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Climate activists escape punishment over London train protest

by Sonia Elks | @SoniaElks | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Thursday, 19 December 2019 14:22 GMT

Police detain climate change activist Cathy Eastburn during an Extinction Rebellion protest at Canary Wharf DLR station in London, Britain April 17, 2019. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls

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Three Extinction Rebellion climate activists argued that the protest was 'necessary' to drive action on climate change during their trial at Inner London Crown Court this week

By Sonia Elks

LONDON, Dec 19 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Three Extinction Rebellion climate activists who disrupted commuters by glueing themselves to a train or climbing on its roof in a central London business hub were told they will face no punishment over the protest at a court hearing on Thursday.

Cathy Eastburn, 52, Mark Ovland, 36, and Luke Watson, 30, were convicted "with regret" by a jury but were handed conditional discharges, meaning they will face no further action as long as they commit no other offences for a year.

"I don't regret what I did at all," Eastburn told the Thomson Reuters Foundation after the sentencing hearing.

"I'm not the sort of person who goes around climbing on top of trains and disrupting people. We did it for a very, very good reason - to sound the alarm."

Extinction Rebellion launched in London in 2018 using non-violent civil disobedience to highlight the risks posed by climate change, inspiring a wave of action globally with protests leading to thousands of arrests.

Eastburn, Ovland and Watson were charged with criminal disruption of the Docklands Light Railway train in Canary Wharf in east London on April 17, one of a number of protests targeting the city's financial districts.

The trio had argued that the protest was "necessary" to drive action on climate change during their trial at Inner London Crown Court this week.

They were found guilty Wednesday after Judge Silas Reid ruled the activists could not use the "law of necessity" as a defence and the jury could not consider their intentions when reaching a verdict.

At the sentencing hearing, the trio were ordered to pay a total of £1,766 ($2,300) in court costs.

An Extinction Rebellion spokeswoman said the trial was the first where arrested activists were heard by a jury.

The protest group has called for governments to set a 2025 deadline to reduce climate-changing emissions to net zero, to declare climate emergencies and to set up citizen assemblies to give people a greater voice in political decision-making.

More than 1,800 Extinction Rebellion activists were arrested during two weeks of street protests in October in London, police said, after 1,100 were arrested in similar April protests.

Eastburn said she did not think mass arrests of the movement's protesters and trials over their disruptive actions would deter people from taking part in future protests.

"I don't think it should put anyone off - and I don't think it will," she said.

"This is about life and death and the future of our children, so people will do what they need to do."

(Reporting by Sonia Elks @soniaelks; Editing by Laurie Goering. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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