Extinction Rebellion stage major sit-down protest in central London

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Extinction Rebellion Stage Major Sit-Down Protest In Central London
Extinction Rebellion protests, © PA Wire/PA Images
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By Helen William and Sophie Wingate, PA

Extinction Rebellion climate activists have staged a sit-down protest in Oxford Street and Regent Street, blocking traffic in the heart of London’s shopping district to call for no new investment in fossil fuels.

Hundreds of demonstrators gathered at Speakers’ Corner at Hyde Park on Saturday morning before marching into the centre of the city’s West End.

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The crowd sat down across Oxford Circus and the famous high streets it connects, chanting “save our planet” and “whose streets, our streets”.

Extinction Rebellion protests
Activists from Extinction Rebellion demonstrate on Oxford Street in central London (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

They carried banners that read “I am here for nature and children”, “navel gazing into disaster” and “life on earth is dying”. Some were seen eating their lunch while they sat in sunny weather.

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Mechanical engineer Verel Rodrigues, 27, of Bristol, told the PA news agency: “We are currently in a dire situation and we are appealing to the government to stop investing in fossil fuels.

“We have no choice. We are sorry to be causing this inconvenience but we don’t have any other choice.

“If an alarm is ringing because your house is on fire, you don’t get p***ed off at the fire alarm. It is trying to save you and we are trying to raise the alarm of what is about to come.”

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The London Metropolitan Police said protesters were disrupting traffic on Oxford Street and Regent Street.

The force tweeted: “A number of protesters in Oxford St. & Regent St. are sitting in the road, blocking traffic in both directions. Traffic diversions are being put in place.”

A member of the public who wanted only to be named as Steve C, 50, of Ealing, west London, said Extinction Rebellion’s tactics have been “obsessive”.

“The tactics have given the Conservative party an excuse to reduce and remove all of our rights to protest.

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“They have daily, repeatedly, blocked roads, whether it is small or large numbers. They have stopped people from taking their kids to school, they have stopped people from getting to work and to hospital appointments. It is just unacceptable”.

Mr C added said the protesters, whom he called the “most un-diverse crowd you have ever seen in London”, consisted of “white middle-class, do-gooding liberals (who) do not represent London town”.

Extinction Rebellion protests
Hundreds of protesters marched from Hyde Park into the city’s famous shopping district to demand an end to fossil fuel investment (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

Protester Sunita Ramani, 23, of Bristol, who works in environmental communications, said the action was justified.

“It’s absolutely not our intention to annoy people and disrupt their lives but looking throughout history civil disobedience has proven to be the most successful way that people are able to make movements like this successful,” she told PA.

“We are doing this on behalf of everyone who deserves to have a liveable, justice-filled future.”

After starting the sit-in just after 2pm, the demonstrators were on the move again around 45 minutes later, heading into the city centre.

Extinction Rebellion billed the protest as part of “the final push in the plan to end fossil fuels”.

The group have said similar action to block “areas of the city for as long as possible” is planned every day for a week or more.

They have pledged that “our disruption will not stop until the fossil fuel economy comes to an end, ” according to the Extinction Rebellion website.

On Friday, two protesters from the climate movement shut down Tower Bridge by abseiling off the sides of the London landmark and unfurling a huge banner that read: “End fossil fuels now.”

The bridge, a main traffic artery across the Thames, was closed to vehicles, causing long queues.

London mayor Sadiq Khan said the protest was “counterproductive” adding that demonstrators needed to win over public opinion at the same time as putting pressure on the government.

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