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Thursday, December 17, 2009

VIDEO RELEASED OF COPENHAGEN DELEGATES AGRESSIVELY INTIMIDATED BY DANISH POLICE, Dec. 16, 2009

CLIMATE JUSTICE ACTION, PRESS RELEASE, 17th December 2009
Contact international media: +45 50669028; Contact danish media: +45 41294994
media@climate-justice-action.org

VIDEO RELEASED OF COPENHAGEN DELEGATES AGRESSIVELY INTIMIDATED  BY POLICE


Video came to light today of COP15 delegates being aggresively intimidated by police. (1) http://bit.ly/6DOBHe

Many delegates who marched out of the UN talks during Wednesday's protests were intimidated and threatened with arrest by Danish police, preventing them from joining a People's Assembly outside the conference.

Danish police were filmed as they surrounded and attacked official delegates who were attempting to join activists and other accredited delgates to form a Peoples' Assembly calling for climate justice.

Kevin Smith from Carbon Trade Watch, who was hit by the police on the bridge, said: "We were trying to reach the point where the Peoples' Assembly was being held in order to have a discussion about the need for real alternatives to the false solutions being promoted inside the climate talks. It's hugely shaming for both the UN and the Danish government that they are willing to use batons, pepper spray, police dogs and tear gas to try and stop these critical discussions from taking place."

Camila Moreno, a representative from Brazil for the Global Justice Ecology Project: "It was a trap. They knew it, they never had any intention of allowing us to get to our friends on the other side of the bridge. It was a combination of the Danish police and the UN."

Eriel Tchekwie Deranger from the Indigenous Environmental Network said: "They didn't want information from those on the inside being conveyed to those on the outside, especially by strong voices from the global South."

Dorothy Guerrero, Focus On The Global South representative from the Philippines, said: "The restriction on our movement hindered the Peoples' Assembly, which was an alternative space from the official agenda. For many of us from the South we are used to seeing that in our own countries, but for a country that has a reputation like Denmark it is quite shocking. The fact that they are shutting people out is in many ways like shutting out the majority voice."

ENDS

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