
Speaking to ΒιΆΉΣ³» Weekly about the actions of those who entered Western Australiaβs state parliament on August 15, Extinction Rebellion activist and Socialist Alliance member Petrina Harley said: βDespite the mediaβs dramatic language of us βstormingβ and βfloodingβ parliament house β ironic they should use terms relating to climate change β we all entered the public gallery by simply walking through security and politely being shown up the stairs.
βWe then sat quietly and listened to parliamentarians.β
At noon, when the time for action arrived, β16 of us stood as one, banners unfurled,β Harley said.
βOur spokesperson apologised for the interruption but asked that the ministers stay and listen to a short statement, as they had refused to respond to a letter we had previously sent them. There was an audible sigh of collective condescension from the ministers assembled, before they all upped and vanished.
βIn unison we made our statement anyway, which was being livestreamed to the rally outside.
βWe dropped our βheartfeltβ messages β literally messages written on little felt hearts β over the railings onto MPβs desks and then broke into song, declaring rebellion to the tune of Queenβs βWe Will Rock Youβ.
βParliament House security then asked us to leave, otherwise we would be escorted out and charged with trespass. We told them we were fine with that.β
Following negotiations, some protesters agreed to leave, others accepted formal move-on notices and the remainder said police would have to physically carry them out.
βThe category of arrestables has become important for raising awareness,β Harley told GLW. βThe government is not playing by any rules so why should we?
βFor me, getting arrested is about rejecting the notion that government is representing the people.
βThey are prepared to risk our lives and our kidsβ futures for the short-term goal of profits and their allegiance to the fossil fuel industry.
βItβs a rejection of our broken system of government and itβs a call to others to rise up and resist; to show people that mass action is the way to shift power from a pro-business government to people prepared to put community before profit.
βOn this occasion, I took a move-on notice but the fight continues.
βMy motivation is concern for the future of my children. I want a government of the people, in place of the current coalition of profit-driven capitalists.β
Another XRWA activist, Andy Grice, was arrested, removed from the premises and then βunarrestedβ after a move-on notice was inserted into his pocket while handcuffed.
βI have tried working within the existing framework of politicsβ Grice told GLW. βBut the climate is changing faster than the capitalist political system is prepared to acknowledge.
βI am frustrated that it can ignore citizens so easily, and I think an increasing show of civil disruption might force the public to think about the urgency of the climate catastrophe we face and force politicians to act β or catalyse an uprising of the people.β¨
βXR openly calls for non-violent disruption to daily life to draw attention to the disruption that climate change will cause if we donβt act now to save the climate.β
Grice commented that XRWA is well organised, with the benefit of international experience that is readily adaptable to Australian conditions. Within a short time it has been able to organise effective, well-supported protest actions.
βBeing βarrestableβ shows a willingness to make a sacrifice but arrest can be a nasty experience β alienating, lonesome, scary and with unpredictable outcomes.
βWithin XR it is relatively OK. There are affinity groups that deal with all the external issues, supply assistance at every stage and even help with recovery afterwards.
βI can protest, get arrested and know that I have back-up at all times.β