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![]() By Yannick PASQUET Berlin (AFP) Sept 15, 2021
In late August, six young climate activists set up tents on a stretch of grass between the Reichstag and the chancellery in central Berlin, refusing to eat. More than two weeks later, some look pale and emaciated. One collapsed on Tuesday. Another broke down in tears as medics performed a daily check of their weight and blood pressure. Neither have they achieved their chief objective -- a meeting with the three main candidates vying to replace Angela Merkel as chancellor when Germany goes to the polls on September 26. "The climate crisis kills. We are on hunger strike for an unlimited period of time," a banner strewn across one of the tents proclaims in large red letters. The activists want to meet conservative Armin Laschet, Social Democrat Olaf Scholz and the Greens' Annalena Baerbock. All three parties have made climate policy a key issue in their campaigning, and the Greens have even pledged to make climate neutrality the top priority of the next government. But the activists say it's not enough. For Jacob Heinze, none of the major parties is prepared "to take the necessary measures to protect us, the younger generation, from the catastrophe" that is unfolding. - 'Time bomb' - They also want the next German government to set up a committee of citizens representing the whole spectrum of society to develop measures to protect the environment. The hunger strike is a "last resort... in the face of the extreme seriousness of our situation", the 27-year-old told AFP, long hair tied back from his gaunt face. Just hours later, he was taken to hospital after collapsing. "We are sitting on a time bomb," said Hannah Luebbert, a 20-year-old activist who is part of the support team. "If we don't change things quickly, in a few years it will be too late." For evidence of this, according to the activists, you only have to look at the deadly floods that swept through western Germany in July, which experts have directly linked to climate change. Global warming will also bring famine, they say, hence the idea of voluntary starvation. "Food security is not something we can take for granted. We are heading for wars over the distribution of food, water and land," said Heinze. The school and university students aged between 18 and 27 from all over Germany believe they belong to "the last generation" that can still take action. - 'Grim and hard' - After that, they say, scientific research has shown that the dramatic consequences of global warming will become irreversible. For them, civil disobedience movements like Extinction Rebellion and Fridays for Future do not go far enough. Some have already carried out drastic stunts such as scaling political buildings or chaining themselves to the streets to block traffic. "But we have seen that these different forms of action have not led to any change" at the political level, Luebbert said. Gathered in a circle on the lawn, some of the activists chose to remain inside the tents that have become their makeshift homes. On the 15th day of their strike, they decided to up the ante by giving up the vitamin drinks they had been taking. "I think we're noticing the aftermath and next week is going to be really grim and hard," says Henning Jeschke, an activist who has posted several videos of the action on Twitter. The only response they have had so far is a phone call from Baerbock. "But even with the Greens we will not meet the climate targets we have to meet," said Luebbert.
![]() ![]() UN climate summit to be Scotland's biggest policing operation Edinburgh (AFP) Sept 9, 2021 The upcoming UN climate summit in Glasgow will be Scotland's biggest ever policing operation, the officer in charge said on Thursday. Bernard Higgins said the 12-day COP26 event later this year, and expected environmental mass protests alongside, made it a "very complex and challenging operation". Up to 120 world leaders, including US President Joe Biden and Pope Francis, are due to attend, as well as senior British royals, and thousands of delegates. Police Scotland has said some 10,000 off ... read more
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