More than 20,000 German youths went on strike from school on Friday, joining Swedish teen activist Greta Thunberg as she took her protest against climate change to Berlin.
Armed with homemade posters bearing slogans like “It’s getting hot in here” or “Our house is on fire” or “You’re never too small to make a difference”, the teenagers packed into central Berlin to sound the alarm about global warming.
From a park in front of the economy ministry, they marched to the Brandenburg Gate, where Thunberg addressed the crowd.
“We should worry, we should panic,” Thunberg said, adding that people should step out of their “comfort zone” and change their behaviour.
“We want a future, is that too much to ask?”
She promised that the fight will go on.
“We haven’t seen anything yet. This is only the beginning of the beginning,” said Thunberg, to cheers from the crowd.
Read More: Here’s why this Swedish schoolgirl is nominated for Nobel peace prize
Organisers had expected to draw around 15,000 marchers, but a police officer in charge of the operation said that more than 20,000 had turned up.
Vowing to keep the protests going until there is tangible change, Franziska Wessel, one of the Berlin organisers, vowed: “We’re going to continue skipping classes every Friday because we can’t keep going like that with the climate. We have to pull the emergency brakes.”
Since December, teenagers across Germany inspired by the 16-year-old Thunberg’s climate fight have been marching weekly instead of sitting in classes.
With the protests coming at a time when a government commission recommended that coal be phased out by 2038, the youths have seized on the theme to demand a halt to the polluting fuel by 2030.
The youth engagement has left politicians divided on how to react.
Economy Minister Peter Altmaier has urged students not to skip school saying that demonstrations are not less effective outside class hours.
But Chancellor Angela Merkel has welcomed their fight.
The post 20,000 German youth join Greta Thunberg in her climate fight appeared first on ARYNEWS.
Comments