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Students, Sunrise and Rebels unite to defy extinction

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Photo: Socialist Appeal / Flickr

<h3>On 15 March students from around the world will join a global Youth Strike for Climate, leaving school and college to demand that their leaders urgently take climate action. In this guest blog Farhana Yamin, CEO at Track 0 and Extinction Rebellion Activist and Jake Woodier, an organiser of #YouthStrike4Climate explain why.</h3>

<p>Politicians beware. Young people are demanding answers from governments to some tough questions.</p>

<ul>
<li><strong>Why have scientific </strong><strong>warnings</strong><strong> about the climate and ecological crisis been ignored for so long? </strong></li>
<li><strong>What emergency actions can now be put in place to stop the extinction of life on Earth? </strong></li>
</ul>

<p>Tired of the apathy and denialist campaigns funded by vested interests, young people are taking to the streets and joining new social movements that are demanding solutions be put in place in 10 years or less.</p>

<p>That timeframe more or less matches the <a href="https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/"><strong>12 year</strong></a><a href="https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/"><strong&gt; deadline</strong></a> given by the United Nation’s chief scientific body, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). In October 2018, the IPCC spelt out the consequences of what a hotter more disruptive climate would look like. Unless we cut global greenhouse gases emissions by 50% in the next 11 years, billions of people would be exposed to increased storms, wildfires, droughts, floods, acidified oceans and sea level rise which would result in water and food shortages and mass migration.</p>

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Students strike for climate in London in February 2019. (Photo: Socialist Appeal/Flickr)

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>Fearing for their future and acting out of solidarity with their fellow global citizens, this week hundreds of thousands of young people are expected to walk out of schools and colleges to join the school strike movement. They are inspired by 16 year old Greta Thunberg, who in August 2018 stopped going to school on Fridays to sit outside the Swedish Parliament and demand climate action. Since then, thousands of young people around the world have joined the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement with campaigns now active in around 71 countries. In Belgium, around 50,000 children and young people take to the streets every Friday. The UK’s student movement is gathering momentum. The first national strike resulted in 15,000 students and young people ditching classrooms to demonstrate a need for radical and urgent action to achieve climate justice for current and future generations.&nbsp;</p>

<p>Anna Taylor, 17, co-founder or the <a href="https://ukscn.org/"><strong>UK Student Climate Network</strong></a> which is coordinating the mobilizations explains:</p>

<blockquote>
<p><em>"The burden of holding powerful actors to account over their climate records has unfortunately fallen on the young. We've been betrayed by the climate inaction of previous generations. We're having to rise up and fight for those around the world already suffering the devastating effects of climate change, and for our very futures."</em></p>
</blockquote>

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The youth led Sunrise Movement rally in San Francisco in December 2018. (Photo: Peg Hunter/Flickr)

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>Long held attitudes of moderation are now woefully insufficient given the global climate emergency we all face. From the “Green New Deal’s 10 year plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to zero in ways that generate clean jobs, supported by the youth-led Sunrise movement and championed by Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, to the Extinction Rebellion’s campaign of mass civil disobedience to dismantle the toxic systems that are putting all life on Earth at risk, it is clear that the desire to build a more inclusive society based on respecting nature’s boundaries is beginning to reshape politics.</p>

<p>No-one knows what will happen and no-one can say for sure whether or not fundamental ecological tipping points have already been breached. The good news is that there are millions of people - old and young – who are mobilising around the world to stop humanity from falling off a cliff.&nbsp; &nbsp;</p>

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Extinction Rebellion protest at Oxford Circus, London in November 2018 (Photo: David Holt / Flickr)

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>We can and must succeed in catalysing a peaceful revolution to end the era of fossil fuels and economic systems based on the extraction and extinction of nature. Life on Earth literally depends on it.</p>

<p>That is why we will be supporting students on strike and all those working to defend life on Earth. As citizens around the world join together to <u><a href="https://twitter.com/TheElders/status/1102897987339124736"><strong>coura… speak truth to power</strong></a></u>, we hope you will give your full support to strikers and rebels where ever you are.</p>

Views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of The Elders or The Elders Foundation

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