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PROTESTS

IN PICTURES: Thousands stage climate protests across Germany

Tens of thousands of people rallied in cities across Germany on Friday at climate protests urging Chancellor Olaf Scholz's government to do more for environmental protection.

The Fridays for Future movement and other activists march in Berlin on September 15, 2023.
The Fridays for Future movement and other activists march in Berlin on September 15, 2023. (Photo by Odd ANDERSEN / AFP)

Bearing posters with slogans like “System change — not climate change” or “I’d be in school if the planet was cool”, around 12,000 people marched in Berlin alone in a demonstration organised by the Fridays for Future movement.

Huge crowds reaching 10,000 also turned up in major cities including Hamburg and Munich.

A Greenpeace activist protests with a banner reading “Gas destroys” near a detail of a depiction of the “See no evil” Wise Monkey, representing the German SPD party chancellor, at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin on September 15, 2023. (Photo by Odd ANDERSEN / AFP)
 

Once a regular event for students holding “school strikes”, the Friday rallies have become less frequent in Germany lately, with some climate activists turning instead to more radical modes of protests, such as holding sit-ins at busy road junctions or on highways.

Activists in Berlin hold a banner calling for an end to fossil fuels. (Photo by Odd ANDERSEN / AFP)

Paul Guenther, 19, said he had turned up at the Berlin rally to condemn “the dishonesty of our chancellor with regard to the climate crisis”.

“A council of experts had calculated that the government’s targets are too weak and even then, they can’t even meet them with what they’re doing,” the geography university student said.

German climate activist Luisa Neubauer speaks on stage during the protest at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin on September 15, 2023. (Photo by Odd ANDERSEN / AFP)

READ ALSO: Germany starts building 700 km wind energy power line

Retiree Birgit Martens, 65, also noted that the government “is not doing enough to meet its own climate targets”.

“Our planet is under threat and the government is not taking enough action against the current climate crisis,” said Josephine Paeder, 38, who works in the public transport sector.

The Fridays for Future movement and other activists march with banners inspired by the Barbie hype reading “Your climate protection law is not kenough!”, “Kenergy instead of LNG!”, “This Barbie wants a strengthened climate protection law”, on September 15, 2023 in Berlin (Photo by Odd ANDERSEN / AFP)

Germany has set a goal of becoming climate neutral by 2045, with emissions to be slashed by 65 percent compared to 1990 levels by 2030.

Member comments

  1. Bullshit. The only ones impacted by these useless protests are us, the average Joe who can’t run errands freely because of the jobless people blocking public streets. I can’t imagine a parallel universe where Wolksvagen looks at those protests and does something about it. The solution lies somewhere else.

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FLOODS

Floods easing in Germany’s Saarland but situation remains serious

Enormous amounts of rain in Saarland and neighbouring Rhineland-Palatinate on Friday and Saturday night caused flooding and landslides, but water levels were slowly retreating on Sunday making the extent of the damage more visible.

Floods easing in Germany's Saarland but situation remains serious

“The flood situation is continuing to ease,” the Saarland Ministry of the Interior said in a post on Facebook on Saturday night, adding that there were still a few focal points where emergency forces were still working. 

“It is simply too early for both clean-up work and assessments of the damage,” a spokeswoman for the Trier-Saarburg district told German news agency DPA. Drones have now been requested to get an overview of the extent of the damage from above.

The Saarland state capital Saarbrücken, the disaster control authority, has lifted the emergency situation put in place in response to the severe floods. Urgent rescue and safety measures have been completed and the water levels have continued to decline, the city’s press office said on Saturday evening.

But the damage caused by the rain and subsequent flooding was extensive.

In the state capital Saarbrücken, the city motorway was under water and had to be closed, a coal-fired power plant in Saarland was also flooded, and several people across the state had to be evacuated. In Rußhütte, a district of Saarbrücken, evacuees were brought to safety by amphibious vehicles and boats. 

READ ALSO: Germany cleans up after massive flooding in state of Saarland

There was also flooding in neighbouring Rhineland-Palatinate – cellars and streets both there and in Saarland were flooded and many smaller streams and rivers burst their banks.

Rail traffic also came to a temporary standstill, but resumed on Saturday and most of the closed roads have also reopened.

Despite the enormous volumes of water – the weather service measured more than 100 litres of rain per square meter in less than 24 hours in some places – there were no deaths and very few injuries.

“There are currently reports of one injured person,” said the spokesman. They had an accident during a rescue operation and had to be resuscitated. “The person is being treated in hospital; reports on their status are currently unknown.”

On Saturday, Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Saarland Minister-President Anke Rehlinger visited the area. Wearing Wellington boots, the two SPD politicians spoke to those affected, including in the village of Kleinblittersdorf.

Interior Minister Nancy Faeser (SPD) meanwhile promised help: “The government is supporting Saarland in particular with strong forces to protect human lives after the severe floods and limit the destruction caused by the water as far as possible,” she said.

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