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Australia PM vows to outlaw 'apocalyptic' climate activism
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) Nov 1, 2019

Jane Fonda under arrest again, in US climate protest
Washington (AFP) Nov 2, 2019 - Hollywood legend and activist Jane Fonda was arrested Friday in Washington protesting politicians' failure to address climate change.

"This time, I may be detained overnight and that's fine for one night, big deal!" Fonda joked to reporters, noting that this was not her first arrest as police put plastic wire around her wrists.

Along with several dozen activists including actresses Rosanna Arquette and Catherine Keener, Fonda sat chanting on the floor of a Senate building where no demonstrations are allowed.

A pacifist and feminist activist since the 1970s, Fonda, who still works full-time at almost 82, said she was drawn to the movement by Swedish teenager and climate advocate Greta Thunberg.

"There are many ways to fight. But I'm inspired by Greta Thunberg and the young student strikers all over the world," she said.

"I'm a celebrity. So this is a way to use my celebrity to get the message out that we face a crisis that could determine whether or not our children and grandchildren have a future that's even habitable."

It is urgent to act, argued Fonda who went to Vietnam in 1972 to demonstrate against the war, a controversial move that earned him the nickname "Hanoi Jane."

"We have 11 years to turn it around; we will have to be very brave and very united and very determined," she said.

Fonda, who wore an eye-catching bright red coat, was referring to scientific reports indicating that sharp decreases in carbon emissions are necessary before 2030 if the world hopes to prevent catastrophic global warming.

- With Diane Lane and Mark Ruffalo -

Nowadays, Fonda says she supports the "Green New Deal," an ambitious proposal offered by progressive Democrats that would dramatically shift the United States away from fossil fuels toward renewable energy.

Republicans -- including President Donald Trump -- slam the initiative, which they call too radical.

"You can call it radical. But I think that what's radical is not doing anything," she quipped, noting that she has not endorsed any 2020 presidential hopeful.

To those who call her a socialist, Fonda deftly suggests that "the fact that taxpayers pay $16 billion a year to subsidize the fossil fuel industry, that's socialism."

Fonda was to spend the night in jail and appear in DC Superior Court on Saturday, charged with crowding, obstruction or incommoding, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

But the actress has promised to return next Friday with the founders of the ice cream brand Ben & Jerry's plus actors Diane Lane and Mark Ruffalo.

She says she is ready to be arrested "again and again" at least until mid-January, because after that, she is due in Hollywood to work on the next season of her award-winning Netflix series "Grace and Frankie."

Australia's pro-coal government threatened harsh new penalties against "apocalyptic" activism Friday as a global wave of climate protests has become increasingly disruptive for the country's lucrative mining industry.

Prime minister Scott Morrison told a peak mining body that his conservative government was seeking ways to legislate against activists engaged in "secondary boycotts", or pressuring firms not to deal with the resources industry.

"We are working to identify serious mechanisms that can successfully outlaw these indulgent and selfish practices that threaten the livelihoods of fellow Australians," Morrison said at an event in the mineral-rich state of Queensland.

"The right to protest does not mean there is an unlimited licence to disrupt people's lives and disrespect your fellow Australians."

Morrison has been ratcheting up the rhetoric since his surprise election victory early this year when a political gamble ahead of the vote to green-light a huge new coal mine in Queensland is considered to have paid off.

The controversial Adani mine has long been a lightning rod for climate activism in Australia, with environmentalists calling out businesses that engage with the firm.

Morrison labelled groups that call for such boycotts as an "insidious threat" to the economy that his government would not allow to "go unchecked".

"There are new threats to the future of the resources sector that have emerged," he said.

"A new breed of radical activism is the on the march. Apocalyptic in tone. Brooks no compromise. All or nothing. Alternative views -- not permitted," said the PM who once brandished a lump of coal in parliament in support of the industry.

Morrison's government has steadfastly rejected calls for greater action to curb greenhouse gas emissions, insisting Australia will meet the targets set out in global agreements without undermining its crucial mining sector.

Last month he snubbed a UN climate summit in New York after it emerged he would not be invited to speak for lack of new climate announcements.

"Australia won't write a blank cheque with its economy" to fight climate change "which requires action from around the globe," he said Friday.

Morrison was responding to escalating protests by climate activists, thousands of whom rallied across the country in October in as part of the global "Extinction Rebellion" movement.

- Clashes over climate -

Climate demonstrations turned violent this week when dozens of protestors were arrested in clashes with police outside an international mining conference in Melbourne.

Morrison has also targeted animal welfare activists labelled "vegan protestors" with the tough new laws targeting those found trespassing on farms introduced in September.

His hard-line Home Affairs minister, Peter Dutton, also threatened new actions to crack down on climate protestors who he said Friday were "completely against our way of life."

"For many of them they don't even believe in democracy," he said, suggesting demonstrators should be forced to pay for police deployments used to counter their protests.

The Human Rights Law Centre on Friday defended the legitimacy of boycott campaigns, and said Morrison's announcement was "deeply concerning".

"To protect our democracy and help ensure a better future for all Australians, governments should be strengthening our rights to come together and protest, not weakening them." the rights group's executive director Hugh de Kretser said in a statement.

ddc/dm/je

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Protected habitat across the globe serves as a refuge for many plants and animals, but new research suggests these safe havens could suffer a decline in biodiversity as a result of climate change. Scientists at the University of Bayreuth use ten different climate models to predict the effects of climate change on the planet's 245,844 protected areas currently registered. Detailed climate forecasts allowed researchers to make especially accurate predictions for biodiversity inside 137,432 terres ... read more

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