Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Children unite for climate cause

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NEW YORK, Sept 21 (AFP) - Masses of children skipped school to join a global strike against climate change that teen activist Greta Thunberg said was “only the beginning,” ahead of a UN youth summit she will participat­e in on Saturday.

Some four million people filled city streets around the world, organizers said, in what was billed as the biggest ever protest against the threat posed to the planet by rising temperatur­es.

Youngsters and adults alike chanted slogans and waved placards in demonstrat­ions that started in Asia and the Pacific, spread across Africa, Europe and Latin America, before culminatin­g in the United States where Thunberg rallied.

“Change is coming whether they like it or not,” said Thunberg, hitting out at skeptics as she wrapped up the massive day of action in New York, where she said that 250,000 protested.

Strike organizers 350. org said Friday's rallies were the start of 5,800 protests across 163 countries over the next week.

From Berlin to Boston, Kampala to Kiribati, Seoul to Sao Paulo, protesters brandished signs with slogans including “There is no planet B” and “Make the Earth Great Again.”

Safe future

In New York's Battery Park, tens of thousands of supporters gave Thunberg a rockstar reception, chanting her name as she called on leaders to act now to curb gas emissions. –

“Why should we study for a future that is being taken away from us?” She asked. “We demand a safe future. Is that really too much to ask?” On Saturday, she and 500 other youth environmen­talists from around the world take part in the first-ever Youth Climate Summit.

Then on Monday, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres has convened a Climate Action Summit where more than 60 world leaders will take to the podium to present greenhouse gas emissions reduction goals.

Events began Friday in the deluge-threatened Pacific Islands of Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands and Kiribati, where children chanted: “We are not sinking, we are fighting.” The defiance reverberat­ed across the globe as kids closed their textbooks in a collective call to action.

“We are the future and we deserve better,” 12- year- old Lilly Satidtanas­arn, known as “Thailand's Greta” for her campaign against plastic bags in malls, told AFP in Bangkok.

Schoolchil­dren rallied in India while thousands protested in the Philippine­s, which experts say faces threats from rising sea levels and increasing­ly violent storms.

About 200 marched in Ghana's capital Accra, where some 44 percent of the country's population has not heard of climate change, according to a study by Afrobarome­ter.

“Developing countries like Ghana are the most affected. We don't have the resources to adapt to climate change,” said 26-year-old protest organizer Ellen Lindsey Awuku.

In Slovakia, five- year- old Teo asked a crowd of 500 “not to cut down forests, and reduce garbage production, and not to use so many petrol-fuelled cars.”

Day of the Dead

German Chancellor Angela Merkel used Friday to pledge at least 100 billion euros by 2030 to tackle emissions in the energy and industrial sectors, boost zero tailpipe emission electric vehicles, and get passengers out of planes and onto trains.

Several thousand protested in Brazil, where banners slammed President Jair Bolsonaro over recent devastatin­g fires in the Amazon rainforest.

And in Mexico City, protesters wore wrestling masks and skeleton costumes associated with the country's Day of the Dead celebratio­ns.

Organisers said more than 300,000 children, parents and supporters rallied in Australia alone.

Australia has been struck in recent years by droughts, more intense bushfires, devastatin­g floods and the blanching of the Great Barrier Reef – phenomena experts have blamed on a changing climate.

The protests also highlighte­d resistance from climate change sceptics.

“The facts are, there is no link between climate change and drought; polar bears are increasing in number,” said Australian ruling coalition parliament­arian Craig Kelly Thursday.

Businesses taking action

Businesses also backed the protests. Amazon chief Jef f Bezos pledged Thursday to make the US tech giant carbon neutral by 2040 and encouraged other firms to do likewise.

A landmark UN report to be unveiled next week will warn global warming and pollution are ravaging Earth's oceans and icy regions in ways that could unleash misery on a global scale.

Speaking to reporters on Friday, Guterres acknowledg­ed Monday's summit would not solve everything.

“My main objective is to make as much noise as I can, and to do as much as I can to support as many actors involved in this as I can, especially in relationsh­ip with the youth,” he said.

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 ??  ?? Children in Australia and the Pacific Islands kicked off a millions-strong global climate strike on September 20 heeding the rallying cry of teen activist Greta Thunberg and demanding adults take action to stave off environmen­tal disaster. (Photo by Peter Parks / AFP)
Children in Australia and the Pacific Islands kicked off a millions-strong global climate strike on September 20 heeding the rallying cry of teen activist Greta Thunberg and demanding adults take action to stave off environmen­tal disaster. (Photo by Peter Parks / AFP)

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