Berliner Boersenzeitung - Clashes as Greta Thunberg joins anti-coal activists to save German village

EUR -
AED 4.308126
AFN 74.482581
ALL 95.530224
AMD 434.876386
ANG 2.099301
AOA 1076.694304
ARS 1633.430504
AUD 1.628669
AWG 2.111165
AZN 1.965707
BAM 1.958337
BBD 2.362793
BDT 143.940617
BGN 1.956466
BHD 0.442905
BIF 3489.287302
BMD 1.17287
BND 1.49646
BOB 8.10609
BRL 5.83057
BSD 1.173135
BTN 111.283999
BWP 15.942812
BYN 3.310457
BYR 22988.245756
BZD 2.359378
CAD 1.592399
CDF 2721.057967
CHF 0.916621
CLF 0.026849
CLP 1056.720618
CNY 8.00853
CNH 8.013747
COP 4288.985037
CRC 533.345622
CUC 1.17287
CUP 31.081047
CVE 110.837016
CZK 24.383316
DJF 208.442259
DKK 7.472605
DOP 69.676157
DZD 155.310268
EGP 62.836842
ERN 17.593045
ETB 184.081928
FJD 2.571051
FKP 0.869443
GBP 0.862147
GEL 3.14914
GGP 0.869443
GHS 13.130323
GIP 0.869443
GMD 86.20339
GNF 10294.873151
GTQ 8.962491
GYD 245.425783
HKD 9.186982
HNL 31.221701
HRK 7.53311
HTG 153.674839
HUF 364.350205
IDR 20313.047299
ILS 3.462863
IMP 0.869443
INR 111.140369
IQD 1536.459283
IRR 1542323.631439
ISK 143.813067
JEP 0.869443
JMD 183.818172
JOD 0.831541
JPY 184.336996
KES 151.505454
KGS 102.532852
KHR 4706.13801
KMF 492.605147
KPW 1055.407589
KRW 1728.844869
KWD 0.360412
KYD 0.977638
KZT 543.376594
LAK 25761.90553
LBP 105109.106795
LKR 374.93256
LRD 215.264518
LSL 19.54009
LTL 3.463179
LVL 0.709457
LYD 7.453576
MAD 10.830302
MDL 20.212654
MGA 4879.137814
MKD 61.615302
MMK 2462.653947
MNT 4196.644722
MOP 9.466051
MRU 46.903081
MUR 55.171957
MVR 18.12671
MWK 2042.55632
MXN 20.479888
MYR 4.656723
MZN 74.952213
NAD 19.539534
NGN 1612.112655
NIO 43.068095
NOK 10.867939
NPR 178.045837
NZD 1.986249
OMR 0.450968
PAB 1.173105
PEN 4.114133
PGK 5.090212
PHP 71.923874
PKR 326.919943
PLN 4.256725
PYG 7215.055949
QAR 4.29048
RON 5.200857
RSD 117.377298
RUB 87.922577
RWF 1715.04647
SAR 4.398531
SBD 9.439939
SCR 17.153207
SDG 704.307623
SEK 10.838119
SGD 1.493315
SHP 0.875666
SLE 28.857779
SLL 24594.486288
SOS 670.414381
SRD 43.933321
STD 24276.034391
STN 24.534194
SVC 10.265307
SYP 129.771086
SZL 19.671417
THB 38.141749
TJS 11.003655
TMT 4.110908
TND 3.424137
TOP 2.823989
TRY 52.948383
TTD 7.963065
TWD 37.043902
TZS 3055.325613
UAH 51.546843
UGX 4411.148016
USD 1.17287
UYU 46.785207
UZS 14001.13781
VES 569.531156
VND 30912.153323
VUV 138.99247
WST 3.181044
XAF 656.855688
XAG 0.015748
XAU 0.000253
XCD 3.169739
XCG 2.114274
XDR 0.818332
XOF 656.224101
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.876052
ZAR 19.559772
ZMK 10557.235521
ZMW 21.907974
ZWL 377.663559
  • RBGPF

