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In German election, hunger strikers seek climate promises

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Climate activist Henning Jeschke, who is since 24 days on a hunger strike, lays on a mattress under a tent in a small camp of climate activists as he poses for a photo in Berlin, Wednesday, Sept. 22, 2021. With his hunger strike he hopes to pressure candidates for chancellor of Germany into meeting him for a debate about the climate crisis ahead Sunday's general election. For the first time in Germany's history, climate change is a central issue of an election campaign, overwhelmingly so for the young generation. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

BERLIN ā€“ After three-and-a-half weeks on a hunger strike, Henning Jeschke is frail and gaunt, but determined to go on, still hoping to pressure the three candidates for chancellor of Germany into meeting him for a debate about the climate crisis ahead of Sunday's general election.

For the first time in Germany, climate change is perhaps the most dominant issue in an election campaign, especially for young voters. It's at the center of televised debates among candidates, and five of the six main parties offer plans with varying degrees of detail for slowing global warming.

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But young climate activists ā€” who pitched a protest tent camp in a park in Berlin's government district last month ā€” fear politiciansā€™ promises will quickly dissipate after the vote or give way to pressure from special interests. Jeschke and six others launched a hunger strike Aug. 30.

By late Thursday, Jeschke was the only one from the original group to remain on a hunger strike, even doubling down by now also refusing liquids, a protest organizer said. The others had dropped out, most this week, amid appeals from politicians and public figures not to endanger their lives.

Jeschke said Wednesday that he was not ready to give in. He was resting on a mattress in the center of the camp, propped up on one elbow and taking occasional sips of tea.

The hunger strike is an act of despair, he said, because he and his fellow activists believe that ā€œin this time of climate collapse, there are no honest conversations, that party programs are insufficient and that we urgently need to take action against the climate catastrophe.ā€

The 21-year-old from the northeastern town of Greifswald, who quit his political science studies for full-time activism, has already lost 11 kilos (24 pounds) and said his parents are worried.

ā€œMy mother is at home in tears, my father comes to visit again and again, but they also see that itā€™s necessary,ā€ he said.

Lena Bonasera, 24, who joined the hunger strike Monday, said the activists first met during Fridays For Future protests, as part of the international youth-led movement launched in 2018 by Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg.

The Oxford-educated Bonasera, who also vowed to stop taking liquids as of Thursday evening, said she halted work on her dissertation on civil disobedience to make time for the campaign.

ā€œI asked myself, why me, and my mom also asked this," she said of her decision to risk her health for her beliefs. ā€œBut once you allow yourself to feel how terrible the climate crisis really is, then I have no choice but to act this way."

At this point, itā€™s unlikely the candidates ā€” Olaf Scholz of the center-left Social Democrats, Armin Laschet of the center-right Union bloc or even Annalena Baerbock of the pro-environment Greens ā€” will show up.

They have urged the strikers to end their protest amid health concerns, instead offering private meetings after the vote, presumably to avoid encounters that could go off the rails. Baerbock spoke to the strikers by phone and expressed empathy for their frustration, A spokeswoman for Scholz said he met with some of them and their supporters after a campaign stop near Berlin.

This Friday, youth activists plan to stage large-scale international protests against climate change, weeks before leaders gather for a U.N. summit in Glasgow. Thunberg is expected at the Berlin rally, taking place just two days before an election that the Greens and climate activists portray as the last chance for Europe's biggest economy to change course.

The hunger strike has made some ripples, even if there won't be a pre-election debate.

Climate scientist Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, who has advised Pope Francis, Chancellor Angela Merkel and EU chief Ursula von der Leyen, spoke to the protesters by Zoom this week, urging them to start eating again and offering to connect them to decision-makers after the election.

In an open letter, Schellnhuber lent legitimacy to the activists' warnings, writing that Earth will warm by close to 3 degrees Celsius this century if current climate policies continue worldwide, and that there is even an outside risk that large parts of the planet will become uninhabitable.

ā€œThis risk may be small, but would we push our children into a school bus that had a 5% chance of being predicted to be fatal?ā€ he wrote in the letter, widely circulated in the German media.

But Schellnhuber told the activists it's not time yet for drastic measures, such as hunger strikes. He said he senses a political opening, with leading politicians more willing to tackle the issue. In a phone interview with The Associated Press, he said he believes after conversations with Scholz that the front-runner ā€œtakes the issue far more seriously than a few years ago.ā€

In the climate debate, two camps have emerged, with the Greens offering the most comprehensive program for making Germany carbon neutral with a mix of government incentives and penalties for polluters. Scholz' Social Democrats also propose government-driven change, but with more time than demanded by the Greens to phase out coal plants and combustion engines.

In the other camp, the Union bloc and the pro-business Free Democrats argue that market-driven innovation should take the lead.

The race between the parties remains close, with the Social Democrats a few percentage points ahead in the polls.

Whatever the final outcome, the focus on climate change in public debate is unprecedented, driven in part by young activists, observers said.

ā€œWe can feel that this is a generation that is being politicized by the issue of climate change,ā€ said Sascha MĆ¼ller-Kraenner of Deutsche Umwelthilfe, a veteran environmental protection group. ā€œIt's an enormous opportunity for our democracy ... that an entire generation has been mobilized.ā€

Mueller-Kraenner's group has taken companies with some of the highest carbon emissions to court, filing lawsuits this week against carmakers Mercedes and BMW.

He said such lawsuits and the street protests complement each other. ā€œIn the end itā€™s the politicians who need to make the decisions, but we must keep up this positive pressure on them,ā€ he said.

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Follow APā€™s coverage of Germanyā€™s election at https://apnews.com/hub/germany-election.

Follow AP's coverage of climate change at https://apnews.com/Climate


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