Activists hold banners and
wave flags as they continue to block the road on Waterloo Bridge on the second
day of an environmental protest by the Extinction Rebellion group, in London on
April 16, 2019.
More than 100 people have
been arrested in ongoing climate change protests in London that brought parts
of the British capital to a standstill, police said Tuesday.
Demonstrators started
blocking off a bridge and major central road junctions on Monday at the start
of a civil disobedience campaign that also saw action in other parts of Europe.
The protests were organised
by the campaign group Extinction Rebellion, which was established last year in
Britain by academics and has become one of the world’s fastest-growing
environmental movements.
London’s Metropolitan
Police said that by early Tuesday 113 adults had been arrested.
The figure includes three
men and two women who were arrested at the UK offices of energy giant Royal
Dutch Shell on suspicion of criminal damage. Campaigners daubed graffiti and
smashed a window at the Shell Centre building.
The majority arrested were
seized for breaching public order laws and obstructing a highway.
The protest saw more than a
thousand people block off central London’s Waterloo Bridge and lay trees in pots
along its length. Later, people set up camps in Hyde Park in preparation for
further demonstrations throughout the week.
Police restrictions
The police have ordered the
protesters to confine themselves to a zone within Marble Arch, a space at the junction
of Hyde Park, the Oxford Street main shopping thoroughfare and the Park Lane
street of plush hotels.
“The information and
intelligence available at this time means that that Met (police) feels this
action is necessary in order to prevent the demonstrations from causing ongoing
serious disruption,” the police said.
The group wants to
governments to declare a climate and ecological emergency, reduce greenhouse
gas emissions to zero by 2025, halt biodiversity loss and be led by new
“citizens’ assemblies on climate and ecological justice”.
Spokesman James Fox said
the group had attempted to maintain a blockade overnight at four sites in
central London before the police came to impose the new restriction.
People were arrested
“mostly at Waterloo Bridge where the police came to try to stop everyone, but
there were too many of us”, he told AFP.
Fox said the protesters
attached themselves to vehicles and to each other using bicycle locks.
“We have no intention of
leaving until the government listens to us,” he said.
“Many of us are willing to
sacrifice our liberty for the cause.”
AFP
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