The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Lützerath vacated: CDU Interior Minister Reul, of all people, praises the Greens – “I have great respect”

2023-01-14T04:09:21.021Z


Lützerath vacated: CDU Interior Minister Reul, of all people, praises the Greens – “I have great respect” Created: 01/14/2023 04:56 By: Patrick Huljina, Christoph Gschoßmann, Fabian Müller During the protests in Lützerath, there were clashes between activists and the police. According to the police, all houses have been cleared. CDU Interior Minister Reul praises the Greens. The news ticker. A


Lützerath vacated: CDU Interior Minister Reul, of all people, praises the Greens – “I have great respect”

Created: 01/14/2023 04:56

By: Patrick Huljina, Christoph Gschoßmann, Fabian Müller

During the protests in Lützerath, there were clashes between activists and the police.

According to the police, all houses have been cleared.

CDU Interior Minister Reul praises the Greens.

The news ticker.

  • Aachen

    police spokesman criticizes

    statements by

    Thunberg

    : "Amazing assessment"

  • Chancellor

    Scholz

    condemns "violent protest"

    : And defends the traffic light's climate policy

  • Greta Thunberg

    has arrived in Lützerath: “shocking” conditions and police violence

  • This 

    news ticker

     on the 

    clearance of Lützerath

     is updated regularly.

Update from January 13, 8:36 p.m .:

The North Rhine-Westphalian Interior Minister Herbert Reul (CDU) praised the Greens.

"The positive influence that the Greens have on the climate protection scene certainly makes it easier to use," he told the

Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger

(Saturday).

The fact that many demonstrators left the bourgeois camp peacefully "is certainly also related to the participation in government of the Greens, who had previously condemned violent protests," said the CDU politician.

North Rhine-Westphalian Interior Minister Herbert Reul (CDU).

© Marc John/IMAGO

"If violent criminals can't hide behind the protective backdrop of peaceful demonstrators, they're easier to isolate." It's certainly not easy for the Greens to share responsibility for the eviction as the governing party in North Rhine-Westphalia.

"But they don't duck away.

Instead, top Greens from Düsseldorf come to Lützerath and engage in discussion with the demonstrators.

I have a lot of respect for that," Reul said.

Aachen police spokesman criticizes statements by Thunberg: "Amazing assessment"

Update from January 13, 7:17 p.m .:

The President of the Aachen police, Dirk Weinspach, criticizes Greta Thunberg’s statements about the conditions and police violence in Lützerath.

Thunberg was seen for a short time "in an absolutely peaceful atmosphere in Lützerath," he told a reporter from

Spiegel.

“She used most of her stay to speak to the press and make statements.

While almost next to her, very careful work was being done to free activists," Weinspach continued.

He criticized the fact that Thunberg had never informed the emergency services about the situation over the past few days.

"It is incomprehensible to me how she comes to her amazing assessment," said the police spokesman.

Weinspach explained that he had been in Lützerath for days and had a "differentiated and completely different picture".

"What I experienced here is a highly professional and de-escalating approach by the emergency services," he said in defense of the evictions.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz criticizes "violent protest" and defends climate policy

Update from January 13, 6:10 p.m.:

Chancellor Olaf Scholz has criticized parts of the protests against the eviction of the lignite village of Lützerath.

“I used to demonstrate more often, too.

However, for me there is a limit that runs exactly where protest becomes violent," said the SPD politician of the

Wochentaz

, the weekly newspaper of the

taz

.

Scholz does not accept criticism that the development of the lignite deposits under Lützerath put the climate goals in danger.

"This allegation is not true.

It's exactly the opposite: we make politics so that we can achieve our climate goals."

also read

Climate activists in Cologne: bloody affair - policeman tears hand from climate adhesive from the asphalt

TO READ

Lützerath evacuation: Operation continues in the dark - Neubauer criticizes the police

TO READ

Climate activists in Lützerath concrete themselves in – and apparently have to ask the police for help

TO READ

Death in the classroom: 17-year-old is said to have stabbed a teacher – students apparently alerted the police themselves

TO READ

Climate activists are attacked by passers-by - and reap "deepest respect" for their reaction

TO READ

Fancy a voyage of discovery?

