Source: Extinction Rebellion
Day 9 in Extinction Rebellion across the world was a day of contrasts.
In London, we witnessed a disturbing attack on civil rights – rightly condemned by Amnesty International, Kws lijchoj thiab Kws kav – and on the same day, our society’s elders came out to protest (UK, Australia) with humour and bravery. Wisdom meeting repression.
We saw rebels come together in joyful celebration to mark the ending of their respective phases of rebellion but, like New Year festivities, heralding new beginnings too; such as in Ireland thiab cov Netherlands, where already Greenpeace is said to be planning a ‘protestival’ at Schiphol Airport in December.
‘Joyful’ also describes the first outing of India’s beautiful Red Brigade in Mumbai: in red salwar kameez and sarees, this new addition to the movement perfectly illustrated the mingling of the local and the global that characterises XR. As red is the colour of auspicious occasions in India, we feel doubly blessed to have this new Brigade on our side.
A final mention for the bravery of the Hong Kong rebels, who staged actions under extremely volatile conditions but were very well received by the public.
We have already rewritten the rules. If now, more need to be broken for humanity and the planet’s sake, then so be it.
Yog tias koj xav pab, thov mus saib peb coj thiab kawm ntxiv txog XR.
Txhawm rau txuas rau cov neeg ntxeev siab hauv koj cheeb tsam hauv cheeb tsam, tiv tauj nrog koj nyob ze XR pawg. Yog tsis muaj ib pab pawg neeg nquag nyob ze koj, koj tuaj yeem pib koj tus kheej!
Yog tias koj xav pom cov ntawv xov xwm dhau los, koj tuaj yeem nrhiav tau lawv no.
Raws li peb nkag mus rau theem tseem ceeb no hauv tib neeg keeb kwm, peb Kev Tawm Tsam yuav xav tau nyiaj txiag kom paub tseeb tias peb cov lus tau hnov. Txhua yam koj ua tau muab txaus siab rau.
Cov ntsiab lus tseem ceeb
London protest ban: An illegal order?
Hnub Monday tsaus ntuj, British police issued a blanket ban on XR protests in London, effectively criminalising any Extinction Rebellion public assembly.
The move drew dav kev thuam from campaigners, politicians, journalists, and lawyers. Greta Thunberg tweeted: ‘If standing up against the climate and ecological breakdown and for humanity is against the rules then the rules must be broken’.
Kev tsis raug txim called the ban 'chilling and unlawful', but is it txhaum cai? The Human Rights Act protects the right to ‘freedom of assembly and association’, including kev sib haum xeeb tawm tsam.
Authorities can restrict these fundamental rights under certain circumstances, but only when absolutely necessary, and the action must be sib faib. A blanket ban feels like neither, and will be tested in the courts.
Today, claimants including Caroline Lucas, Clive Lewis, George Monbiot, Jenny Jones, and Green MEP Ellie Chowns (herself arrested in Trafalgar Square) are bringing an action on behalf of XR, challenging the order via judicial review in the High Tsev Hais Plaub.
‘The ban is a disproportionate and unprecedented curtailment of the right to free speech and free assembly’, says Tobias Garnett, a human rights lawyer.
Nyeem zaj dab neeg tag nrho no.
rau cov London Newsletter with updates from all the sites, click this button:
London rebels, mus saib peb Rebellion Xav tau nplooj , nyob mus txog hnub ntawm lub Kev ntxeev siab tshaj tawm channel, thiab qhib rau hauv xov tooj cua ntxeev siab (+44 7367 900650).
Hong Kong’s Calling
12-13 OCT | Hong Kong
Several small but significant XR actions took place in Hong Kong over the weekend. On Saturday afternoon, over a dozen rebels staged a die-in at Central Pier. They give a brief speech, brandished banners and chanted warnings about the climate and ecological crisis.
On Sunday, a larger group participated in a Funeral March for the Earth in Mong Kok. The public reacted very positively, with both tourists and locals showing a keen interest.
Given the delicate state of the region, we are incredibly grateful to the bravery and diligence of these rebels in this difficult time.
Stay strong, XR Hong Kong. We are with you!
Is Nrias teb
OCT 13 | Mumbai and Visakhapatnam, India
Last Sunday, Mumbai saw its first outing of India’s Red Brigade sporting red sarees and salwar kameez.
Nyob rau ib hnub thaum protests were prohibited, the Indian Rebels found a creative way to make their demands visible and their voices heard, reminding people that ‘Temperatures are rising, our rivers are drying up and forests are being destroyed.
We face floods on one end and droughts on the other, while the rich continue to destroy nature to extract coal from our land.’
Meanwhile, rebels in Visakhapatnam in Andhra Pradesh led a silent march. Volunteers wore masks over their mouths and bore placards that highlighted the impending crisis and the threat to livelihoods and security from the effects of climate breakdown.
Australia – Nanna Knows Best!
15 OCT | Hobart/Nipaluna, Australia
Everybody knows you don’t mess with Nanna, especially when she’s knitting. However, that’s exactly what authorities chose to do when they arrested three amazing women in Hobart.
