COP26: Police seize Loch Ness monster ahead of protest

Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now
Glasgow police seized an inflatable Loch Ness Monster this morning, ahead of a planned protest.

The initiative was being organised by anti-poverty group, Jubilee Debt Campaign, ahead of finance day at COP26, to highlight that there is no climate justice without debt justice, which means cancelling lower income countries’ debt and providing climate finance without creating new debt.

Why was Nessie protesting?

The inflatable ‘Nessie’ - dubbed the ‘Loch Ness Debt Monster’ - is approximately four metres tall, eight metres long and three metres wide, and represents the growing threat of climate debt burdens for lower income countries, who have been prevented from discussing how debt is sabotaging their climate response at COP26.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

What do the campaigners say?

Eva Watkinson, head of campaigns at Jubilee Debt Campaign said: “The debt crisis facing lower income countries has been excluded from debate at COP26 and now police have prevented the ‘Loch Ness Debt Monster’ from highlighting this fundamental issue. Lower income countries’ unsustainable debt is preventing them from fighting the climate crisis.

“And when climate disasters hit, countries are pushed into further debt to pay for reconstruction. Rich polluting countries created the climate crisis and should take responsibility by cancelling the debts of countries that need it and ensuring climate finance is given in grants, not more loans.”