    -1.1500

    62.6

    -1.84%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.82

    0%

  • BTI

    1.3500

    58.8

    +2.3%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    23.13

    +0.3%

  • RYCEF

    0.9000

    15.8

    +5.7%

  • GSK

    0.9100

    52.31

    +1.74%

  • BCE

    0.5200

    23.78

    +2.19%

  • VOD

    0.4600

    15.8

    +2.91%

  • RIO

    3.9900

    100.48

    +3.97%

  • RELX

    0.7900

    36.59

    +2.16%

  • JRI

    0.2500

    12.99

    +1.92%

  • BCC

    0.2700

    79.27

    +0.34%

  • NGG

    3.5600

    89.54

    +3.98%

  • AZN

    2.1700

    187.37

    +1.16%

  • BP

    0.5800

    47.38

    +1.22%

Clashes as Greta Thunberg joins anti-coal activists to save German village
Clashes as Greta Thunberg joins anti-coal activists to save German village / Photo: INA FASSBENDER - AFP

Clashes as Greta Thunberg joins anti-coal activists to save German village

Climate activist Greta Thunberg condemned moves to demolish a German village to make way for a coal mine expansion as police clashed with demonstrators at the site on Saturday.

Text size:

Crowds of activists marched on the hamlet of Luetzerath in western Germany, waving banners, chanting and accompanied by a brass band.

On the sidelines, there were tense standoffs and scuffles in the pouring rain, between some protesters and police.

Luetzerath -- deserted for some time by its original inhabitants -- is being razed to make way for the extension of the adjacent open-cast coal mine, one of the largest in Europe, operated by energy firm RWE.

Thunberg marched at the front of a procession of demonstrators who converged on the village, showing support for activists occupying it in protest.

"That the German government is making deals and compromises with fossil fuel companies such as RWE, is shameful," she said from a podium.

"Germany, as one of the biggest polluters in the world, has an enormous responsibility," she added.

AFP saw some protesters clash with police trying to move the march away from Luetzerath, which has been fenced off.

Local media reported stones being thrown at police and one protester was seen with a head injury, as ambulance sirens sounded near the protest site.

Police said activists had smashed protective barriers near the huge coal mine and entered the mine site.

"The police barriers have been broken," the police tweeted. "To the people in front of Luetzerath: get out of this area immediately."

"Some people have entered the mine. Move away from the danger zone immediately!"

- Final stages of evacuation -

In an operation launched earlier this week, hundreds of police have been removing activists from the hamlet.

In just a few days, a large part of the protesters' camp has been cleared by police, and its occupants evacuated.

German press, quoting the police, reported that around 470 activists had been removed from the village since the beginning of the evacuation.

But between 20 and 40 were still holed up in the contested village late Friday, a spokeswoman for the protest movement said. Officials said they were entering the final stages of evacuating the activists.

Demolition works were progressing slowly on those buildings that had been emptied, while surrounding trees had been felled as part of the clearance.

The village has become a symbol of resistance to fossil fuels.

- Energy crisis -

Police reinforcements have come from across the country to participate in the forced evacuation.

Meanwhile AFP saw protesters arriving in buses, holding banners with slogans including "Stop coal" and "Luetzerath lives!"

Organisers said 35,000 people attended the demonstration.

In the village, many of the activists have built structures high up in the trees, while others have climbed to the top of abandoned buildings and barns.

Activists said they had also dug a tunnel under the hamlet in a bid to complicate the evacuation effort.

The movement has been supported by protest actions across Germany. On Friday, masked activists set fire to bins and painted slogans on the offices of the Greens in Berlin.

The party -- part of Germany's ruling coalition with Chancellor Olaf Scholz's Social Democrats and the liberal FDP -- has come under heavy criticism from activists who accuse it of betrayal.

Following the energy crisis set off by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the government has brought old coal power plants back online.

Officials also signed a compromise deal with RWE that made way for the demolition of Luetzerath but spared five nearby villages.

German Chancellor Olaf Sholz on Saturday inaugurated a Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) terminal at the northern port of Lubmin, on the Baltic coast.

The plant is another part of the German plan to compensate for the loss of Russian gas imports.

(H.Schneide--BBZ)