictures from protests held around the world, Thunberg later tweeted satisfacti­on with the response.

“What a huge success! With masks and socially distant, hundreds of thousands returned to the streets, demanding climate action, in over 3,200 places on all continents, including Antarctica!

“Who is going to demand our right to a livable future, if not us?

“The fight for a future doesn’t end here. This is just the beginning,” Thunberg wrote.

Previous global Fridays for Future demos have seen millions of young people pour into cities to demand action against global warming.

In Germany, police said some 10,000 protesters braved the rain to gather at Berlin’s Brandenbur­g Gate. Organizers estimated the figure to be twice as high.

Demonstrat­ors clutched umbrellas and carried signs to highlight the climate crisis, while some scribbled messages on their face masks such as “Not a single degree more” and “Unite behind the science.”

A Berlin police spokespers­on said participan­ts were adhering to hygiene regulation­s imposed to contain the virus spread, with many demonstrat­ors standing or sitting at least 1.5 meters apart.

Who if not us?

Elsewhere in Germany, some 7,000 people turned out in the western city of Cologne, while the cities of Freiburg and Hamburg each drew around 6,000 demonstrat­ors.

Bad weather across the country however was believed to have dampened the overall turnout somewhat.

A large protest planned in the southern city of Munich had to be cancelled because of a regional spike in coronaviru­s infections, and was replaced by a smaller event outside the city center.

Climate strike organizers in Austria said that 6,000 people had attended a demonstrat­ion in the capital Vienna despite heavy rain and organizati­onal hurdles posed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Vienna’s police department estimated turnout at 2,500. Protest organizers said a further 2,000 people had rallied in other parts of Austria using the slogan: “Masks up, emissions down!”

“We don’t know when the pandemic will be over, but we do know that the climate crisis is getting worse every day and is endangerin­g human rights,” said Vienna-based activist Klara

Butz.

“Who is going to demand our right to a livable future, if not us?” she asked.

Greenpeace meanwhile marked the day by releasing a photo recently taken in the Arctic of

18-year-old ornitholog­ist Mya-Rose Craig, known as “birdgirl.”

She is pictured standing on an ice floe holding a poster reading “Youth Strike for Climate” — in what the environmen­tal campaign group said was the world’s most northerly climate strike.

“I’m here because I want to see for myself what’s at stake as this crucial protector of the planet, the Arctic Ocean, melts away at a terrifying rate,” she said from the Svalbard archipelag­o in a statement.

“Previous global Fridays for Future demos have seen millions of young people pour into cities to demand action against global warming.

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