Moritz Riedacher sat down at a busy road junction with four other climate activists in southwestern Germany earlier this year, holding up traffic for hours — an action that resulted in a jail sentence — but he remains undeterred.
This week, the 26-year-old journalism student again halted traffic, this time in Berlin where fellow activists in the group Letzte Generation (Last Generation) launched a campaign demanding stronger climate protection policies.
Riedacher, who has not yet been imprisoned pending appeals, is among the first in Germany to be sentenced to jail over such protests.
Photo: AFP
“I find it really, really hard to process the verdict,” he said, calling the four-month sentence handed to him this month over the Heilbronn protest “disproportionate.”
“It is definitely urgent” for the government to do more for climate protection, he said, pointing to deadly flooding in southern Germany in 2021.
“We can’t say let’s just go on as normal. Rather, we need to cause disruptions,” Riedacher said.
The controversial tactics of Letzte Generation, from hunger strikes to throwing mashed potato on paintings in museums, has resulted in the group being described by some German politicians as “climate terrorists.”
Over the past year, its sit-ins on roads complete with some members being glued to the asphalt have become increasingly frequent.
In turn, more activists are landing in court. While most receive fines for disrupting traffic or obstructing police work, the court in Heilbronn has raised the stakes with months-long jail sentences.
For Judge Julia Schmitt, the road blockade constituted “coercion,” a crime carrying up to three years’ imprisonment.
Heiko Teggatz, deputy chief of the union for German police, said that Schmitt’s ruling should be used as an example.
“That is the only signal that these idiots understand,” Teggatz told the daily Welt, urging preventive detention of up to 30 days followed by expedited trials that result in heavy jail terms.
The protesters have not drawn sympathy from German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government, with even junior coalition partner the Greens opposed.
Calling the group’s approach “wrong,” German Minister for Economic Affairs and Climate Action Robert Habeck of the Greens told news channel NTV that “this protest doesn’t win a majority for climate protection, rather, it irritates people, divides society and in that sense, it’s not a helpful contribution to climate protection.”
Accusations have flown that the blockades hinder emergency services such as ambulances, and scenes of frustrated motorists shouting at the protesters or dragging them away have accompanied much of the action.
However, Riedacher said that “at the same time, more people are showing solidarity, perhaps after being moved by these harsh rulings.”
If the verdict against him is upheld, he could end up with a criminal record, but he and other protesters are unfazed.
In central Berlin last month, activist Irma Trommer was facing a similar charge of coercion.
Prosecutors say that street blockades force motorists to take certain actions — stop moving — against their will.
Different courts have weighed up the imperatives of the right to protest against the coercion charge, with varying outcomes.
Whatever the verdict in her case, the 26-year-old actress said she would keep blocking traffic “because I understand that the climate crisis is now the key point on which our entire future hinges.”
Trommer said that she had been jittery on the eve of the trial, but added: “I am ready to go to jail if necessary.”
“Having a criminal record is the lesser evil compared to what the climate crisis will bring. If that’s the price that I have to pay, then I’ll pay,” she said.
The activists carry out demonstrations with full knowledge of the potential consequences. Not only do they undergo training on how to glue themselves to asphalt, but they are also given legal advice.
The trials offer “a platform with wide reach” to bring climate concerns to the public, Letzte Generation says on its Web site.
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