The Knitting Nannas blocked the entrance to Parliament House in a true demonstration of elder wisdom, something which seems dearly lacking within the government.
Cass, 63, said: ‘I am a retired mental health clinician. I have never been arrested. I have four grandchildren.
I have watched the destruction of our natural world by those who see nature as something to be assigned a dollar value instead of being valued as our life support system.
Petitions, emails, phone calls, volunteering for environmental groups – I’ve actively tried all those for many years. The time for real action is now. This is my stand for a better future.'
Nannas, we salute you!
Dublin challenged – walk now or swim later
OCT 12 | Dublin, Ireland
Ireland’s International Rebellion Week finished with some fun and poignant actions in Dublin. First, rebels had a blue kayak race down Westmoreland St (video ntawm no) and held a die-in on the main bridge in the city centre to highlight the threat from rising sea levels.
Later, children held posters stating who they wanted to become when they grew up … IF they are given the chance to grow up.
Earlier in the week, rebels took their protest mus rau hauv fast fashion store Penneys (Irish Primark) and appealed to shoppers to consider the impact of supporting the brand.
XR Ireland planned their closing celebration in the style of New Year’s Eve: a beginning rather than an end, with a samba band, a countdown, and the forming of a huge circle to share daily highlights.
Ronan, an arrested rebel, spoke about solidarity being impossible to imprison, and the courage that comes with it. He reminded rebels that nonviolence is not a passive avoidance of the use of force, but an active engagement in love and compassion.
In a regen workshop, rebels faced imagined descendents and had to answer difficult questions such as ‘What kind of ancestor do you want to be?’ A Lord Mayor came to the camp and, when challenged if he was ready to take unpopular decisions, replied, ‘That is why I am here’.
Ireland’s Rebellion Week might be over, but their Rebellion has only just begun.
London – Grandparents assemble!
15 TUG | London, UK
In true rebellious spirit, thousands claimed their right to protest on the streets defying the disproportionate ban. In their first coordinated action, XR Grandparents gathered en masse in front of Buckingham Palace.
Together with their children and grandchildren, they resisted this new wave of police intimidation in song, chanting ‘I would rather be a crusty than extinct’. Watch this inspirational personal account of why some grandparents and parents are risking their freedom for the future of their children.
Earlier at the Department for Transport, co-founder Gail Bradbrook practiced ‘the noble art of window smashing’, as first popularised by Emmeline Pankhurst, calling for a plan to transition the UK to a zero-carbon transport system.
While across town, rebels brought a last supper blocking the road in front of the MI5 building to mark food insecurity on a dying planet.
Cov neeg ntxeev siab thiab gathered in public defiance at Trafalgar Square, where their right to protest peacefully was supported by Sian Berry, co-leader of the Green Party, and several MEPs.
In the evening, they were joined by rebels from Millbank, who marched to Westminster thiab held vigils at Whitehall and Trafalgar Square, lighting a candle to mark this attack on their civil rights.
Is that Boris flouting the ban in a boat? Find out more in the London tsab ntawv xov xwm.
XR Unchained
Saib ntau qhov zoo nkauj thiab ua siab loj ua los ntawm International Rebellion hauv XR Unchained. There is so much to tell
XR Cov ntsiab lus
- An interesting article on how Extinction Rebellion is hloov existing politics
- A yees duab kev sib tham with two Dutch rebel brothers whose hammock strings were cut by a tourist as they hung under a canal bridge in Amsterdam
- Kev xam phaj nrog Jeremy Corbyn: ‘Extinction Rebellion are a wake-up call’
- Representatives from XR have been invited to the Welsh Government climate change conference hnub no
Tib neeg XR
‘I got involved in XR last year in October, when I set up the first strike in the UK for Fridays for Future. It was very small at the start, with just ten people. It has been really cool to watch it grow.
I have also teeb tsa XR Cov me nyuam, an independent group for 8-12 year olds, because I felt that there wasn’t the right space for me in XR and in this emergency we need a space for rebels of all ages to rebel.
We did our first action in the International Rebellion last week. We marched from Trafalgar Square to The Week Junior on Fleet Street, to demand they tell the truth and start reporting on the climate crisis. On the way we stopped and held a die-in, it drew a lot of attention.
I have chosen this spot for my portrait, to promote lub Truthteller.life platform that I have been involved with. It’s a website where you can tell us what you know about the emergency. I hope that it will help reveal the full truth.
To all kids (and parents out there) join XR Kids if you are between 8 and 12, you can find us on Instagram thiab Facebook. '
Peb tau txais cov dab neeg zoo kawg nkaus rau tib neeg thiab peb xav paub koj li. Nyeem ntxiv - lossis sau koj tus kheej - koom nrog peb Facebook pab pawg.
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Ua tsaug rau koj
Ua tsaug rau koj nyeem! Nyob twj ywm, ntxeev siab, koj lub zog muaj nuj nqis heev.
Yog tias koj muaj lus nug lossis lus nug, thov hu rau ntawm [email tiv thaiv].
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