A fountain in front of a Soviet World War II memorial in Vienna which was dyed green by climate activists. /Joe Klamar/CFP
A fountain in front of a Soviet World War II memorial in Vienna which was dyed green by climate activists. /Joe Klamar/CFP
An Austrian court has rejected a lawsuit brought by 12 minors who accused the government of failing to revise a climate protection law, which they said insufficiently protects their constitutional rights.
A growing number of organizations and individuals around the world have turned to the courts to challenge what they see as government inaction on preventing climate change.
The Austrian lawsuit, the first of its kind in the nation and submitted in February, claimed a law dating from 2011 is not ensuring that children are shielded from the consequences of global warming.
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Austria's Constitutional Court rejected the suit as "inadmissible," stating that "not all parts of the law were challenged" despite them being "inextricably linked," according to a statement after the ruling.
The court deemed the lawsuit's scope "too narrow."
Michaela Kroemer, a lawyer representing the plaintiffs, aged five to 16 years old, said the court hadn't addressed the lawsuit's actual content. She has previously said that the law "which lacks greenhouse gas reduction targets, clear responsibilities and an accountability mechanism clearly infringes" on constitutional rights.
Police talk to Greta Thunberg as her and other climate activists in Malmo refused to leave a protest on June 19. /TT News Agency/Johan Nilsson via Reuters
Police talk to Greta Thunberg as her and other climate activists in Malmo refused to leave a protest on June 19. /TT News Agency/Johan Nilsson via Reuters
The challenge is being supported by environmental activists, including Fridays for Future, the movement inspired by Sweden's Greta Thunberg.
Thunberg was this week charged with disobeying a police order to leave a climate protest in the southern city of Malmo. If convicted for disobeying a police order, Thunberg can be handed a fine or up to six months in prison.
In February, Environment Minister Leonore Gewessler of the Green party -- the junior partner in Austria's conservative-led coalition government -- praised the "great commitment of young people to climate protection".
Several lawsuits by other activist groups have also accused the conservative-led government of inaction in the face of climate change. In 2021, an Austrian with multiple sclerosis sued the government in the European rights court for failing to protect the climate, saying global warming has worsened his condition.
A ruling is still pending, according to a Fridays for Future spokeswoman.
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Source(s): AFP