Multiple demonstrations are due to take place across the country this weekend as environmental campaign group Extinction Rebellion gears up for a new “uprising”.
Various stunts including a “funeral march” in Lewes, East Sussex, and a fancy dress tea party at Gatwick Airport are scheduled.
Extinction Rebellion says the activities over the August bank holiday weekend are a precursor to larger protests taking place from Tuesday.
The group is targeting other UK airports in an attempt to avoid the aviation industry’s return to “business as usual” which it says is one of the biggest contributors to the climate crisis.
Members of the UK parliament return on 1 September 2020, we will be there to meet them.
The Climate & Ecological Emergency Bill must pass.#WeWantToLive#ExtinctionRebellion pic.twitter.com/OomBJI9GH5
— Extinction Rebellion London ? (@XRLondon) August 14, 2020
Groups are set to gather near Stansted, Luton and Leeds Bradford airports in protest against planned expansions.
A march named “Procession for the Planet” is due to take place in Lewes, featuring black-clad mourners and a jazz band “to mark the death and destruction wrought by humans on our natural world”.
Activists in Brighton are planning an “epic voyage of rebellion” in which they will march from the seafront to London with a “Lightship” named after climate activist Greta Thunberg.
@LightshipGreta has her very own twitter account ?. Go give her a follow for all the latest updates on the Moving Rebellion – an epic voyage from Brighton to London, leaving #Brighton on the 30th of August: https://t.co/f4D2cceag8#ExtinctionRebellion pic.twitter.com/sJIRDchMXO
— Extinction Rebellion Brighton (⧖) (@XRBrighton) August 28, 2020
In London parents have been invited to take their children for a “Feed and Play-in” outside the Bank of England to protest against fossil fuel bailouts, and similar demonstrations are due to take place in Oxford, Cardiff, Leicester and York.
Extinction Rebellion was responsible for two weeks of protests last summer, which saw a shutdown of much of central London.