Cape Argus

Thunberg fined by court

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CLIMATE campaigner Greta Thunberg was fined yesterday for disobeying Swedish police at a rally last month, but said she acted out of necessity due to global warming and joined a new protest hours later.

The 20-year-old activist, who has become a key face of the movement to fight climate change, was accused of disrupting traffic and refusing to leave a June protest in the port city Malmo.

“It’s correct that I was at that place on that day, and it’s correct that I received an order that I didn’t listen to, but I want to deny the crime,” Thunberg told the court when asked about the charge against her.

Thunberg said she had acted out of necessity, citing the need created by the “climate crisis”.

The rally, organised by environmen­tal activist group Reclaim the Future, tried to block the entrance and exit to the Malmo harbour to protest against the use of fossil fuel.

“According to me we are in an emergency, and due to that my action was legitimate,” she said after the trial.

After a short trial, the court nonetheles­s found her liable and issued a fine of 1 500 kronor (R2 556) plus an additional 1 000 kronor to the Swedish fund for victims of crime.

The crime she was convicted of can carry a maximum sentence of six months in prison, but usually these types of charges result in fines.

Asked if she would exercise more caution in the future following her fine, Thunberg said they would “definitely not back down”.

“We cannot save the world by playing by the rules because the laws have to be changed,” the activist said. “It is absurd that the ones acting in line with the science, the ones blocking the fossil fuel industry are the ones having to pay the price for it,” she added.

Hours later, Thunberg joined a protest similar to the one in June that resulted in her being fined.

Sitting on the road leading to the Malmo port she put out a sign reading “I block tanker trucks”.

Thunberg shot to global fame after starting her “School Strike for the Climate” in front of Sweden’s parliament in Stockholm at the age of 15. She and a small band of youths founded the Fridays for Future movement, which quickly became a global phenomenon.

Thunberg also regularly lambasts government­s and politician­s for not properly addressing climate issues.

Reclaim the Future insists that despite the legal pressures, it remains unbowed in standing up to the fossil fuels industry. “If the court chooses to see our action as a crime it may do so, but we have the right to live and the fossil fuels industry stands in the way of that,” the group spokespers­on Irma Kjellstrom said.

Six people present at the June protest have or will face charges.

“We young people will do what we can to stop this industry,” Kjellstrom said, explaining the group’s plans for continuing civil disobedien­ce.

 ?? | AFP ?? CLIMATE activist Greta Thunberg is carried away by police officers after she took part in a new climate action in Oljehamnen in Malmo, Sweden, yesterday, after the city’s district court convicted and sentenced her to a fine for disobeying police at a rally last month.
| AFP CLIMATE activist Greta Thunberg is carried away by police officers after she took part in a new climate action in Oljehamnen in Malmo, Sweden, yesterday, after the city’s district court convicted and sentenced her to a fine for disobeying police at a rally last month.

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