My space

"Perhaps the protest should be directed against the fact that it takes six years for a wind turbine to be approved.

If we want to achieve the energy transition, we need more speed," said the Chancellor.

Scholz promises faster approval procedures and more speed in the expansion of renewable energies.

"The goal must be to soon set up three to four large wind turbines in Germany every day." It is the absolute goal of his government to ensure that Germany becomes climate-neutral by 2045.

Meanwhile, the demolition of a former farm owned by farmer Eckardt Heukamp has begun.

All houses have been cleared in Lützerath - activists only in the tunnel and in tree houses

Update from January 13, 5:27 p.m .:

According to the police, there are no more activists in the houses in Lützerath and on the roofs of the buildings.

A spokesman told a dpa reporter on Friday afternoon.

The clearing of the district of Erkelenz in the Rhenish lignite mining area is thus making further progress.

Only a tunnel in which two climate activists had barricaded themselves and several tree houses still have to be cleared.

Greta Thunberg sees "shocking" conditions in Lützerath and accuses the police: "The violence is outrageous"

Update from January 13, 3:32 p.m .:

The Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg arrived in Lützerath on Friday.

On site, she sharply criticized the police's actions during the eviction: "It's outrageous how violent the police are." The 20-year-old also visited the crater of the opencast lignite mine while holding a sign that read "Keep it in the ground" ( Leave it in the ground).

Greta-Thunberg has already arrived at the Lützerath evacuation: "Shocking" what is happening

What is happening in Lützerath is "shocking," said Thunberg.

Unfortunately, similar things are happening all over the world.

"It's appalling to see what's happening here." Many people have been trying to prevent this for years.

On Saturday she will take part in the planned rally for the preservation of Lützerath, she announced.

“We want to show what people power looks like, what democracy looks like.” She does not yet know how long she will stay in Germany.

Greta Thunberg (3rd from right) has joined the climate activists around Luisa Neubauer in Lützerath.

© Federico Gambarini/dpa

Update from January 13, 3:08 p.m .:

Greta Thunberg had already announced her visit to the large demonstration in Lützerath on Saturday on Wednesday.

NRW Interior Minister Herbert Reul (CDU) called on the climate activist to de-escalate the Porteste in the Lützerath eviction.

"In NRW, everyone is allowed to demonstrate, including Ms. Thunberg, who is traveling from afar," he told the

picture

, according to a message on Friday.

"I hope she makes sure her comrades stay peaceful and play by the rules."

Lützerath eviction: Open letter to Habeck - "Do not betray basic green values: Lützerath must stay"

Update from January 13, 2:15 p.m .:

 The German Police Union (DPolG) has asked the Greens for a clear commitment to the police operation in Lützerath.

"It is unacceptable that high party officials and members of parliament call for resistance and protests in Lützerath," said federal chairman Rainer Wendt in the course of the Lützerath eviction.

"The Greens have to decide whether they want to be government or opposition." It is scandalous to equate criminal activities in Lützerath with the legitimate use of direct coercion by the police.

By Friday morning, more than 2,000 Greens members had signed an open letter of protest.

In it, Economics Minister Robert Habeck and his NRW colleague Mona Neubaur (both Greens) are asked to stop the eviction immediately.

"Don't betray basic green values: Lützerath must stay" is the title of the letter.

The "negotiated deal with the energy company RWE threatens to break with the principles of our party," it says.

As a member of the Greens, you can neither understand nor accept the evacuation of the village of Lützerath.

