Article 6XDC2 Extinction Rebellion may have gone quiet, but climate protest will come roaring back | Oliver Haynes

Extinction Rebellion may have gone quiet, but climate protest will come roaring back | Oliver Haynes

by
Oliver Haynes
from Environment | The Guardian on (#6XDC2)

The pandemic and harsh laws suffocated climate movements as we knew them. Get ready for a new kind of action

On 21 April 2019, I was on Waterloo Bridge in London with my younger siblings. Around us were planters full of flowers where there were once cars, and people singing. This was the spring iteration of Extinction Rebellion, when four bridges in London were held by protesters. My siblings, then 14, had been going out on school strike inspired by Greta Thunberg, and wanted to see her speak.

We were there for less than a day, but the occupations of bridges and other blockades lasted for 11 days. Tens of thousands of people mobilised in the UK that spring. An estimated 500,000 people were affected by the shutdowns the movement imposed on central London's road networks, and more than 1,000 protesters were arrested in what was then an official part of XR's strategy.

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