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Trial starts for climate protesters who painted Senate red

Trial starts for climate protesters who painted Senate red

Support from PD, Italian Left and Green politicians for UG trio

ROME, 12 May 2023, 17:09

Redazione ANSA

ANSACheck

- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

-     ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

The trial of three climate protestors who sprayed easy-to-wash-off red paint over the front of the Senate on January 2 began in Rome on Friday.
    The three young people, Laura Paracini, David Nensi and Alessandro Sulis, are charged with aggravated criminal damage and could be jailed if they are found guilty.
    The action was part of a series of acts of civil disobedience staged by the Ultima Generazione (UG - Last Generation) group to highlight the need to address the climate crisis.
    "The idea of going to prison does not scare us," said Paracini.
    "What terrorizes us is the climate crisis.
    "We are worried about our future.
    "I am scared of a future without water, without food. The climate crisis is also a social crisis.
    "With our actions we want the climate crisis to be on the news every day because it's the biggest news story and not many people realise.
    "To those who say our methods are wrong, I say, are there any better ones? "What have they brought to the environmental movement so far? "We stand by our methods, which polarize public opinion.
    "We don't want to be liked, we want change".
    There was a big show of support for the three outside the court.
    Marta Bonafoni of the centre-left Democratic Party, Italian Left (SI) Senator Ilaria Cucchi and leader Nicola Fratoianni, Green MP Angelo Bonelli and former minister Alfonso Pecoraro Scanio took part in a rally of solidarity.
    Greenpeace was also there, along with representatives of Amnesty International, who displayed banners reading "Peaceful Civil Disobedience is not a Crime".
    On Friday the court admitted the Senate, the culture ministry and the city of Rome as civil plaintiffs in the criminal trial against the three climate protestors.
    UG said a high-profile Italian scientist, the geologist Mario Tozzi, has been admitted as a witness for the defence.
    The judge adjourned proceedings against until October 18.
    The case is set to be one of many as the group have been especially active recently, with the " We Won't Pay for Fossil Fuels" campaign to stop public investment in, and subsidies of, fossil fuels, the biggest source of the greenhouse emissions causing the climate crisis.
    Other UG protests have included splashing paint at the La Scala opera house and the Vittorio Emanuele II statue in Milan, sticking themselves to Botticelli's Spring at the Uffizi and the Laocoon statue in the Vatican, blocking the Mt Blanc Tunnel, throwing flour over an Andy Warhol car in Milan, stripping off half naked and halting traffic, throwing soup onto a Van Gogh and pouring diluted vegetable charcoal into the Four Rivers in Piazza Navona in Rome.
    In the light of such acts, the government has approved a crackdown on art 'eco-vandals', with fines of up to 60,000 euros.
    UG is part of the A22 network of climate civil-disobedience groups in several countries, including Just Stop Oil in the UK, Stop Old Growth in Canada, France's Derniere Renovation and Declare Emergency in the United States
   

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