Climate activist Greta Thunberg has managed to avoid jail time after being found guilty of disobeying police during a climate protest in June. (Photo by Sascha Schuermann/Getty Images)

Energy and climate News

Greta Thunberg avoids jail after climate-protest guilty verdict

2 minutes read

Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg has managed to avoid jail time despite being found guilty of disobeying police during an environmental protest in June.

The famed 20-year-old activist had been taking part in a climate demonstration blocking a port in Sweden when she allegedly refused orders given by police to move off the road.

She eventually had to be forcibly removed from the thoroughfare by Swedish law enforcement officers.

During a hearing in a court in Malmö on July 24 regarding the incident, Thunberg admitted the circumstances of the crime but challenged the prosecutor’s arguments that she had broken the law on a number of legal grounds.

According to a report on the trial by Swedish media outlet Dagens Nyheter, the activist argued that it was unclear whether the protest constituted a public gathering in the legal sense and expressed doubt as to whether the demo was “disrupting public order”.

Thunberg also described herself as being in distress at the time of the incident as a result of the ongoing “climate crisis” and argued that such distress could be considered enough to find her not legally culpable.

“I believe that we are in an emergency situation,” Thunberg told the court. “There is a climate crisis that threatens life, health and property.”

That argument was rejected by Swedish prosecutor Emma Olsson, who, although agreeing a climate crisis does exist, argued it does not exclude people from the scope of the law.

The Malmö district court ultimately ruled in favour of the prosecutor, finding Thunberg guilty of disobeying directions given by police.

She was spared the maximum penalty of up to six months in prison and was instead handed a number of fines and penalties totalling 2,500 Swedish kroner, or roughly €215.

Brussels Signal has approached Thunberg’s media team for comment but at the time of writing no response had been received.

Key Topics

More like this

Paris police have banned a concert organised by the hard-left party La France Insoumise (LFI) as part of France's annual Fête de la Musique (music day) celebrations, citing concerns that the event could attract anti-police activists and fuel public disorder. Getty
News

Paris police ban hard-left music concert over fears of anti-police agitation

By Anne-Laure Dufeal

New leaders take their seats as the European Council meets in Brussels
Premium
News

New leaders take their seats as the European Council meets in Brussels

By Antonio O'Mullony

Spanish judge places Zapatero's daughters and secretary under investigation
News

Spanish judge places Zapatero’s daughters and secretary under investigation

By Brussels Signal

EP approves EU-US tariff deal
News

European Parliament approves EU-US tariff deal branded ‘unbalanced and unfair’

By Brussels Signal