Climate change

93 Arrested After Protesters Deface Iconic ‘Charging Bull' Statue on Wall Street

Video from the scene showed the protest group staging a die-in around the bull, holding tombstones and "blood"-spattered fake money

What to Know

  • A group of climate change protesters doused Wall Street's iconic "Charging Bull" statue with a substance meant to look like blood on Monday
  • Their message: the financial community has "blood on its hands;" 26 people were arrested
  • Video from the scene showed the protest group staging a die-in around the bull, holding tombstones and "blood"-spattered fake money

A group of climate change protesters doused Wall Street's iconic "Charging Bull" statue with a substance meant to look like blood on Monday, saying the financial community has "blood on its hands."

Police arrested 93 protesters, with all of the arrested being processed. Police called the protest an "act of civil disobedience." The majority of the protesters will be charged with disorderly conduct, police said. One woman is being charged with reckless endangerment and a man is being charged with criminal tampering.

Professional cleaners were brought in to power-wash the bull and remove the mix of corn syrup and red dye. 

Video from the scene showed the protest group staging a die-in around the bull, holding tombstones and "blood"-spattered fake money.

One of the demonstrators from the group Extinction Rebellion mounted the iconic statue, waving the movement's flag. 

Worldwide, activists with the Extinction Rebellion movement blocked roads and staged demonstrations in big cities around the globe Monday, part of a wide-ranging series of protests demanding much more urgent action against climate change.

Demonstrators also stopped traffic in European cities including Berlin, London, Paris and Amsterdam. In some cities, activists chained themselves to vehicles or pitched tent camps and vowed not to budge.

"You might come from a variety of different groups, but we all stand against a system that's destroying the planet and mankind, and we're looking to change that because we can't just have little changes, we want a real big change," said Pierrick Jalby, a 28-year-old nurse from eastern France who joined the demonstration in Paris. "We don't want reforms, in fact, we want a revolution."

Members of Extinction Rebellion, a loose-knit movement also known as XR that started last year in Britain, have staged a series of flashy protests this year to demand action on manmade climate change, often featuring marchers in white masks and red costumes and copious amounts of fake blood.

In Berlin on Monday, around 1,000 people blocked the Grosser Stern, a traffic circle in the middle of the German capital's Tiergarten park dominated by the landmark Victory Column. That protest began before dawn. Another 300 people blocked Berlin's central Potsdamer Platz, placing couches, tables, chairs and flowerpots on the road.

Over the weekend, demonstrators had set up a tent camp outside German Chancellor Angela Merkel's office to prepare for the protests, reflecting dissatisfaction with a climate policy package drawn up last month by her government.

Merkel's chief of staff, Helge Braun, criticized the group's tactics.

"We all share an interest in climate protection, and the Paris climate targets are our standard in this," he told ZDF television. "If you demonstrate against or for that, that is OK. But if you announce dangerous interventions in road traffic or things like this, of course that is just not on."

He dismissed the idea of declaring a "climate emergency," saying that the German constitution doesn't provide for such a thing and it wouldn't translate into "concrete action."

Around 1,000 protesters blocked the area around Chatelet in central Paris and vowed to stay at least the night in the makeshift camp they had pitched. Some were seated, some chained to a barrel.

Demonstrators playing steel drums marched through central London as they kicked off two weeks of activities designed to disrupt the city.

London police said some 135 climate activists had been arrested. Extinction Rebellion said protesters were arrested as they blocked Victoria Embankment, outside the Ministry of Defense.

Among those arrested was 81-year-old Sarah Lasenby, a retired social worker from Oxford.

"It is imperative the government should take serious actions and put pressure on other states and global powers to radically reduce the use of fossil fuels," she said.

In Amsterdam, hundreds of demonstrators blocked a major road outside the Rijksmuseum, one of the city's most popular tourist attractions, and set up tents. The protest went ahead despite a city ban on activists gathering on the road. The protesters ignored police calls for them to move to a nearby square.

In Spain, a few dozen activists briefly chained themselves to each other and to an elevated road over a major artery in the Madrid, snarling traffic during the morning rush hour. The National Police said 33 activists were taken to their premises and three were arrested for resisting orders by anti-riot officers.

A few hundred other protesters camped out in 40 tents at the gates of Spain's Ministry of Ecological Transition.

Those at the Berlin protests included activist Carola Rackete, best known as the German captain of a humanitarian rescue ship who was arrested for docking in an Italian port without authorization this year to disembark migrants rescued at sea.

"We must stay here and rebel until the government proclaims an ecological emergency and acts accordingly," Rackete said.

Founded in Britain last year, Extinction Rebellion now has chapters in some 50 countries. The group said the protests Monday were taking place in 60 cities worldwide in countries including Turkey, Canada, South Africa, Mexico and elsewhere.

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