More than 200 people have been arrested as
Extinction Rebellion protesters begun their attempt to shut down central
London for two weeks.
The activists succeeded in bringing the
Westminister area to a standstill on Monday with roadblocks on Westminster and Lambeth Bridges, Victoria Street, Whitehall, Horse Guards Road and the Mall.
By 5pm, the Metropolitan Police said there had been 217 arrests in connection with the protests.
Throughout the day Parliament Square was empty of traffic except for police vans, bicycles and rickshaws carrying tourists, while costumed protesters walked up Whitehall, and a hearse was used to block the road at Trafalgar Square.
An impromptu cricket game was held outside the Supreme Court and the streets rang with drumming, whistles and chanting, while dozens of tents were erected on the roads and yoga classes took place on Westminster Bridge.
Extinction Rebellion says the protests could be as much as five times bigger than those held in April, which brought major disruption to London and saw more than 1,100 arrests.
It is part of an "international rebellion" around the world, with action taking place in cities including Berlin, Madrid, Amsterdam and New York.
Hundreds of environmental activists took part in protests through Dublin as part the action, with a mock funeral procession though the city and a large pink boat unveiled outside the heart of the Irish parliament in Leinster House.
In the
UK, Extinction Rebellion is calling on the Government to declare a climate and ecological emergency, to act immediately to halt wildlife loss and to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to net-zero by 2025.
They also want to see the Government create and be led by the decisions of a Citizens' Assembly on climate and ecological justice.
The antics of the Extinction Rebellion protesters have been well documented - on Monday that saw police cutting one protester out of a car and tackling Extinction Rebellion members on Lambeth Bridge; demonstrators also locked themselves into a model of a Trident missile outside the Ministry of Defence and one protester locked his head to the steering wheel of a hearse.
Extinction Rebellion has said it plans to minimise disruption to ordinary Londoners, but admitted that the protests could disrupt emergency workers at St Thomas’s hospital, which sits on the opposite bank of the Thames from the Houses of Parliament.
The Metropolitan Police have described the protests as “unprecedented” in their scale and length and warned that they will arrest those breaking the law.