A group of activists skirmished with security on Tuesday at the United Nations climate talks in the Brazilian Amazon city of Belém, briefly trying to force their way into the main venue before being pushed back. Two security workers suffered minor injuries, the UN said.
The confrontation came late in the day as people were filtering out of the venue for COP30, as the talks are known.
“Earlier this evening, a group of protesters breached security barriers at the main entrance to the COP, causing minor injuries to two security staff and minor damage to the venue,” UN Climate Change said in a statement.
“Brazilian and UN security personnel took protective actions to secure the venue, following all established security protocols. Brazilian and UN authorities are investigating the incident. The venue is fully secured, and COP negotiations continue.”
Agustín Ocaña, mobilization coordinator for youth with the Global Youth Coalition, told The Associated Press he was outside when he saw two groups of people — some wearing yellow shirts and others dressed in the garb of Indigenous communities — walking toward the venue.
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He said at first they were mostly just dancing and chanting, and he decided to follow because he has friends in the Indigenous group.
He didn’t see which group first broke through security but said things escalated when guards reacted by closing the doors forcefully and calling for reinforcements.
Ocaña said some of the people entering were chanting “They cannot decide for us without us,” referring to tensions over Indigenous participation in the conference.
As security and marchers clashed, he said he saw members of both sides hitting each other with small plastic bins used to hold items near secure entrances. One guard was bleeding after being struck in the head, and Ocaña said he saw two or three people with bruises.
He added that some Indigenous communities have been frustrated watching resources pour into building “a whole new city” while urgent needs for education, health, and forest protection go unmet elsewhere.
“They were not doing this because they were bad people. They’re desperate, trying to protect their land, the river,” Ocaña said.
“It’s important the world knows this is just a small piece of what can happen if we keep having these never-ending conversations about how we’re going to protect the planet while we keep destroying it,” he said.
(FRANCE 24 with AP)










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