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France's Hollande slams 'scandalous' Paris climate protest clashes
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Nov 29, 2015


Human chains and Hollywood heavyweights at global climate protests
London (AFP) Nov 29, 2015 - More than half a million people around the world took part in climate change marches over the weekend, a co-organiser said on Sunday, as protesters urged politicians to take action.

From Sydney to Stockholm and Cairo to Cape Town, an estimated 570,000 took to the streets in 2,300 separate events across 175 countries, a new record for a set of global marches, co-organiser Avaaz said.

"This is the problem of our generation and the next," said Katia Herault, a climate protester in London who had only a Nemo costume protecting her from pouring rain and howling winds.

The 37-year-old Frenchwoman was one of around 50,000 marchers at London's Hyde Park on Sunday calling for action on the eve of the United Nations climate summit in Paris.

Many were dressed in animal costumes -- from bumblebees to cows, from polar bears to exotic fish -- while others brandished placards reading: "There is no planet B", "Our Children Need a Future" and "We Want 100 percent Clean Energy" in scenes replicated across the world.

At the London event, Oscar-winners and multi-million selling musicians rubbed shoulders with protesters from the Pacific islands to Scandinavia.

"This is very personal to me. This is to do with my land. This is to do with our people," said 37-year-old Mikaele Maiava from the Tokelau islands, a territory of New Zealand threatened by rising waters.

Fashion designer Vivienne Westwood was also on the march from Hyde Park to the British parliament as leaders from 150 countries prepare to meet in Paris to hammer out a plan to cut emissions.

Actress Emma Thompson, who has campaigned against oil drilling in the Arctic, said she had seen the effects of climate change during a visit there last year.

"It helped me understand in a much more visceral, real way what was happening to the planet," the actress told AFP.

"So I'm here today to really get behind the climate summit in Paris which is actually a really historical event.

Rocker Peter Gabriel, founder of the band Genesis, said climate change was "a serious threat" and said any pact negotiated in Paris should have a "real means of enforcing the talk, which I'm sure will be in abundance."

"Politicians want to get re-elected. If there's enough of us, and this is happening all over the world, then they will respond," he said.

- Human chains -

The people-powered protests kicked off with marches across Australia, with 45,000 gathering in Sydney.

"There's nothing more important that I can be doing at the moment than addressing climate change," said Kate Charlesworth, a doctor and Sydney mother.

In Copenhagen, some 5,000 people marched to parliament.

Four of the protestors were dressed as polar bears to promote a sculpture they will bring to Paris during the climate summit, depicting a dead polar bear covered in oil.

In Stockholm, around 4,000 people marched under grey skies, while in the Finnish capital Helsinki organisers reported a turnout of between 1,500 and 2,000 people.

Further south in Spain, some 20,000 marched in the Spanish capital, the biggest climate march in Madrid's history, Greenpeace said.

Activists formed human chains in Paris and Brussels, the latter made up of around 4,000 people.

"I hope that this chain shakes all the politicians in Europe and the rest of the world to forge a deep and sincere deal," said protester Stephane Eelens.

In Berlin, around 15,000 marched from the central train station to the Brandenburg Gate, where a stage had been set up decorated with a globe clouded in black smoke.

Around 1,000 people joined a march in Athens from the Acropolis to the parliament, carrying banners reading "Solarise Greece" or "Go renewable".

French President Francois Hollande on Sunday condemned the "scandalous" behaviour of far-left activists who clashed with riot police in an area dedicated for memorials to the Paris attacks ahead of key UN climate talks.

Around 100 people were arrested after a small group of protesters at the central Place de la Republique square pelted officers with bottles as well as candles that had been left in tribute to the victims of the November 13 attacks.

"These disruptive elements have nothing to do with defenders of the environment," Hollande said at an EU-Turkey summit in Brussels.

"They are not there so that the (COP21) talks succeed but are there solely to create incidents," he said.

"It is doubly regrettable, even scandalous that this happened at the Place de la Republique where flowers and candles have been left in memory of those who were killed by the terrorists' bullets" in the November 13 Paris attacks, he said.

He said it was also regrettable "in relation to the climate conference which will allow the world to decide the future of the planet."

Around 4,500 activists had earlier linked hands in the French capital in a peaceful protest pleading for leaders to curb global warming.

