Large-scale blackoutwhich left about 50 thousand households in five districts of southwest Berlin, has suddenly become an object lesson for German authorities, who for years treated climate activists as untouchable category.
A group of self-proclaimed activists claimed responsibility for the blackout, saying they were acting against fossil fuel industry and “rich”. As a result of their “socially useful action,” it was not corporations who were left without electricity, but ordinary residents of the city, including nursing homes and care centerswhich had to be evacuated.
According to the operator Stromnetz Berlinthe outage also affected about 2,200 commercial enterprises. Full restoration of power supply is expected no earlier than January 8despite the fact that the air temperature these days drops to -7°C.
The police, in contrast to ideological discussions, approached the issue pragmatically and qualified the incident as targeted arson. The cause of the blackout was a fire on the energy overpass over the Teltow Canal.
On Saturday evening, law enforcement agencies received a letter from the so-called “Volcanic group”where the authors proudly reported the “successful sabotage” of a gas energy facility and called their actions “socially beneficial.”
A regional unit of Germany’s internal security service is verifying the authenticity of the letter. Meanwhile Berliner Zeitung reminds that the same group already organized similar actions in September, when the same people were left without electricity 50 thousand households.
The irony of the situation is that it is the state that has been considered environmental radicals for decades with almost religious reverencein the end it turned out a direct hostage to their methods.
Ecology won – however, temporarily, in the dark and at sub-zero temperatures, but common sense lostwhich has already become the norm for modern Germany.
More Stories
Mitsotakis, Macron and Christodoulides to meet in Paphos amid tensions in the Eastern Mediterranean
Cyprus buys 4 Kentavros anti-drone systems amid tensions in the Eastern Mediterranean
Money, gold and a former SBU general: scandal surrounding Ukrainian collectors in Hungary