Germany: environmental activist Greta Thunberg, arrested on the sidelines of a demonstration


Europe 1 with AFP
modified to

7:48 p.m., January 17, 2023

The young environmental activist Greta Thunberg was arrested and then placed in police custody on Tuesday in Germany after a demonstration against the extension of a coal mine. On Saturday, 15,000 people from all over Germany had joined the mobilization and scuffles had broken out.

Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg and other protesters were detained by police on Tuesday while protesting against the expansion of a coal mine in western Germany, according to a police source. “The group is in custody,” a police spokeswoman told AFP, adding that the anti-coal activists had headed “to the edge of the mine”.

In photos, Greta Thunberg, dressed in black, is shown being held by police officers and then carried by them as part of her evacuation. “Once the control is over, we will decide the fate of these people,” a police source added. The Swedish activist has been in Germany for several days to support opponents of the extension of the country’s largest open-pit mine, in the Rhine basin, which will soon swallow up an abandoned hamlet called Lützerath.

A project deemed necessary for Germany’s energy security

This hamlet occupied by climate defenders who wanted to prevent its destruction was evacuated by the police, who brought out several hundred people taking refuge in trees and abandoned farms. Despite the end of the police operation, which lasted several days, the opponents are not giving up. They had organized a demonstration on Saturday which brought together more than 15,000 participants from all over Germany. Scuffles left several dozen injured among the demonstrators and the police.

Protest actions continued on Tuesday with occupations of railway tracks, blockades of roads and buildings, especially in western Germany. The lignite mine, which belongs to the German energy group RWE, is located between Cologne and Düsseldorf. Its extension, planned for several years, is considered necessary for Germany’s energy security, which must compensate for the interruption of Russian gas deliveries. Activists believe that the current reserves of lignite are sufficient and denounce on the part of Germany a serious renunciation of its climate commitments.



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