‘It’s the protests which are giving me hope’:
activists descend on Glasgow
Campaigners from around the world are uniting to
disrupt the Cop26 conference and put pressure on political leaders
Matthew
Taylor
Sat 30 Oct
2021 16.39 EDT
Thousands
of protesters from around the world arrived in Glasgow on Saturday to demand
urgent action on the escalating ecological emergency before the two-week Cop26
climate conference.
Campaigners
from scores of environmental justice, indigenous and civil society groups are
converging on Scotland’s biggest city to forge alliances and pressure political
leaders.
Among the
activists to arrive in Glasgow on Saturday evening was Greta Thunberg who was
mobbed by supporters at Glasgow Central train station. Climate protesters held
a demonstration at the station ahead of her arrival and the teenage activist
was greeted by large crowds of supporters.
Protests –
from marches to strikes, and occupations to roadblocks – are being planned and
activists say their campaigns of peaceful civil disobedience will be crucial to
the outcome of the talks. “It is the protests which give me hope,” said Cat
Scothorne, 18, an activist with Glasgow Calls Out Polluters.
“It is a
chance to foreground the voices of those people on the frontline of the climate
crisis and push back against the influence and ‘green washing’ of corporations
at this Cop – a chance to tell people what is really happening, especially in
the global south.”
Campaigners
from Europe, Africa and Asia joined UK activists on Saturdayon the streets as
protests and civil society events got under way. On the banks of the Clyde,
overlooking the Cop26 conference centre, activists from Ocean Rebellion dressed
as mermaids to highlight the huge impact industrial fishing has on greenhouse
emissions.
Delegates
from the Minga Indigena collective, representing indigenous communities in
North and South America, were welcomed to the city by Scotland’s first minister
Nicola Sturgeon. They mixed water from Scotland and the Andes before calling
for climate justice to be a “unifying demand of Cop26”.
In central
Glasgow, activists who had walked to Cop26 from across the UK and Europe
arrived in the city demanding justice for those on the frontline of the climate
crisis.
Alex
Cochrane, from Extinction Rebellion Glasgow, which helped organise the
“pilgrims’ procession”, said it was time for governments to “walk the walk for
the global south”.
Cochrane
added: “Cop26 must end a growing crime against humanity by wealthy governments
where the global south are sacrificed to bear the brunt of the global north’s
affluent, carbon-intensive lifestyles.”
Protester
numbers were due to grow on Saturday eveningwith the arrival of a “climate
train” carrying hundreds of activists from across Europe at Glasgow Central
station.
Federico
Pastoris, a climate justice activist and campaigner with the Stop Cambo group,
which is campaigning to prevent drilling in the Cambo oilfield in the North
Sea, said the next two weeks were as much about building links between
environment campaigners in Europe and frontline communities in the global south
as they were about influencing what goes on inside the conference centre.
“It is
summed up by the idea of climate justice… there is a realisation that the Cop
process is ineffective so we need to build grassroots collaborations and
solidarity to find new ways of addressing this crisis. That is why people have
made such an effort to get here.”
Over the
next fortnight, campaigners are planning a series of protests and civil
disobedience actions. On Friday Thunberg is planning to join a school strike in
Glasgow, and on Saturday a global day of action will see large-scale marches in
both Glasgow and London, with campaigners promising spin-off civil disobedience
protests. Activists say there will also be smaller, more disruptive actions
throughout the two weeks of the conference.
Many
campaigners and civil society groups from the global south have had severe
difficulty getting to Glasgow because of problems with visas and the changing
Covid-19 travel restrictions.
However, by
Saturday some had made it. Patience Nabukalu, 24, had travelled from Uganda as
part of the Mapa – “most affected people and areas” – organisation,
representing communities disproportionately affected by climate change.
“This is an
opportunity for people like us, who live in areas that are really facing the
climate effects right now, to raise our voices,” she said.
Nabukalu,
who was speaking from a coach that was expected to arrive in Glasgow on
Saturday evening, said she had grown up facing ever-more-regular and extreme
flooding, which had had dire consequences for her family and the wider
community.
She added:
“The only thing I want to hear [from world leaders] are climate solutions and
climate action. I am tired of promises and pledges because promises keep
getting made but nothing actually happens and we are running out of time.”
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