OAN’s Elizabeth Volberding
11:45 AM – Wednesday, October 11, 2023
A Swedish court has charged climate activist Greta Thunberg again for violating police orders during an environmental protest in July in southern Sweden. This marks the second occurrence that she has been convicted and fined for the same crime.
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On Wednesday, the Malmo District Court in Sweden mandated Thunberg, 20, to pay a $206 (about 2,250 kroner) fine for disobeying police mandates during an environmental protest that occurred in July.
During the protest, Thunberg and several other activists blocked entry into an oil terminal in Malmo. This consisted of the activists sitting in front of the facility and refusing the leave when asked to by police officers.
Therefore, she was fined with “disobedience to law enforcement” on September 15th for declining to follow police orders after they requested for her to leave the scene. Then, she was dragged away by two police officers after the event.
Thunberg has denied that she is guilty for her actions. However, she has confessed to the facts of the situation, explaining that the battle against the fossil fuel business was a form of “self-defense” because of the global danger of the climate crisis.
According to the statement Thunberg made on the verdict, she proclaims, “We have the science on our side and we have morality on our side. Nothing in the world can change that and so it is. I am ready to act based on the conditions that exist and whether it leads to more sentences.”
The climate activist had been fined previously for a similar offense that took place on June 24th, 2023 during an environmental protest at the same oil terminal in Malmo. During this demonstration, she and several other activists momentarily restricted access to the oil terminal facility by sitting down in front and were physically removed by police.
From her first offense that occurred in June, Thunberg was required to pay $230 (about 2,500 kroner), fined by the same court in Malmo.
On Thursday, Thunberg and several other environmental activists, including Indigenous Sami, are planning to take part in another protest in Norway.
At this upcoming demonstration, the activists are planning to participate by protesting a wind farm of 151 turbines and command to have it removed because they believe it harms the reindeer herders’ “way of life”.
According to the activists, an adjustment to producing green energy should not come at the expense of the Indigenous peoples’ rights.
Norway’s Supreme Court ruled that the construction of the wind turbines had disobeyed the rights of the Sami, who have controlled the land and utilized it for reindeer for many years. However, the Norwegian government is not planning to relocate or get rid of the wind farm.
The 20-year-old climate activist is known for encouraging global movements for the youth by wanting more useful and beneficial efforts to battle climate change after holding weekly protests outside the Swedish Parliament that started in 2018.
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