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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Extinction Rebellion attempt Zurich blockade
by AFP Staff Writers
Zurich (AFP) Oct 4, 2021

More than 200 Extinction Rebellion activists, some dressed as clowns, attempted to blockade central Zurich on Monday in a bid to force the Swiss government to heed the environmental movement's climate demands.

XR urged its activists to return every day at noon to block traffic at three key strategic points in Switzerland's financial capital, including a bridge and the crossroads of the city's main shopping street.

Students and senior citizens were among those who descended on Zurich from across the wealthy Alpine nation, unfurling banners and stretching out large sheets of blue plastic symbolising the oceans suffocating with rubbish.

Others installed a ship daubed with climate crisis slogans, "because we are all in the same boat", one activist said.

"We have children and are worried about their future," said Genevieve, a teacher from Neuchatel who came with her physicist husband.

"We are a little afraid of being arrested because this is the first time we have taken part in civil disobedience."

A retired humanitarian, who did not wish to give her name, said that the prospect of being arrested "does not scare me", adding that "everything else, at the political level, did not work".

In June, XR petitioned the Swiss government asking it to "officially" recognise the climate emergency and mandate a citizens' assembly on "climate and ecological justice", warning that its activists were otherwise prepared to engage in civil disobedience.

After an hour, the police ordered activists to retreat to designated areas to clear the way for trams on Zurich's main shopping street.

A police statement later said 134 people were booked then released.


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CLIMATE SCIENCE
'Lot of work' before climate summit, host Britain admits
Milan (AFP) Oct 2, 2021
Nations have "a lot of work to do" in the weeks left before the COP26 climate summit, host Britain said Saturday as calls for greater ambition and more cash to fight warming grew. The Glasgow summit, which opens on October 31 and which was delayed a year by the pandemic, is being billed by observers as crucial for the continued viability of the Paris climate deal. The 2015 accord committed nations to limit global warming to "well below" 2 Degrees Celsius through sweeping emissions cuts and to gu ... read more

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