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Climate activists go on trial for disrupting British Grand Prix by AFP Staff Writers London (AFP) Jan 25, 2023 Climate activists from the Just Stop Oil group went on trial on Wednesday for sitting on the track during the British Grand last year. Six activists are facing a jury trial on criminal charges of conspiring with others to cause a public nuisance and causing a public nuisance after they invaded the Silverstone circuit in July last year. All of the defendants have pleaded not guilty. They held the protest on the track in Northamptonshire, central England, when the race had been suspended because of a serious accident. Most of the cars had already passed when they staged the sit-in but two vehicles with Japan's Yuki Tsunoda and France's Esteban Ocon at the wheel drove past during the protest, the prosecution told the court. The jury was shown footage of five protesters briefly sitting on the track before marshals dragged them away as two cars hurtled past. The sixth activist was found in a car park with cable tie, glue and a Just Stop Oil banner and is accused of being involved in the protest. Lawyer Simon Jones said the protesters' actions caused "an immediate risk of serious harm", both to themselves, the marshals and the drivers. "Plainly they could have been struck by fast-moving vehicles with obvious severe consequences," he added. "We say that their actions also caused risk to the drivers themselves and the marshals," he added, saying the protesters "deliberately chose to create and caused" risk to themselves, the drivers and marshals. Just Stop Oil wants a halt to all new fossil fuel projects and has staged eye-catching direct action protests to raise awareness, blocking highways and throwing tomato soup over Vincent Van Gogh's "Sunflowers" painting.
UK Olympic gold medallist cleared over London climate protest The protest was one of a string of protests that included highly disruptive blockades of UK transport networks. Former Team GB athlete Stott, 43, and the other activists were acquitted after a judge ruled the part of the tanker they glued themselves to was not a motor vehicle. The group had targeted a tanker belonging to Anglo-Dutch energy giant Shell as it left a petrol station in west London in April 2022, later having to be removed by police "de-bonding" experts. They were each found not guilty of one count of tampering with a motor vehicle at trial in London. Judge John Zani ruled the defendants had not bonded themselves to the vehicle itself but the trailer attached to it. "On the basis of that there is no case to answer here in relation to any of the defendants and the cases against each of the five are dismissed," Zani said in court. The court heard earlier that canoe slalom champion Stott and another activist climbed on top of the empty tanker as the driver attempted to drive it out of a petrol station. The pair glued their hands to a bar on top of the tanker but were eventually bought down by police with a specialist crane and a special frame, and were then dragged away by officers. "I am aware that my actions will cause anger to many people and I am prepared to be held accountable," Stott said at the time. "But our government should also be held to account for its decisions which are destroying our planet's ability to support human civilisation." Extinction Rebellion is a loosely linked network that originated in the UK in 2018. It has pushed businesses and the government to take action on the climate crisis with eye-catching but non-violent acts of civil disobedience that have led to mass arrests -- as well as some public anger -- over the disruption caused to the lives of ordinary citizens. Activists gained notoriety for blockading train lines, airports and roads, causing chaos for commuters. Earlier this month, the network announced a temporary halt to public disruption in the UK as they seek broader support. Stott won gold at the London 2012 Olympic Games in the Canoe Double Men's Slalom
Climate: Temperate Europe sees southern climes in 2022 Paris (AFP) Jan 25, 2023 Several western European cities were hit last year by high temperatures normally recorded in regions hundreds of kilometres south, a climate monitor found Wednesday. Last summer was the hottest on record in Europe, which was blanketed by heatwaves and droughts fuelling deadly wildfires on the continent. Cities in Portugal, Spain, France and Italy that are normally spared scorching heat were about 1.4 degrees Celsius warmer than their summer temperatures averaged across the period 1990 to 2020, ... read more
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