SHARE
COPY LINK

PROTESTS

Berlin protestors throw cake and go topless at Volkswagen meeting

Activists hurled cake at Volkswagen bosses on Wednesday, as the German carmaker's annual shareholders' meeting was disrupted by protests over human rights and climate change.

Activist at Volkswagen meeting
An activist is escorted away as she demonstrates against Volkswagen's ongoing production of cars with combustion engines using fossil fuels during the annual general meeting. Photo: Tobias Schwarz / AFP

Outside the hall where the event was taking place in Berlin, climate protesters gathered to put pressure on Europe’s largest car manufacturer to reduce its carbon footprint.

“The science is clear: the emissions from Volkswagen’s planned car sales are beyond planetary limits,” was the message held up by activists from the group Scientist Rebellion.

Inside, the meeting itself was interrupted when cake was aimed at Wolfgang Porsche, who sits on Volkswagen’s supervisory board and celebrated his 80th birthday Wednesday.

A topless woman also interrupted the speech given by Volkswagen CEO Oliver Blume to criticise the group’s operations in the Chinese region of Xinjiang.

Activists accuse Volkswagen of turning a blind eye to human rights abuses in the region, where the group has a factory with Chinese partner company SAIC.

China’s Communist Party is accused of detaining over one million Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in the far-western region as part of a years-long crackdown, as well as running labour camps.

China vehemently denies the abuse allegations, while Volkswagen has also rejected suggestions forced labour is used in its factories.

READ ALSO: ‘Last resort’: Berlin activists go on hunger strike for climate

“A constructive dialogue is important. And a general meeting offers a good opportunity for this,” the company said in response to the protests.

Among shareholders, some lamented Volkswagen’s poor stock market performance despite record profit margins and the drop in sales in China, a key market for the group, where it is facing increasingly stiff competition from local car manufacturers.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

PROTESTS

IN PICTURES: Tens of thousands join election rally against German far right

Tens of thousands of demonstrators rallied in Germany on Saturday, urging citizens to vote against the far right in this weekend's European Union elections.

IN PICTURES: Tens of thousands join election rally against German far right

With placards reading “Stop hatred” and “Down with racism”, around 30,000 people joined a demonstration in central Berlin, according to Campact, one of the civil groups organising the rally.

Polls indicate the anti-immigration AfD party could win up to 15 percent of the vote in Germany on Sunday — potentially its best-ever performance — despite a string of scandals.

That would place it joint-second with Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democratic Party and behind the centre-right Christian Democrats.

Protesters take part in a demonstration to defend democracy against the far right on June 8, 2024 in Berlin. (Photo by CHRISTIAN MANG / AFP)

Some demonstrators in Berlin held up letters spelling out “Go vote” along with yellow stars like those of the EU flag.

“There is no better way to defend democracy than to go and vote tomorrow,” activist Tareq Alaows of the refugee rights group ProAsyl told the crowd.

Protesters hold a banner reading “Right extremists out of parliaments – vote for democracy” at the demonstration. (Photo by CHRISTIAN MANG / AFP)

Thousands of people joined similar rallies in Stuttgart, Leipzig, Dresden, Munich and Frankfurt.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: What’s at stake in the European parliamentary elections?

The AfD was expelled from a far-right group within the European Parliament after its top candidate Maximilian Krah made comments minimising the crimes of the Nazis’ SS guards.

Protesters hold posters reading “Germany is colourful” (L) and “Heart not rabble-rousing”. (Photo by CHRISTIAN MANG / AFP)

Among other scandals, Krah is also being investigated over his relations with China after one of his aides was arrested on suspicion of spying for Beijing.

READ ALSO: Germany’s far-right AfD denies plan to expel ‘non-assimilated foreigners’

At the start of the year, media reported that members of the party attended discussions of plans for mass expulsions of foreigners from Germany.

The report sparked weeks of mass protests.

At his final campaign rally for the election in the western city of Duisburg, Scholz urged people to vote on Sunday “to defend democracy and the rule of law”.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED – Could the far-right AfD ever take power in Germany?

SHOW COMMENTS