France has banned all demonstrations, including those for the climate talks, in the wake of the November 13 atrocities which left 130 people dead.

Massive rallies for the climate, but violence in Paris
Paris (AFP) Nov 29, 2015 - Hundreds of thousands of people rallied around the world Sunday on the eve of a Paris summit aimed at averting catastrophic climate change, but violent clashes in the French capital soured the show of people power.

The global protests, including an emotional linking of hands near the heart of this month's terror attacks in Paris, were aimed at building grassroots pressure for an historic deal at the UN talks to limit global warming.

As US President Brack Obama and other world leaders began flying into Paris for Monday's official opening, negotiators vowed at a preliminary session to honour the victims of the attacks by forging an ambitious deal.

"The best way to honour the memory of those who have fallen, those who are victims of barbaric attacks, is to carry out what we have committed to," the co-chair of the talks, Ahmed Djoghlaf, told participants at a vast conference centre in Le Bourget, on the northern outskirts of Paris.

Deep emotions and tensions from the November 13 attacks, in which Islamist militants killed 130 people in a series of gun and suicide bomb assaults, were evident across the City of Lights on Sunday.

French authorities cancelled two climate demonstrations because of security fears.

- 'Hear our voices' -

But in a show of defiance against the militants and determination to have their voices heard on climate change, thousands of people in Paris gathered to hold hands and link up in a two-kilometre (1.2-mile) human chain.

"Hear our voices! We are here!" they chanted.

Protesters left a 100-metre (300-foot) gap in the human chain outside the Bataclan concert hall, the site where gunmen killed 90 people, as a mark of respect to the victims.

Instead of marching, activists placed thousands of pairs of shoes -- weighing more than four tonnes according to organisers -- on Place de la Republique square.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon left a pair of running shoes, and Pope Francis sent shoes to be placed on his behalf.

But a band of anti-capitalist militants infiltrated the protests, leading to clashes with riot police in the late afternoon and the detention of more than 200 people.

Police fired teargas at protesters, who pelted them with bottles and candles in Place de la Republique and chanted: "State of emergency, police state", referring to the post-attack protest restrictions.

- 'Scandalous' behaviour -

French President Francois Hollande condemned the "scandalous" behaviour of the far-left activists.

"These disruptive elements have nothing to do with defenders of the environment," Hollande said at an EU-Turkey summit in Brussels.

Before flying out to Paris, Obama said world leaders would show their resolve to stand up to terrorism.

"It's an opportunity to stand in solidarity with our oldest ally, just two weeks removed from the barbaric attacks there, and reaffirm our commitment to protect our people and our way of life from terrorist threats," Obama said in a Facebook post before leaving Washington on Air Force One.

About 150 leaders, including China's Xi Jinping, India's Narendra Modi and Russia's Vladimir Putin, will attend the start of the UN conference that is tasked with reaching the first truly universal climate pact.

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said nearly 1,000 people thought to pose security risks had been denied entry into France, which reimposed border controls on November 13 to protect the summit.

About 2,800 police and soldiers will secure the site of the November 30-December 11 conference, and 6,300 others will deploy in Paris.

- Dangerous warming -

The UN's weather body said this month the average global temperature for 2015 is set to rise one degree Celsius above pre-industrial levels, halfway towards the targeted UN ceiling.

Voluntary carbon-curbing pledges submitted by nations to bolster the Paris pact, even if fully adhered to, put Earth on track for warming of 2.7-3.5 degrees C, according to UN climate chief Christiana Figueres.

If concrete action is not taken soon, scientists warn of superstorms, drought and rising sea levels that will displace millions.

But this week's talks are set to see decades-long disputes between rich and poor nations flare again and potentially prevent an agreement.

Potential stumbling blocks range from finance for climate vulnerable and poor countries to scrutiny of commitments to curb greenhouse gases and even the legal status of the accord.

The last attempt to forge a global deal -- the ill-tempered 2009 Copenhagen summit -- foundered upon such divisions between rich and poor countries.

To pressure world leaders into putting aside their differences and forge an agreement, more than half a million people participated in global climate protests over the weekend, co-organiser Avaaz said.

"The charge from the streets for leaders to act on climate has been deafening, with record numbers turning out across the world," said Avaaz campaign director Emma Ruby-Sachs.


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