Search

Lützerath eviction: German police drag climate protesters from coal village - BBC

ladokopintan.blogspot.com

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Police in riot gear have started to drag climate activists away from an abandoned village in western Germany they have occupied for months.

Protesters barricaded themselves in to prevent Lützerath from being swallowed up by the nearby Garzweiler open coal mine.

Some activists threw stones and pyrotechnics at police officers as they began to clear the camp.

Protesters climbed into treehouses to make the eviction more difficult.

The village is owned by energy firm RWE, and the last resident moved out over a year ago.

There were violent scuffles as police wearing riot gear stormed the village early on Wednesday to evict the protesters.

They dragged some activists, many wearing scarves to mask their faces, away across the muddy ground. The situation was then described as calmer but many of the protesters remained.

Some have formed human chains, others have taken to treehouses or the rooftops of the village.

Lützerath is literally on the verge of being swallowed up by the vast open coal mine on its doorstep.

RWE operates the mine and plans to extend the works. A huge mechanical digger stands metres from the treeline at the edge of the village.

Police keep guard as activists stage a sit-in protest against the expansion of the Garzweiler open-cast lignite mine of Germany's utility RWE, in Luetzerath, Germany, January 11, 2023
Reuters
A activist hangs above riot police at the settlement of Luetzerath next to the Garzweiler II open cast coal mine on January 11, 2023
Getty Images

Although all the residents have left, several hundred climate protesters are determined to stop RWE getting at the lignite that lies underneath Lützerath.

Some have been here for more than a year, squatting in the abandoned brick buildings.

When we visited the camp a few days ago the activists were busy, reinforcing barricades and preparing piles of bricks.

Some were practising their rope-climbing skills. A series of treehouses, perilously high in the tall trees, are linked by rope so that the activists can move around above the heads of the police.

"That coal has to stay in the ground," one of the protesters told the BBC.

Dina Hamid

Dina Hamid rejects the assertion of the authorities, that Germany needs that lignite if it is to meet its energy requirements, now that it can no longer rely on supplies from Russia.

"The climate crisis is now, and we know that coal should have been stopped years ago."

Lützerath is likely to be the last German village lost to a coal mine.

The government has pledged to bring forward the phase-out of coal in North Rhine-Westphalia, the state in which the mine lies, to 2030. The national target is 2038.

RWE and the regional ministers have agreed to limit the extension of the mine; plans to demolish and excavate five other villages have been scrapped.

But the battle for Lützerath is not yet over. The activists are pinning their hopes on a German law that prohibits the felling of trees between February and September. That could, in theory, halt the planned excavation, albeit temporarily.

Lützerath is now surrounded by police officers, one of whom told reporters this morning that the site would be cleared.

Even so, the protesters remain determined to hold off the eviction, and what seems to be the inevitable fate of the village, for as long as they can.

Activists stage a sit-in protest against the expansion of the Garzweiler open-cast lignite mine
Reuters

Adblock test (Why?)



World - Latest - Google News
January 11, 2023 at 07:22PM
https://ift.tt/3mFq0HA

Lützerath eviction: German police drag climate protesters from coal village - BBC
World - Latest - Google News
https://ift.tt/ZiqV8Cu


Bagikan Berita Ini

0 Response to "Lützerath eviction: German police drag climate protesters from coal village - BBC"

Post a Comment

Powered by Blogger.