Climate activists turn Rome’s Trevi Fountain black

Published May 22, 2023
ACTIVISTS hold banners reading “We don’t pay for the fossil” near Rome’s Fontana di Trevi after pouring black liquid made out of vegetable-based carbon into the water as part of a campaign to raise awareness about climate change.—AFP
ACTIVISTS hold banners reading “We don’t pay for the fossil” near Rome’s Fontana di Trevi after pouring black liquid made out of vegetable-based carbon into the water as part of a campaign to raise awareness about climate change.—AFP

ROME: Climate activists in Italy turned Rome’s famous Trevi Fountain black on Sunday, saying floods that have killed 14 people in the country’s northeast were ‘a warning’.

Activists from the anti-climate change organisation Last Generation climbed into the landmark fountain and poured a vegetable-based carbon liquid into it, before being pulled out and escorted away by police.

The Trevi Fountain’s most iconic moment saw Swedish actress Anita Ekberg go for a dip in Federico Fellini’s film La Dolce Vita.

The protest came as Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni arrived in Emilia Romagna to visit areas devastated by floods described as the worst in a century after six months’ worth of rains fell in 36 hours.

Over 36,000 people have been displaced by the disaster, with costs in the hundreds of millions of euros.

“Our country is dying!” the activists shouted, as tourists packed in around the fountain in Rome’s historic centre snapped photographs, applauded or booed.

Police pulling the protesters out also confiscated their banners against government-funded fossil fuels.

Mattia, 19, who did not give his last name, was cited as taking part “because the horrible tragedy experienced in these days in Emilia Romagna is a forewarning of the black future that awaits mankind”.

Last Generation pointed to a report by the Bank of Italy earlier this month that found 23 per cent of Italian houses were at risk of flooding, at a potential cost of three billion euros yearly.

“While the climate crisis knocks at the door, breaking riverbanks and flinging fish into the streets, the Italian government cuts resources for soil protection” and fails on climate change mitigation, it said..

Published in Dawn, May 22nd, 2023

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