'Greta Thunberg is no longer a climate activist - Israel-hater is
the main job': Fury over eco-protester's Palestine stance, as Fridays
for Future movement distances itself from her
Greta Thunberg has come under fire for her pro-Palestine stance in Germany
Daily Mail
Nov 13, 2023
Greta Thunberg, wearing a Palestinian keffiyeh worn by Hamas terrorists, accused 'the people
in power of not listening' to the 'voices of those who are being
oppressed' in the Gaza Strip during her speech in front of tens of
thousands
Greta Thunberg has
come under fire for her pro-Palestine stance by Jewish groups, as the
German branch of climate movement Fridays for Future also distanced
itself from her.
Ms Thunberg, wearing a
Palestinian black and white scarf, had urged 'ceasefire now' at a
climate protest in Amsterdam on Sunday before a man grabbed her
microphone and said: 'I've come for a climate demonstration, not a
political view.'
The 20-year-old
eco-protester had accused 'the people in power of not listening' to the
'voices of those who are being oppressed' in the Gaza Strip during her speech in front of tens of thousands of climate demonstrators.
Her outburst marked 'the end of Greta
Thunberg as a climate activist,' said Volker Becker, the president of
the German-Israel Society DIG, adding that 'from now: Israel hater is the main job' for the Swedish activist.
The Israeli embassy in Germany also wrote on X that it was 'sad that Greta Thunberg is again misusing the climate stage for her own purposes'.
Thunberg, wearing a keffiyeh worn by Hamas terrorists, had urged 'ceasefire now' at a climate protest in
Amsterdam before a man grabbed her microphone and said, 'I've come for a
climate demonstration, not a political view'
After being interrupted, Ms Thunberg resumed her speech, noting that 'the people
in power have not been listening'
Ricarda Lang, co-leader of the Greens,
which is a junior partner of Chancellor Olaf Scholz's coalition, also
said Ms Thunberg had 'discredited herself as the face of the climate
movement'.
'Greta Thunberg misused the
absolutely necessary and correct concern on climate protection for a
one-sided position on the Israel-Palestinian conflict, in which she does
not name the perpetrators, in which she does not condemn the absolute
atrocities by Hamas,' said Lang.
'She has in fact discredited herself as the face of the climate movement through these statements,' added Lang.
Ms Thunberg's 'one-sided' view of the Israel-Hamas war, which saw 1,400 Israelis slaughtered by Hamas
terrorists on October 7, has also seen the German chapter of the
Fridays for Future movement distancing itself from the activist.
Luisa
Neubauer, its chapter head, said Ms Thunberg was 'extraordinarily
reflective and far-sighted' in the past but that the German branch will
now have to examine 'with whom we still have a basis to work based on
common values'.
'It is obvious that
for many global organisations, global realities diverge when it comes to
Israel and Palestine. But that does not justify anti-Semitism or
disinformation,' warned Ms Neubauer.
Ms Neubauer had told Die Zeit weekly of her regret over what she called Ms Thunberg's one-sided view of the conflict.
'I'm
disappointed that Greta Thunberg had nothing concrete to say about the
Jewish victims of the massacre of October 7,' she said.
On
Sunday, Ms Thunberg was talking to a crowd of tens of thousands in
Amsterdam when she invited a Palestinian and an Afghan woman onto the
stage.
'As a climate justice movement,
we have to listen to the voices of those who are being oppressed and
those who are fighting for freedom and for justice. Otherwise, there can
be no climate justice without international solidarity,' she said.
After
the Palestinian and the Afghan woman, Sahar Shirzad, spoke and Ms
Thunberg resumed her speech, noting that 'the people in power have not
been listening,' a man came on to the stage and interrupted her,
grabbing the microphone.
'I have come here for a climate demonstration, not a political view,' he said, before he was ushered off as crowd members booed.
Greta Thunberg addressed tens of thousands of people who gathered in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, on November 12
An aerial view of the 'March for
Climate and Justice' led by climate activist Greta Thunberg in
Amsterdam, the Netherlands, on November 12
Ms Thunberg takes part during a march for climate and justice in Amsterdam on November 12
Ms
Thunberg then grabbed the mic back and repeated: 'Calm down.' After a
brief pause, she started chanting: 'No climate justice on occupied
land.'
The man's identity was not
clear. He was wearing a jacket with the name of a group called Water
Natuurlijk, that has elected members in Dutch water boards.
Before
Ms Thunberg took to the stage, the event was briefly interrupted as a
small group of activists at the front of the crowd waved Palestinian
flags and chanted pro-Palestinian slogans.
Since
October 7, when Hamas fighters stormed Israel's borders, killing around
1,400 mostly civilians, the wider movement Fridays for Future
International has been putting up solidarity calls on social media with
Gaza, which has come under relentless Israeli bombing over the Hamas
attack.
The international group
blasted the 'genocide' in Gaza where more than 11,000 people have been
killed according to the Hamas-run Health Ministry, and slammed 'Western
support and misinformation machines'.
The
incident on Sunday came after tens of thousands of people marched
through the streets of Amsterdam calling for more action to tackle climate change in a mass protest just 10 days before a national election.
Organisers claimed 70,000 people took part in the march and called it the biggest climate protest in the Netherlands.
Tens of thousands of participants at the 'March for Climate and Justice' in Amsterdam on November 12
Demonstrators marched for climate
and justice from Dam Square to Museumplein, led by Ms Thunberg, in the
Netherlands over the weekend
Tens of thousands of eco demonstrators took to the streets of Amsterdam on November 12
Carrying
placards reading: 'Our house is on fire', 'In 2050: Daddy, what are
trees?', and 'Climate Justice Now,' demonstrators packed into
Amsterdam's central square and set off through the streets.
Ms Thunberg was among those walking through the heart of the Dutch capital.
Political leaders – such as former European Union
climate chief Frans Timmermans, who now leads a centre-Left, two-party
bloc in the election campaign – later addressed the crowd in a square
behind the landmark Rijksmuseum.
'We
live in a time of crises, all of which are the result of the political
choices that have been made. It has to be done and it can be done
differently,' the organiser, the Climate Crisis Coalition, said in a
statement.
While the coalition included
the Fridays for Future youth movement, protesters were all ages and
included a large contingent of medics in white coats carrying a banner
emblazoned with the text: 'Climate crisis = health crisis'.
'I
am a paediatrician. I'm here standing up for the rights of children,'
said Laura Sonneveld. 'Children are the first to be affected by climate
change.'
Tackling climate change is one of the key policy areas for political parties contesting the November 22 general election.
'It
is time for us to protest about government decisions,' said Margje
Weijs, a Spanish teacher and youth coach. 'I hope this influences the
election.'
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