Hundreds of Students Arrested Demanding Climate Action

Updated March 3, 9:30 AM EST

Roughly 400 student activists were arrested Sunday after zip-tying themselves to the White House fence in what observers say was likely the biggest single day of civil disobedience throughout the Keystone XL “saga.”

With over 1,200 students descending on Pennsylvania Ave. for the mass sit-in and mock oil spill action, they delivered their message loud and clear: If the president won’t demand real climate action, “people power will.”

“Obama was the first President I voted for, and I want real climate action and a rejection of the Keystone XL pipeline,” said Nick Stracco, a Senior at Tulane University and one of the lead organizers of XL Dissent. “The people that voted him into office have made it absolutely clear what we want, and that’s to reject Keystone XL.”

Throughout the day, images of students marching through Georgetown and lying on the ground in a giant “human oil spill” flooded the internet. Meanwhile, leading environmentalists were quick to note, with over 86,000 people having signed an online “pledge of resistance” committing to engage in civil disobedience to stop the pipeline, XL Dissent is likely a “sign of things to come.”

Earlier:

Over 500 students are risking arrest Sunday as they handcuff themselves to the White House fence, placing their bodies on the line in what many say may be a “watershed” moment for a generation. Under the banner XL Dissent, over one thousand college students are descending on the White House to force President Obama to face the individuals whose future is imperiled by current U.S. climate policy.

“Our generation is going to be stuck with the reality of decisions made now about whether to invest in destruction or the future,” Smith College student Aly Johnson-Kurts told Common Dreams ahead of the demonstration. “We are realizing we cannot sit idly by, or we will not have a future to fight for.”

Beginning at 10 AM with a rally in Georgetown, the demonstrators will march to Lafayette Park, beside the White House, where they will hold a rally. En route, the protest will stop in front of Secretary of State John Kerry’s house to display a banner that reads “Sec. Kerry: Don’t Tar Your Legacy,” in reference to the pending Keystone XL tar sands pipeline decision, which has become a major flashpoint for the climate movement.

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