Paris
climate activists put under house arrest using emergency laws
French
police arrest activists for flouting ban on organising protests
during climate talks next week
27
November, 2015
At
least 24 climate activists have been put under house arrest by French
police, accused of flouting a ban on organising protests during next
week’s Paris climate summit, the Guardian has learned.
One
legal adviser to the activists said many officers raided his Paris
apartment and occupied three floors and a staircase in his block.
French
authorities did not respond to requests for comment but lawyers said
that the warrants were issued under state of emergency laws, imposed
after the terror attacks that killed 130 people earlier this month.
The
author and climate change campaigner, Naomi Klein, accused French
authorities of “a gross abuse of power that risks turning the
summit into a farce”.
“Climate
summits are not photo opportunities to boost the popularity of
politicians,” she told the Guardian. “Given the stakes of the
climate crisis, they are by their nature highly contested. That is
democracy, messy as it may be. The French government, under cover of
anti-terrorism laws, seems to be trying to avoid this, shamefully
banning peaceful demonstrations and using emergency powers to
pre-emptively detain key activists.”
Since
Thursday, three people have been placed under house arrest in Rens,
two in Paris, two in Rouen and one in Lyons, according to
campaigners. They may now only leave their houses to sign a post
office register verifying their whereabouts, three times a day.
Joel
Domenjoud, a legal activist, said that he had been served with a
restraining order wrongly describing him as a “principal leader of
the ultra-left movement” just hours after a judge refused to hear
an appeal against the ban on the climate demo that he had petitioned
for.
“I
wasn’t there when they came to my house but my neighbour called me
to say ‘What’s wrong? The stairs are full of cops from the first
to the third floor!’” he said.
Domenjoud
says he was then followed by several undercover officers, before
returning home, where he was served with the restraining notice.
“I
feel angry about it because I think they made a big mistake,”
Domenjoud added. “They weren’t looking for people like us
activists – or if they were, it shows that they can target people
for no reason at all and our civil liberties are in danger.”
Several
sources said that officers also raided three squats in Paris – and
more across the country – seizing computers, documents and personal
effects.
Thousands
of climate campaigners, including high-profile Indian activist
Vandana Shiva, have vowed to defy the blanket ban on demonstrations.
One protest on Sunday will be protected by a ‘human chain’, while
a day of civil disobedience will take place when the summit ends on
12 December, dubbed as ‘red lines’ day.
Numbers
are expected to be smaller than previously hoped, but artists have
been working around the clock on creations such as a series of
‘inflatable cobble stones’, alluding to a famous slogan from the
May 1968 protests: Beneath the cobble stones the beach.
Some
protesters argue that the permission granted to football matches,
trade fairs and Christmas markets in Paris over the summit period
suggests that the authorities’ real concern is to suppress dissent.
“We
are trying to find grey areas in the law,” said John Jordan, a
prominent activist. “At the moment, a demonstration is legally
defined as more than two people who share a political message. We are
trying to find creative ways around these laws.”
During
recent protests by Quebec students, participant numbers were kept to
below 50 on each march, to avoid a prohibition order.
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