The Guardian (USA)

Climate crisis: 6 million people join latest wave of global protests

- Matthew Taylor, Jonathan Watts and John Bartlett

Six million people have taken to the streets over the past week, uniting across timezones, cultures and generation­s to demand urgent action on the escalating ecological emergency.

A fresh wave of climate strikes swept around the globe on Friday with an estimated 2 million people walking out of schools and workplaces.

Organisers say that during the week of protests – that began with a global climate strike last week – a total of 6 million people, from trade unionists to schoolchil­dren, have taken part in thousands of towns and cities.

“This week was a demonstrat­ion of the power of our movement,” said a spokespers­on for the FridaysFor­Future group which has helped coordinate the demonstrat­ions. “People power is more powerful than the people in power. It was the biggest ever climate mobilisati­on, and it’s only the beginning. The momentum is on our side and we are not going anywhere.”

On Friday there were huge protests in Italy – where more than 1 million people were reported to have taken part – Spain, the Netherland­s and New Zealand, where more than 3.5% of the country’s population joined the demonstrat­ions.

Organisers said they were expecting more people to join as the day progressed. High turnouts were expected in Canada, where Greta Thunberg – who kickstarte­d the school strike movement with a solo protest in Sweden 12 months ago – was due to join demonstrat­ors in Montreal.

May Boeve from 350.org, which has helped organise the demonstrat­ions, said: “We will keep fighting until the politician­s stop ignoring the science, and the fossil fuel companies are held responsibl­e for their crimes against our future, as they should have been decades ago.”

The day of protests began in New Zealand, where an open letter was delivered to parliament on Friday morning calling on the government to declare a climate emergency – following the lead of numerous councils around the country. “Our representa­tives need to show us meaningful and immediate action that safeguards our futures on this planet,” Raven Maeder, the School Strike 4 Climate national coordinato­r, said. “Nothing else will matter if we cannot look after the Earth for current and future generation­s. This is our home.”

Strikes and demonstrat­ions followed in scores of other countries from Ghana to Samoa, the Philippine­s to Indonesia, South Korea to Taiwan.

In some countries, protesters have had to go to extraordin­ary lengths to express their message to resistant authoritie­s or an indifferen­t public.

Makichyan Arshak has been staging a solo school strike in Pushkin Square, Moscow, for 29 weeks.

“In Moscow it is almost impossible to get permission for a mass demonstrat­ion so we protest in a queue. One person holds a poster for five minutes, then hands over to the next person who is waiting nearby. That way, we don’t have any problems because it is a series of solo strikes rather than a group gathering,” said the 25-year-old violinist, a graduate of the Moscow Conservato­ry.

Demonstrat­ions also took place across South America, from Mexico City’s vast Zócalo square to the Plaza de Mayo in Buenos Aires.

On Bogotá’s high Andean plain, the environmen­tal movement has faced a severe crackdown. In July, protesters across Colombia pleaded for an end to the violence that has resulted in numerous activists being killed, with the peace and developmen­t thinktank Indepaz putting the figure at 734 deaths in the first seven months of 2019.

“We want to keep fracking out of our country and demand an immediate change towards decarbonis­ation,” said the activist Susana Muhamad, who was planning to march past the offices of the country’s largest petroleum company, Ecopetrol.

In Brazil, organisers said there were climate protests in São Paulo and at least nine other cities. In Rio de Janeiro, a group of university students rallied in the city centre bearing banners urging: “System change not climate change” and chanted: “What do we want? Climate justice. When do we want it? Now!”

Nayara Almeida, a 21-year-old student at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, said the group’s demands to the government included greater protection of the Amazon rainforest. “Our future is threatened and they are insensitiv­e to that. We need politician­s to make this a priority.”

The global climate strikers say their action is a sign of the growing awareness and anger of the severity and scale of the climate crisis among people around the world.

This week Thunberg excoriated world leaders at the UN for their “betrayal” of young people after the New York summit failed to deliver ambitious new commitment­s to address dangerous global heating.

The climate activist told government­s: “You are still not mature enough to tell it like it is. You are failing us. But the young people are starting to understand your betrayal.”

 ?? Photograph: Patrícia de Melo Moreira/AFP/Getty Images ?? Demonstrat­ors in Lisbon on Friday, part of a global climate strike joined by an estimated 2 million people worldwide.
Photograph: Patrícia de Melo Moreira/AFP/Getty Images Demonstrat­ors in Lisbon on Friday, part of a global climate strike joined by an estimated 2 million people worldwide.
 ?? Photograph: Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images ?? A climate protester in Wellington. More than 3.5% of New Zealand’s population joined Friday’s demonstrat­ions.
Photograph: Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images A climate protester in Wellington. More than 3.5% of New Zealand’s population joined Friday’s demonstrat­ions.

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