Lützerath eviction: "It's just terrible the dangers these people take on"

Update from January 13, 1:14 p.m .:

Lützerath employs the country, and also the capital: In Berlin, more than 200 people have expressed their protest against the eviction of the NRW village by demolishing shop windows.

Update from January 13, 12:38 p.m.:

 Two climate activists are still waiting in a tunnel in Lützerath - according to the police, special forces from the fire brigade and THW are needed to get them out of there.

"I just think it's terrible what dangers these people take on themselves," said Aachen police chief Dirk Weinspach on Friday after climbing a little way into the tunnel shaft.

The construction is not safe, the oxygen supply is not guaranteed in the long term, said Weinspach.

However, he assumes that there is currently no acute danger for the two people.

He didn't know if they were chained.

"Contact officials are trying to get in touch and speak to those concerned right now," he said.

Their communication with the telephone no longer works, they are now trying to use radios.

Lützerath: Last buildings cleared - activists in the tunnel

Two Lützerath activists are holding out in an underground tunnel.

© Screenshot/YouTube/LuetziBleibt

Update from January 13, 11 a.m.:

According to dpa information, the police began clearing the last building in Lützerath on Friday morning.

In the meantime, only a few of the originally several hundred climate activists stayed in the place to oppose the eviction.

Two of the activists remain in an underground tunnel.

On Twitter, the activists shared a picture of emergency services looking for the exact location.

"This tunnel will keep you busy for a long time," they wrote.

Protests in front of RWE headquarters: activists chain themselves

Update from January 13, 10:50 a.m .:

In protest against the Lützerath eviction, around 25 to 30 climate activists occupied the entrance to the RWE headquarters in Essen on Friday.

According to an activist spokesman, three of them chained themselves to a roller shutter with bicycle locks.

They carried signs with inscriptions such as "Lützi stays" and "Lützerath moratorium".

Lützerath is currently being cleared and demolished by the police so that RWE can excavate the coal underneath.

The action in Essen should continue until the eviction is canceled, said the activist spokesman.

According to his own statements, he belongs to the group "Last Generation".

Lützerath activists entrench themselves in tunnels: the police want to complete the evacuation "today".

Update from January 13, 9.45 a.m .:

According to their own statements, the police want to largely complete the evacuation in Lützerath this Friday.

"We want to clear all structures as quickly as possible, if possible today," said a police spokesman for the dpa.

Two activists are still holding out in one of the underground tunnels.

It is unclear whether their evacuation will also succeed today.

The entrance to the tunnel was largely blocked off on Friday morning.

In addition to police officers, firefighters were also on site.

Habeck criticizes protests: "Lützerath is simply the wrong symbol"

Climate Protection Minister Robert Habeck (Greens) meanwhile criticized the activists.

He has little understanding for the massive protests.

“There are many good reasons to demonstrate for more climate protection, including against the Greens.

But Lützerath is simply the wrong symbol," he told

Spiegel

.

Lützerath is not the symbol for continuing the Garzweiler opencast lignite mine in the Rhineland, but "it's the end of the line," said Habeck.

The coal phase-out in the local coal mining area is preferred by eight years to 2030, which was always the goal of the climate movement.

"The agreement gives us planning security," explained the climate protection minister.

Climate Protection Minister Robert Habeck reprimanded the protests in Lützerath.

(Archive image) © Kay Nietfeld/dpa/Archive image

Police discover tunnel in Lützerath: Two activists are said to be underground

Update from January 13, 7.40 a.m .:

According to the police, the night passed quietly in the Lützerath settlement occupied by climate activists.

Activists are still holding out in an underground tunnel, a police spokesman said on Friday.

According to activists, there are two people in the tunnel.

The two were determined to chain themselves as soon as an attempt was made to get them out, said a spokeswoman for the "Lützerath Lives" initiative on Friday morning.

According to their own statements, the police discovered underground passages in Lützerath on Thursday.

In one there were people, it was said.

A spokesman explained that one had no eye contact with the people, but could speak to them.

