Four environmental campaigners breached security at London's Heathrow airport yesterday, climbing aboard a parked aircraft and unfurling a banner protesting against runway expansion plans.
Police later arrested the four from Greenpeace who walked through security at one of the world's most policed airports.
"Climate emergency. No 3rd runway" read the banner they hung on the tailfin of a passenger plane that had just landed after a domestic flight from Manchester.
The protest, with others to follow outside parliament later in the day, came just two days before the end of the government's public consultation on the planned expansion which has pitted business against environmentalists.
Plans to build a third runway have sparked protests and a virulent blogging campaign stressing a contradiction between major aviation expansion and attempts to fight global warming.
"The arguments in favor simply don't stack up," said Nic Ferriday of the Aviation Environment Federation. "You can't have the massive expansion of aviation in this country -- led by Heathrow -- when the government is at the same time promising to cut carbon emissions to fight climate change."
Heathrow already handles 67.3 million passengers and 471,000 aircraft movements a year, figures which are forecast to double over the next 30 years if expansion goes ahead.
In other aviation news from the UK, a British airline said one of its flights was forced to divert to Turkey after copilot Michael Warren died in mid-flight.
GB Airways said the Airbus A320, carrying 156 passengers from Manchester to Paphos, Cyprus, landed in Istanbul on Sunday after what was termed a medical emergency on the flight deck.
The 43-year-old Warren was pronounced dead once the plane had landed. GB did not give a specific cause of death but said he had died of natural causes.
DEATH CONSTANTLY LOOMING: Decades of detention took a major toll on Iwao Hakamada’s mental health, his lawyers describing him as ‘living in a world of fantasy’ A Japanese man wrongly convicted of murder who was the world’s longest-serving death row inmate has been awarded US$1.44 million in compensation, an official said yesterday. The payout represents ¥12,500 (US$83) for each day of the more than four decades that Iwao Hakamada spent in detention, most of it on death row when each day could have been his last. It is a record for compensation of this kind, Japanese media said. The former boxer, now 89, was exonerated last year of a 1966 quadruple murder after a tireless campaign by his sister and others. The case sparked scrutiny of the justice system in
The head of Shin Bet, Israel’s domestic intelligence agency, was sacked yesterday, days after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he no longer trusts him, and fallout from a report on the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack. “The Government unanimously approved Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s proposal to end ISA Director Ronen Bar’s term of office,” a statement said. He is to leave his post when his successor is appointed by April 10 at the latest, the statement said. Netanyahu on Sunday cited an “ongoing lack of trust” as the reason for moving to dismiss Bar, who joined the agency in 1993. Bar, meant to
Indonesia’s parliament yesterday amended a law to allow members of the military to hold more government roles, despite criticisms that it would expand the armed forces’ role in civilian affairs. The revision to the armed forces law, pushed mainly by Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto’s coalition, was aimed at expanding the military’s role beyond defense in a country long influenced by its armed forces. The amendment has sparked fears of a return to the era of former Indonesian president Suharto, who ex-general Prabowo once served and who used military figures to crack down on dissent. “Now it’s the time for us to ask the
DITCH TACTICS: Kenyan officers were on their way to rescue Haitian police stuck in a ditch suspected to have been deliberately dug by Haitian gang members A Kenyan policeman deployed in Haiti has gone missing after violent gangs attacked a group of officers on a rescue mission, a UN-backed multinational security mission said in a statement yesterday. The Kenyan officers on Tuesday were on their way to rescue Haitian police stuck in a ditch “suspected to have been deliberately dug by gangs,” the statement said, adding that “specialized teams have been deployed” to search for the missing officer. Local media outlets in Haiti reported that the officer had been killed and videos of a lifeless man clothed in Kenyan uniform were shared on social media. Gang violence has left