Greta Thunberg came under fire on Monday over her pro-Palestinian stance in Germany, where the local chapter of climate movement Fridays for Future had distanced itself from her views on the Israel-Hamas war.
Thunberg, wearing the Palestinian black and white scarf, had urged "ceasefire now" at a climate protest on Sunday in Amsterdam.
She was interrupted by a man who sought to snatch the microphone from her, saying he had come for a climate protest, not for her other views. After he was removed by security officers, she began chanting, along with the crowd, "no climate justice on occupied land".
“No climate justice on occupied land”
— Lukas Slothuus (@lslothuus) November 12, 2023
Respect for Greta Thunberg's vocal commitment to the cause of Palestine.
One struggle, one fight! π΅πΈπ±πpic.twitter.com/Y8SJ2WuOJR
"Greta Thunberg misused the absolutely necessary and correct concern on climate protection for a one-sided position on the Israel-Palestinian conflict, in which she does not name the perpetrators, in which she does not condemn the absolute atrocities by Hamas," said Ricarda Lang, co-leader of the Greens, which is a junior partner of Chancellor Olaf Scholz's coalition.
"She has in fact discredited herself as the face of the climate movement through these statements," added Lang.
The statements in Amsterdam marked "the end of Greta Thunberg as a climate activist," added Volker Becker, the president of the German-Israel Society DIG, adding that "from now: Israel hater is the main job" for the Swedish activist.
The Israeli embassy in Germany also wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, that it was "sad that Greta Thunberg is again misusing the climate stage for her own purposes."
Since October 7, when Hamas fighters stormed Israel's borders, killing around 1,200 mostly civilians, Fridays for Future International has been putting up solidarity calls on social media with Gaza, which has come under relentless Israeli bombing over the Hamas attack.
Israel has vowed to destroy Hamas, the Islamist rulers of Gaza, in a war that the Hamas-run health authority said has killed 11,000 people, mostly civilians in the territory.
Fridays for Future's international group has blasted the "genocide" in Gaza, and slammed "Western support and misinformation machines".
Luisa Neubauer, who heads the German chapter of Fridays for Future, recently told Die Zeit weekly of her regret over what she called Thunberg's one-sided view of the conflict.
"I'm disappointed that Greta Thunberg had nothing concrete to say about the Jewish victims of the massacre of October 7," she said.
Germany's climate activist branch had also distanced itself from the international group over its pro-Palestinian posts on Instagram.
Neubauer said that Thunberg was "extraordinarily reflective and far-sighted" in the past but that the German climate branch will now have to examine "with whom we still have a basis to work based on common values".
"It is obvious that for many global organisations, global realities diverge when it comes to Israel and Palestine. But that does not justify anti-Semitism or disinformation," warned Neubauer.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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