Thunberg criticizes the Greens – thousands at the demonstration for Lützerath

Evacuation of Lützerath

The demonstration against the eviction of the hamlet of Lützerath for lignite mining has begun.

(Photo: dpa)

erkelenz Greta Thunberg has criticized Germany’s Greens for supporting the demolition of Lützerath and digging up the coal lying beneath the village. Corporations like RWE should actually be held accountable for how they treat people. “The fact that the Greens make compromises with such companies shows where their priorities lie,” said the Swedish climate activist on Saturday in an interview with the German Press Agency in Erkelenz. She herself was never associated with a green party.

A rally under the motto “Prevent eviction! For climate justice”. The police spoke of several thousand participants – despite the pouring rain. Aachen police chief Dirk Weinspach said the demonstration would become a challenge for the emergency services. The organizers initially gave no information on the number of participants on Saturday afternoon.

He warned against attempts to break into Lützerath, which has since been cordoned off, or the Garzweiler II opencast mine. There have always been calls on social networks, he said. “We will prevent that with all the means at our disposal. I can only hope it doesn’t come to that, otherwise we’re going to have very ugly pictures.”

Greta Thunberg in Lützerath

The climate activists Greta Thunberg and Luisa Neubauer in Lützerath.

(Photo: Getty Images)

In the meantime, the evacuation continued in the Erkelenz district of Lützerath itself. Emergency services climbed trees on which activists persevered, as a dpa reporter reported. According to the energy company RWE, preparations were also underway to get two activists out of a tunnel. “The forces are very careful, no heavy equipment can be used here because that would endanger people in the underground soil structures,” said police chief Weinspach.

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The police initially gave no information on the number of remaining activists. “We’re almost through above ground,” a spokesman said in the morning. There are about 15 “structures” remaining, including tree houses and shacks. The demolition of the already cleared buildings continued on Saturday. According to a dpa reporter, this included the former home of farmer Eckardt Heukamp. He had been the last farmer in Lützerath.

Greta Thunberg said she knew Lützerath from a previous visit, but it was completely different then. “It’s a completely different place now.” Regarding the crater landscape of the immediately adjacent Rhenish lignite mining area, she said: “It really does look like Mordor. It shows what people are capable of under the wrong conditions. It shows what we are fighting against, what we are trying to prevent.” In JRR Tolkien’s novel The Lord of the Rings, Mordor is the evil realm.

Garzweiler opencast mine

Thunberg describes the progressive mining of the Garzweiler opencast mine as Mordor.

(Photo: IMAGO/Marc John)

Thunberg had already visited Lützerath on Friday and denounced “police violence”. Aachen police chief Dirk Weinspach had vehemently rejected the criticism. On the contrary, the police acted with extreme caution, he said. When asked if she maintained her criticism of the police, Thunberg told dpa: “Police violence means different things in different countries. But there have been several instances where police have endangered the lives of activists.”

The Green Youth also criticized the actions of the police. “The reports we are getting from the village cannot be justified,” said the state spokeswoman for the Green Youth of North Rhine-Westphalia, Nicola Dichant. “Images of police operations that endanger activists massively, paramedics who are thrown out of the village by the police, and the press who are not allowed to observe. That is the opposite of a de-escalative operation.”

The police have been clearing Lützerath, which is occupied by climate activists, since Wednesday to give RWE the opportunity to demolish it and excavate the coal underneath. Leading Green politicians such as Federal Minister of Economics Robert Habeck and his NRW colleague Mona Neubaur are behind this decision. They say the coal is needed to maintain energy security. The demolition of Lützerath is part of a compromise that, on the other hand, provides for an eight-year earlier phase-out of coal.

More: Resistance in Lützerath – why this entrepreneur became an activist

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