Now climate change mob threaten to wreak havoc for returning MPs as they march on Parliament Square on eighth day of protests
- Extinction Rebellion group are carrying on their protests in London this week, following chaos last week
- Today they are marching from Marble Arch to Parliament Square as MPs return from their holidays
- Several activists have already tied themselves into trees ahead of protests, with police vowing to act
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Climate protesters marched on Parliament today with some tying themselves to trees opposite Big Ben as they carry on the demos which have hit London.
Extinction Rebellion continued their second week of protests, after bringing bringing parts of the capital to a standstill and gluing themselves to trains last week.
More than 1,000 people have been arrested during climate change protests which started on Monday April 15. The action has seen Waterloo Bridge and Oxford Circus blocked and a ‘die in’ at the Natural History Museum.
Police have told protesters to stick to the terms of the protest after chaos in many areas of the capital last week
A climate change protester lays in a hammock high in trees in Parliament Square today during the second week of demos
Some of the group carried a coffin as they walked from the Marble Arch camp down to Westminster this morning
The group, who are camped in Marble Arch, were split yesterday over whether to continue their action or move to ‘political negotiations’.
But the faction calling for further protests seem to have prevailed and the group marched on Parliament this morning.
Scotland Yard has said protesters at Parliament Square must leave a designated area by 11.59pm on Tuesday and warned: ‘Any organiser or person taking part in the protest failing to comply with these conditions or inciting others not to comply with them will be committing an offence and will be liable to arrest.’
The force added: ‘A robust policing plan will be in place for the demonstration.’
Last night, officers cut the main power to the Extinction Rebellion camp in Marble Arch and then removed the sound equipment.
After a police cordon was put in place, officers could be seen taking away the various parts of a sound system, including a mixing desk and amplifiers.
Meanwhile Greta Thunberg, the Swedish schoolgirl behind youth school ‘climate strikes’, will meet political party leaders in the House of Commons.
The group is turning its attention to Parliament today after shutting down Waterloo Bridge and Oxford Circus last week
Climate change protesters have made homes in the tress of Parliament Square this morning
The Extinction Rebellion group marched beneath a cardboard cut-out of David Attenborough this morning
An activist at Marble Arch prepares to march with others to Parliament Square this morning
Police have told the group that they will be arrested if they stay at the site beyond midnight tonight
The 16-year-old Nobel Peace Prize nominee is expected to meet the leaders at around 11.30am before giving a speech at a meeting in Portcullis House at around 2pm.
Miss Thunberg, who has Asperger’s, told an protest in London last week that the world is now facing an ‘existential crisis’.
Tory leadership hopeful Boris Johnson told her she should be protesting in China, where far more carbon dioxide is emitted than in the UK.
Yesterday, at least 100 protesters laid down under the blue whale skeleton at the Natural History Museum in a stunt organisers called a ‘die in’.
Some protesters, wearing red face paint, veils and robes, remained to give a performance to classical music on the steps beneath the skeleton.
The Metropolitan Police said 1,065 people had been arrested in connection with the demonstrations by 10am on Monday, while 53 of those had been charged.
Olympic gold medallist Etienne Stott was one of the activists arrested as police moved to clear Waterloo Bridge on Sunday evening.
The London 2012 canoe slalom champion was carried from the bridge by four officers at around 8.30pm as he shouted about the ‘ecological crisis’.
A police officer carrying a part of the climate change protesters sound system away from the camp in Marble Arch
An officer carries a large Fender amp away from the Marble Arch camp on Monday evening
Extinction Rebellion protesters lying down inside the main hall of Natural History Museum
Parents who were taking their children to the museum expressed anger at the group