30/01/24View in Browser

Leftists armed with lentils, leaflets, and a climate pretence

By Nikolaus J. Kurmayer | @NKurmayer

A new wave of anti-capitalist leftists claiming to fight for the climate is taking it out on car tyres, risking further damage to a climate movement already gasping for air.

The climate activists we are already familiar with – those who would glue themselves to the streets – may be annoying, but they are also highly courageous to brave the wrath of their “victims”.

But Europe’s big cities are seeing another, increasingly popular, trend: “climate activists” who sabotage big cars in wealthy neighbourhoods under cover of the night.

Meet the tyre extinguishers, a global network of anarchist activists open to anyone who opposes the status quo and whose sole purpose is to punish the owners of big cars, mostly SUVs. 

“ATTENTION – your gas guzzler kills,” state flyers the group leaves behind after sneaking lentils into a car tyre’s air valve. The group – which claims to be leaderless – aims to “make it impossible to own a huge polluting 4×4 in the world’s urban areas,” as per their website.

With increasing frequency, the group is responsible for European news stories to the tune of “climate activists sabotage 80 cars.” Anybody can claim to operate on the group’s behalf, and as media coverage of them increases, so does their activity. 

Berlin, the Petri dish of Europe’s radicalised left, saw 336 police reports because of “extinguished” tyres in 2022 alone. By 15 December 2023, another 1,001 police reports were filed on top.

The police told the CDU there had been 1,337 victims just in Berlin since the “tyre extinguisher” movement officially launched in March 2022, and the trend is pointing upwards. Since 15 December, another 400 cars were hit in the Berlin area.

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French Prime Minister Gabriel Attall holds general policy address with the main guidelines of his government, at the National Assembly in Paris, France, 30 January 2024. The Prime Minister addresses his 14 ministers and the 577 deputies of the National Assembly on education, security, purchasing power, health, labor and the current agricultural crisis. EPA-EFE/TERESA SUAREZ

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The Roundup

Key EU lawmakers have asked the European Commission to present a package to boost the climate-friendly transformation of Europe’s industrial sector while expressing concerns about social stability once climate measures start to bite.

An alliance of German steelmaking states are supporting a global sustainable steel club that the US hopes will reduce China’s ability to undercut European and American markets, while welcoming support for the industry’s green transition.

Ongoing farmers’ protests can be partly attributed to the lack of consideration EU society and policymakers give to agriculture in general and geopolitical terms, Sebastien Abis, director of the agricultural group Club Demeter and research fellow at thinktank IRIS in France, told Euractiv.

France’s far-right Rassemblement National and far-left LFI are proposing to introduce a form of ‘agricultural exception’, which, as is already the case for the arts, would exempt some agricultural products from the EU’s free trade agreements with other countries.

The European Court of Justice (ECJ) has ruled that law enforcement agencies cannot indiscriminately store biometric and genetic data on those who committed criminal offences until their death, it said in a judgement published on Tuesday.

The Bulgarian prosecutor’s office issued on Tuesday a European arrest warrant for six Russian spies suspected of terrorist attacks targeting Bulgarian arms factories and warehouses.

A new government agency to “protect Hungary’s sovereignty”, which starts work on Thursday, will have a “chilling effect” on the country’s democracy, critics warn.

France’s controversial new immigration law, criticised by opponents as restrictive and racist, is part of an underlying European trend marked by repressive migration policies, particularly concerning access to the right of asylum, an expert told Euractiv.

Last but not least, don’t miss this week’s Transport Brief: To decarbonise transport, we need solutions, not fantasies.

Look out for…

  • Commissioner Paolo Gentiloni meets EIB President Nadia Calviño on Wednesday.
  • Informal meeting of defence ministers on Tuesday-Wednesday.
  • Special European Council on Thursday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

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