Dublin branch of Extinction Rebellion to launch tomorrow

April 3rd, 2019

Environmental activists will
formally set-up a Dublin branch of Extinction Rebellion at an event in the
capital tomorrow evening.

The Extinction
Rebellion Dublin group will meet at Third Space Cafe in
Smithfield tomorrow evening
 to
cement the group’s status as one of many branches of the movement popping up
across Ireland.

The movement that
formed in England late last year calls on citizens to use peaceful civil
disobedience as a way to rebel against the climate inaction of its Government.

The Dublin
affinity group is demanding that the Irish Government
declare a climate emergency, inform the Irish public about the scale of the
ecological crisis, and enact legally binding policy measures to reduce emissions
to net zero within the next few decades.

To date, Ireland
remains well off track to meet its 2020 and 2030 climate targets. The 2019
Climate Change Performance Index released in December also singled out Ireland
as the worst performing country in Europe for addressing climate change for the
second consecutive year.

Dr Ciarán Ó’Carroll of Extinction Rebellion Ireland told The Green News that Extinction Rebellion Dublin will protest the Government’s inaction on climate change starting with an international week of action during the week of 15 April.

“Our first action will
be to take part in International Rebellion week where activists across the
globe will blockade the streets of capital cities until governments start taking
climate catastrophe seriously,” he added.

Irish Extinction
Rebellion activists marked World Wildlife Day last month with a mock Funeral for Humanity in the centre of Dublin to highlight the planet’s extinction
crisis.

Roughly one-third of
Ireland’s 98 wild bee species are threatened with extinction, and recent
findings show that over 60 percent of the 202 species of commonly occurring
birds in Ireland is now on the red and amber conservation lists.

Additionally, over 90
per cent of 58 listed habitats in Ireland have been labelled as having an “inadequate” or “bad” status, while just over half of the 61 European protected species
in Ireland have a “favourable” conservation status.

The Extinction
Rebellion movement began with 10 people in the UK last summer and rose to prominence in November 2018 when thousands of activists blocked London bridges,
disrupted traffic, and glued themselves to public buildings.

Most recently, semi-naked Extinction Rebellion protesters interrupted a Brexit debate in the House of Commons and glued their hands to the public gallery glass.

About the Author

Kayle Crosson

Kayle is a multimedia journalist focused on climate and environmental issues and contributes to The Irish Times and The Green News.

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