Climate activist’s jailing ignites row in Australia

Melbourne, Dec 9 (FN Agency) For 28 minutes in April, Deanna “Violet” Coco blocked a single lane of rush hour traffic on the Sydney Harbour Bridge, calling for greater action on climate change. Those 28 minutes cost her a 15-month jail sentence. Last week — in a move that has drawn international criticism — an Australian judge sent Coco to prison after she pleaded guilty to breaching traffic laws, lighting a flare and disobeying police orders to move on, BBC reported. The climate activist had made an “entire city suffer” with her “selfish emotional actions”, Magistrate Allison Hawkins said. “You do damage to your cause when you do childish stunts like this.” Coco will be eligible for parole in eight months, but her lawyer plans to challenge the sentence, which he says is “extraordinarily harsh” and “baseless”.

“There are five lanes on that bridge. She blocked one, and not for very long,” Mark Davis told the BBC. Her co-accused avoided jail, he pointed out. “This is almost without precedent.” The outcome of the case quickly sparked uproar. Small protests were held across Australia, and the sentence was condemned by human rights groups and some politicians. Human Rights Watch researcher Sophie McNeill said the case sends a terrible message to the globe. “We’re always calling on these authoritarian governments to treat peaceful protesters respectfully and to not jail them… (but) a country like Australia – who should be leading on human rights in the region, as a democracy – is also jailing peaceful activists,” she said. The UN’s special rapporteur on peaceful assembly Clément Voule said he was “alarmed” by Coco’s sentence. “Peaceful protesters should never be criminalised or imprisoned,” he said. Others disagree.

There’s been much debate in Australia about whether activists — peaceful or otherwise — should have the right to disrupt businesses or the lives of ordinary people. Premier Dominic Perrottet lauded the decision to jail Coco, saying this week: “If protesters want to put our way of life at risk, then they should have the book thrown at them.” But Coco’s own uncle Alister Henskens – a minister in the state government – also welcomed the decision, saying “nobody is above the law”. And social media was filled with similar comments on both sides.