The Technical Relief Agency tried to get the activists out that night, but ended the operation later.

It was initially unclear when a new attempt would be made.

According to "Lützerath Leben" the people are a good four meters deep.

There is a "ventilation system".

Meanwhile, activists protested in front of the RWE headquarters in Essen on Friday morning.

According to them, several of them chained themselves to the entrance gate.

A police spokesman said the RWE security service had reported an incident to them.

"We're on our way," they said.

Lützerath clearance: underground tunnels cause problems

Update from January 13, 6:30 a.m.:

On the third day of the evacuation of Lützerath for lignite mining, the police this Friday will focus on activists who have entrenched themselves in underground passages.

“We don't know how stable these underground soil structures are.

We also don't know what the air supply is like there," said Aachen police chief Dirk Weinspach on Thursday evening on WDR.

The situation is correspondingly dangerous.

On Friday night, the Technical Relief Agency ended its mission without getting the activists out of the tunnel.

In addition, the police want to clear a last occupied house on Friday.

During the night, the climate activists endured heavy rain, strong winds and temperatures below ten degrees.

The police initially did not clear further.

There were still numerous police officers on site.

According to a police spokesman, however, they only wanted to become active at night when activists had to be freed from potentially dangerous situations.

The occupiers of the place, which is to make way for lignite mining, reported on Thursday on social networks about a tunnel and warned the police not to drive into the area with heavy equipment.

The police confirmed that there are at least two tunnels.

However, there are only activists in one.

So far the police have not been able to get hold of them.

Special forces from RWE and the Federal Agency for Technical Relief would now have to take care of "how the rescue can be carried out in a suitable manner," said Weinspach.

"It will also be important to proceed very carefully and not take any risks." It is not foreseeable how much the clearance of the site could be delayed as a result.

During the night of Friday, the evacuation initially continued in the dark.

"Objects that have been addressed are still being processed," said a police spokesman.

Activists who had cemented themselves in or chained themselves were also freed despite the darkness.

"In such cases, we have to provide help," said the spokesman.

Update from January 12, 8:44 p.m .:

According to Aachen police chief Dirk Weinspach, the clearing of the lignite town of Lützerath is well advanced.

"The clearing of the above-ground structures is largely complete," he said on Thursday evening on WDR.

“We cleared almost all the houses except for one.

The meadow has been cleared, most of the tree houses have been cleared.

In this respect, there is not that much left," he said about the current status of the Lützerath eviction.

Eviction in Lützerath: activists hole up in tunnels

How long the operation of the Lützerath evacuation, during which Luisa Neubauer was dragged away by police officers during a sit-in blockade, will continue, cannot be said.

The evacuation could be delayed by underground passages that were discovered on Thursday.

According to the police, there are still activists there.

“It is not foreseeable how long the evacuation from the underground soil structures will take.

It will also be important to proceed very carefully and not take any risks, ”said the police chief about the activists who are hiding in tunnels and delaying the further eviction of Lützerath.

Lützerath evacuation: police vehicle on fire

Update from January 12, 8:09 p.m .:

On the edge of the Lützerath clearance and the police operation in the lignite town, a civil emergency vehicle caught fire.

"We are definitely assuming arson," said a police spokesman on Thursday.

The civil emergency vehicle was parked near the protest camp in the neighboring town of Keyenberg and was clearly recognizable as a police car thanks to a blue light on the roof.

It is assumed that the perpetrators smashed the window and poured a flammable liquid into the car.

It was initially unclear whether suspects could be identified.

Lützerath occupation: police operation continues in the dark

Update from January 12, 7:52 p.m .:

In the lignite town of Lützerath, the clearance continues on Thursday evening, even in the dark.

"Objects that have been addressed are still being processed," said a police spokesman.

Activists who had cemented themselves in or chained themselves were also freed despite the darkness.

