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Added on the 30/10/2019 13:26:07 - Copyright : Le Républicain Lorrain
Ce mercredi 15 janvier la cour d'appel de Metz a confirmé la condamnation de huit militants et d'un salarié Greenpeace suite à une intrusion dans la centrale nucléaire de Cattenom le 12 octobre 2017. Toutefois les peines sont allégées. Les prévenus écopent de jours amendes et non de prison ferme ou avec sursis comme en première instance. Alexandre Faro, avocat de Greenpeace, détaille l'arrêt rendu par la cour.
Abonnez-vous http://bit.ly/inahistoire JT FR3 Rhône Alpes | France 3 | 04/07/1987 Retour sur les temps forts et le verdict du procès de Klaus Barbie, accusé de crime contre l'humanité pendant la seconde guerre mondiale. Des rescapés de la Shoah venus témoigner au procès expriment leur sentiment face au
GreenPeace activists unfurled a huge banner with the image of Patrick Pouyanne on the facade of a shopping centre in La Defense, denouncing "the head of Greenpeace activists put up a banner on the facade of the CNIT shopping centre bearing the effigy of Patrick Pouyanne, CEO of TotalEnergies. The banner reads "Civil society is looking for the head of France's most polluting company, which is making billions at the expense of the planet and its people. If you have any information, please do not contact the government, which is its main accomplice"", as TotalEnergies prepared for another tense general meeting where shareholders were due to vote on climate issues and the reappointment of the CEO. IMAGES
A Greenpeace activist hangs from the building hosting the Nuclear Energy Summit in Brussels, organised by the IAEA, holding a sign that reads "Nuclear Fairytale." Promoting nuclear energy has been a taboo in Brussels, but the summit is designed to send out the message that it is key to fighting climate change. IMAGES
Greenpeace activists dressed as Shell board members hold a mock profits party behind a burning sign reading "Your Future" outside the company's headquarters as it released its annual results. Shell announced a post-tax profit of $19.4 billion for 2023, a slump from $42.3 billion in 2022 when prices soared to a record on the Ukraine conflict. IMAGES