Friday 4 October, 10:30 am.
Extinction Rebellion will disrupt Wellington on Monday 7 October, starting an international wave of climate and
environmental civil disobedience.
Participants will meet at Midlands Park, Wellington at 7 am before moving to undisclosed locations.
National media spokesperson, Dr Sea Rotmann, says the non-violent action is the first of more than 60 in cities around the world.
The group plans to shut down a number of cities including Paris, New York, Buenos Aires, Delhi and London, she says.
In April Extinction Rebellion brought London to a stand-still for two weeks with 1,000 arrests.
Dr Rotmann, an Environmental Scientist, says the New Zealand branch will disrupt Wellington traffic with a street party
and expects arrests.
"We want a planet where all life thrives, and all children can flourish," she says. "Yet business as usual is pushing us
towards mass extinction."
"The lack of meaningful action around climate and ecological breakdown is pushing ordinary people to risk arrest,'' she
says.
Rotmann says we have a simple choice to "make history or be history".
"It is time to draw the line and to take whatever non-violent action is necessary to prevent irreversible damage and
widespread human misery," she says.
Dr Rotmann says the event is open to the public with a family-friendly space for people to take part without risking
arrest.
Representatives from the group’s twenty branches, from Whangarei to Invercargill, will join the action, she says.
Extinction Rebellion has three demands of Government:
1. Tell the truth and declare a climate and ecological emergency,
2. Act Now to halt biodiversity loss and reduce greenhouse emissions to net-zero by 2025, and
3. Go beyond politics and set up a Citizen's Assembly on climate and ecological justice.
ENDS
More information
Media can attend a non-violent civil disobedience training on Sunday 6 October between 10 am and 12 noon by
prior arrangement.
We will post the event location, and updates throughout the day on our Facebook, Instagram and Twitter
Extinction Rebellion Aotearoa NZ started in late 2018 and has over 20 branches nationwide from Whangarei to Invercargill.
As New Zealanders and members of the Pacific, Extinction Rebellion Aotearoa New Zealand acknowledge climate
injustice is colonial injustice, and Māori and Pacific peoples bear its brunt. Their voices and leadership must guide
the way forward.
What is a Citizens' Assembly?
A citizens' assembly brings people together to learn, deliberate and make recommendations on an issue of public concern.
Similar to jury service, members are randomly selected from the population by a process called sortition. Quotas are
used to ensure that the assembly is representative in terms of key characteristics such as gender, age, ethnicity,
education level and geography. Assembly members learn about critical thinking before they hear balanced information from
experts and stakeholders. The members spend time deliberating in small, facilitated groups, and then they draft and vote
on recommendations. Non-partisan organisations conduct Citizens' assemblies under independent oversight. They are
transparent, inclusive and effective.
ends