"In such cases we have to provide help," said the spokesman for the ongoing Lützerath evacuation and further explained the current situation during the operation against the protests.

However, it is not planned to clear other buildings during the night.

Parts of Lützerath were brightly lit by searchlights.

Trees were felled and bushes removed, as reported by a dpa reporter.

Wooden houses were also demolished in the dark.

Lützerath-News: Climate activist Neubauer is carried away by the police - police officer injured

First report:

Lützerath - Climate activist Luisa Neubauer was carried away by police officers from the access road to the lignite town of Lützerath during the course of the Lützerath clearance.

Neubauer had gathered there on Thursday (January 12) with around 100 activists for a sit-in.

The participants in the Lützerath occupation were surrounded by the police and gradually carried away or taken away.

Finally, three officers also carried Fridays for Future activist Neubauer away with their multi-purpose sticks.

Environmental activist Luisa Neubauer is carried away by police officers during a sit-in in Lützerath.

© Federico Gambarini/dpa

Lützerath eviction: activist Luisa Neubauer is carried away by police officers

"We want to stay here until we are carried away," Neubauer had previously told the dpa news agency during the eviction in Lützerath.

A police spokesman explained the current development of the Lützerath occupation that the participants were on their way to the edge of the opencast mine.

This was dangerous and had to be prevented by the police.

According to Neubauer, the police occasionally used pepper spray against activists during the protest in Lützerath.

The spokesman said he could neither confirm nor rule it out.

A total of several hundred people took part in a demonstration from the village of Keyenberg in the direction of Lützerath, about four kilometers away.

Eviction in Lützerath: Policewoman injured in demo use of firecrackers

Meanwhile, a policewoman was slightly injured by a firecracker on Thursday.

The officer was hit in the leg, but was able to remain on duty, said a police spokesman about what happened as a result of the evacuation in Lützerath.

"Please refrain from any pelting by emergency services - this is not a peaceful protest!

We will consistently report every attack!” wrote the police, who probably used RWE trucks for the evacuation in Lützerath, on Twitter for use against the protests in Lützerath, in which climate activists even embed themselves in concrete.

Why should Lützerath be evacuated?

Below the village of Lützerath, which belongs to the North Rhine-Westphalian town of Erkelenz, there are large lignite deposits.

In 1995 the region was approved as a mining field.

Originally, around 100 residents lived in the village, most of whom sold their houses and properties many years ago or were compensated.

The land now belongs to the energy supplier RWE.

The group has earmarked the area for the Garzweiler opencast mine.

The residents of Lützerath have been resettled since 2006, and demolition work has been underway in the town since 2020.

On Friday, during the clearing of the Rhenish lignite town of Lützerath, the symbolic houses of the former residents should come into focus.

So far, excavators have only leveled the activists' wooden huts and barricades.

However, the houses in Lützerath have not yet been demolished.

Video: Eviction in Lützerath continues: Storm causes activists to create

Lützerath currently: Activists must give up the occupation of the symbolic Duisserner Hof

On Thursday morning, the squatters had to give up the symbolic Duisserner Hof as a result of the Lützrath evacuation.

The building had become a powerful symbol of resistance to the Garzweiler lignite opencast mine: the owner had resisted expropriation to the last and had become known as the "last farmer from Lützerath".

The evacuation also began in a second building, the so-called Paulahof with a painted rainbow flag on the facade.

The residents who got in left the place years ago.

The Lützerath buildings are now owned by the energy company RWE, which intends to mine the lignite beneath the site to generate electricity.

(dpa/fmü)

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2023-01-14

You may like

News/Politics 2024-04-03T11:58:37.172Z
News/Politics 2024-03-08T12:27:17.859Z
News/Politics 2024-03-25T15:17:10.562Z
News/Politics 2024-04-03T09:18:38.118Z
News/Politics 2024-02-21T16:14:36.235Z

Trends 24h

News/Politics 2024-04-18T20:25:41.926Z

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.