- Sputnik International
World
Get the latest news from around the world, live coverage, off-beat stories, features and analysis.

Extinction Rebellion Activists Cover Trafalgar Square in Red Dye in Protest for Indigenous People

© AP Photo / Dominic LipinskiRed dye covers the steps outside the National Gallery of art as Extinction Rebellion protesters symbolically play dead, in a solidarity action for indigenous communities in Brazil
Red dye covers the steps outside the National Gallery of art as Extinction Rebellion protesters symbolically play dead, in a solidarity action for indigenous communities in Brazil - Sputnik International
Subscribe
Brazil has been the second worst hit country in the world by coronavirus, with over 3 million people testing positive for the virus and on Saturday the country’s death toll hit 100,000. Brazil’s indigenous communities have been gravely affected by Covid-19 with over 600 lives lost so far.

Extinction Rebellion activists in London have painted the steps of the National Gallery with red paint and have dyed the fountains in Trafalgar Square red and green in solidarity with indigenous communities in Brazil who are dying at an extraordinary rate due to Covid-19.

Brazil’s official coronavirus death toll hit 100,000 on Saturday and over 3 million people have been infected with the virus making it the world’s second worst affected country after the US.

To mark International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples, activists lay “dead” on the Gallery’s steps, while others held up banners reading “Genocide (equals) Ecocide” and “Indigenous Emergency.”

​The group was joined by protesters from HS2 Rebellion, the Articulation of Indigenous Peoples of Brazil (APIB) and the Internationalist Solidarity Network.

APIB said that coronavirus threatens to wipe the entire indigenous community out with the mortality rate now double the rest of Brazil’s population.

​In a statement a spokesperson said, “To date, more than 21,000 APIB lives have been harmed by coronavirus in Brazil, with more than 600 lives lost.

"The alarming situation continues to grow more serious every day, because in addition to the threat of the virus, the threats of racism, illegal deforestation, criminal networks, mining companies, missionaries and big corporations continue to advance further into the most vulnerable territories of Brazil.”

The protestors are standing in solidarity with indigenous communities as not only are they suffering due to Covid-19, they are also at the forefront of the climate crisis and are also under threat due to deforestation.

They are asking people to paint their palms, one green and one red and to post a selfie on social media with the hashtag #IndigneousEmergency

​Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro has been heavily criticised for downplaying the impact of the virus having described it as a “little flu.”

In memory of all of the Brazilian people who have lost their lives to coronavirus, following the record breaking numbers of deaths announced on Saturday, the non-governmental group Rio de Paz placed crosses on Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro and released 1,000 red balloons into the sky.

Newsfeed
0
To participate in the discussion
log in or register
loader
Chats
Заголовок открываемого материала