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      How Swiss women won a landmark climate case for Europe - podcast

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 4 days ago - 02:00


    Last week a group of older women successfully challenged the Swiss government’s climate policies at the European court of human rights. Isabella Kaminski reports

    “It took me a while until the penny dropped that we’d actually won.”

    Elisabeth Stern , 76, is a climate activist with the KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz (Senior Women for Climate Protection Switzerland), a campaign group of 2,400 older Swiss women.

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      They’re fighting polluters destroying historically Black towns – starting with their own

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 5 days ago - 11:00

    When Joy and Jo Banner founded the Descendants Project in 2020, they didn’t expect to be defending their hometown first

    When twin sisters Joy and Jo Banner founded their non-profit, the Descendants Project, in 2020, their goal was to protect the Black-founded “freetowns” in Louisiana’s river parishes. Like the Banners’ hometown of Wallace, many of the Black communities that abut the lower Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans were founded after emancipation by people who’d once been enslaved.

    Today, decades of disinvestment have left freetowns vulnerable to predatory development, land theft and industrialization. The Banners hoped to reverse those trends. Yet within weeks of creating their organization, their purpose shifted dramatically. Instead of supporting other Black communities, the twins found themselves fighting for their own hometown’s survival. Wallace, population 1,240, was facing an existential threat in the form of the proposed construction of a gargantuan grain-export terminal, the latest in an onslaught of industrial growth along the lower Mississippi River. The terminal would “drain us of all of our resources and all of our quality of life”, Joy said. “The overall goal is to run all of us out.”

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      Jail for holding a placard? Protest over the climate crisis is being brutally suppressed | Natasha Walter

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 6 days ago - 16:00 · 1 minute

    The legal repression of activism has been fast and frightening, yet it won’t make protesters disappear and only sows division

    Years ago, when Dr Sarah Benn recognised the scale of the climate crisis, she made sure that she was doing all the right things. She recycled, she went vegan, she stopped flying, she voted Green, she signed petitions. It was because she didn’t see real change happening, despite doing all those things, that she then went further. She glued her hand to a building. She sat down in front of an oil terminal. And she stood on a grass verge with a handwritten sign, saying, “Stop New Oil”.

    Benn’s story will be pretty familiar to anyone with a passing interest in the current wave of climate protest. This wave grew out of deep frustration with existing avenues for change. And it did feel, for a time, as if these protests might be a catalyst for the wider shift that so many people recognised was urgently needed. The marches and sit-downs sparked so much sympathy and curiosity, even with politicians from Michael Gove to Dawn Butler . I remember walking along a street on an Extinction Rebellion march in 2019 and people were cheering from their windows. A big part of all the early protests was outreach, with protesters talking to people on the streets, in communities and workplaces, and finding eager responses.

    Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 250 words to be considered for publication, email it to us at observer.letters@observer.co.uk

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      Greta Thunberg detained at The Hague climate demonstration

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Saturday, 6 April - 14:20


    Climate activist detained after Extinction Rebellion protesters tried to block road near Dutch parliament

    Greta Thunberg was detained by police at a demonstration in The Hague, in the Netherlands.

    The climate activist was put in a bus by local police along with other protesters who tried to block a major highway into the city.

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      Emma Thompson and Greta Thunberg among critics of Shell’s Greenpeace case

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April - 10:20


    More than 30 public figures sign letter condemning $1m legal action

    More than 30 public figures including Emma Thompson, Imelda Staunton and Greta Thunberg have written to Shell criticising its “callous and vindictive” lawsuit against Greenpeace after activists occupied a moving oil platform last year.

    In one of the biggest legal threats inthe environmental charity’s 50-year history Shell is suing it for $1m (£790,000) in damages, with costs that could run into the millions.

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      On the trail of a killer: Eleven years after Berta Cáceres’ murder is there new hope for justice?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April - 06:00

    The Honduran Indigenous and environmental leader was shot in 2016 for her opposition to an internationally financed dam, but despite violence and threats, the net is closing on the murder’s alleged mastermind

    • Photographs by Fritz Pinnow

    Almost exactly 11 years ago Berta Cáceres led a group of local activists to block a road, halting trucks carrying building materials for the Agua Zarca hydroelectric dam in Río Blanco. It marked the start of a fierce fightback by the Indigenous Lenca people against the energy company Desarrollos Energéticos (Desa) in Honduras.

    More than a decade later, only rusty razor wire and rotting fences remain on the former construction site. A shipping container that served as Desa’s central office is now used by farmers to store corn. After international funding was pulled, the company was forced to halt operations indefinitely in 2018.

    A shipping container that was once an office and rusting razor wire on the former dam construction site

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      The silencing of climate protesters in English and Welsh courts - podcast

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 21 March - 03:00

    The court of appeal ruled on Monday that the ‘consent’ defence could not be used in the cases of climate activists. Sandra Laville reports

    Over the last year, many climate protesters facing trial for criminal damage have used the “consent” defence, arguing that if the property owner had known more about the climate emergency, they would have agreed with the activists’ actions.

    On Monday, in a case brought by the attorney general, Victoria Prentis, the court of appeal ruled that such a defence could not be used in future cases.

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      ‘Water is worth more than gold’: eco-activist Esteban Polanco on why violence won’t stop him

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 19 March - 12:00

    Brutally attacked for his work as one of the Dominican Republic’s leading land defenders, Polanco says the next generation must fight environmental destruction

    While making his way from his home in Loma de Blanco, a mountain in the middle of the Dominican Republic, to the nearby town of Bonao, Esteban Polanco was attacked by a group of about 10 men. They threw a molotov cocktail at the car in which he was travelling with two of his children, before running off. The family survived, but Polanco suffered terrible burns.

    “I was close to death, and it took a year to recover,” he says of the 2007 attack. Some, but not all, of the perpetrators were later imprisoned.

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