Cape Argus

Climate protesters defiant

Ignore police order to stop demonstrat­ions; 1 500 arrested so far over disruption­s

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CLIMATE change activists, including one of the founders of Extinction Rebellion, defied a police order to end protests yesterday after a week of disruption in London, targeting Britain’s transport ministry and security agency MI5.

Gail Bradbrook, one of the founders of the group that is half way through two weeks of actions around the world, climbed on to the top of the entrance of the transport ministry to protest at a high-speed rail project known as HS2.

“This is nature defending herself,” Bradbrook said, as public servants looked on from a gallery inside the building and police cordoned off the street. “I’m doing this for your children.”

Invoking the example of women’s suffrage activist Emmeline Pankhurst, Bradbrook tried to smash one of the ministry’s windows with a hammer and screwdrive­r before she was brought down by a police climber in a cherry-picker and arrested.

The group, which uses civil disobedien­ce to highlight the risks posed by climate change and the accelerati­ng loss of plant and animal species, has staged a fresh wave of protest actions in cities from Amsterdam to Melbourne since October 7.

In New York, activists glued themselves to a green sailboat parked on Broadway last week to highlight rising sea levels. In Brussels, police used water cannons on Saturday to disperse hundreds of Extinction Rebellion activists gathered in a square.

Police on Monday ordered a halt to all of the group’s protests in London, saying those who did not comply would be arrested. They have already made around 1 500 arrests over the past eight days, including more than 90 at a day of actions in the British capital’s financial district on Monday.

More than 1 400 people have been arrested in 20 cities in other countries, Extinction Rebellion said.

The British government reinforced the police call on it to stop. “While we share people’s concerns about global warming, and respect the right to peaceful protest, it should not disrupt people’s day-to-day lives,” a government spokespers­on said.

The activists oppose plans to run the HS2 rail project through ancient woodlands. The ministry says the rail line will slash journey times between central and northern England and the capital and be much more efficient in carbon terms than driving. The project is billions of pounds over budget, running late and subject to review on whether it should go ahead.

An activist who tried to lock herself to the ministry said the project would be a “scar across the belly of this land”, destroying vital habitats for barn owls, bees and birds. “We all use tactics to numb ourselves because this is scary,” said the woman before she was taken away in a police van.

Later, police began arresting Extinction Rebellion activists who had assembled to block a road running past the headquarte­rs of the MI5 security service to highlight the risks climate change poses to food security.

“A significan­t policing operation continues and we’ll take robust action against anyone engaged in unlawful protests at locations targeted by Extinction Rebellion,” London police’s Deputy Assistant Commission­er Laurence Taylor said.

Extinction Rebellion said HS2 would damage or destroy 108 ancient woodlands in the largest single act of deforestat­ion in Britain since World War I. The transport ministry said 7 million new trees and shrubs, including over 40 native species specific to each location,would be planted as part of the programme.

 ?? | Reuters ?? CO-FOUNDER of Extinction Rebellion Gail Bradbrook is removed from a doorway in London, yesterday.
| Reuters CO-FOUNDER of Extinction Rebellion Gail Bradbrook is removed from a doorway in London, yesterday.

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