by New Worker corrrespondent
Ecology campaigners were on the streets of London again for a “Weekend of Resistance” led by the Extinction Rebellion (XR) campaign as part of a month of protests called by a number of movements to draw attention to the environmental crisis which they say could trigger mass extinction across the planet.
On Friday two young Just Stop Oil protestors poured tomato soup over Van Gogh's Sunflowers painting in National Gallery and then glued themselves to the wall beneath the frame while another sprayed yellow paint on the walls of New Scotland Yard, the Metropolitan Police’s headquarters, to protest against police and state repression of activists.
The Van Gogh masterpiece was fortunately shielded in glass and suffered no damage. Enraged art lovers called it vandalism but this suffragette-style protest was defended by one of the protesters who said "Is art worth more than life? More than food? More than justice? The cost-of-living crisis is driven by fossil fuels—everyday life has become unaffordable for millions of cold, hungry families—they can't even afford to heat a tin of soup.
"Meanwhile, crops are failing and people are dying in supercharged monsoons, massive wildfires, and endless droughts caused by climate breakdown," the activist added. "We can't afford new oil and gas, it's going to take everything. We will look back and mourn all we have lost unless we act immediately".
The next day the climate change warriors gathered in Trafalgar Square on Saturday for a march on Downing Street to show “this corrupt, unelected government that we refuse to be pushed around”. Some burned their energy bills outside the Prime Minister’s residence while others held sit-down protests in other parts of central London to draw attention to their demands and disrupt traffic throughout central London.
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