Thousands join global climate strike in Pakistan

Thousands join global climate strike in Pakistan
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A group of students hold placards with different slogans about the climate change in Karachi's Frere Hall area on Sept 20, 2019. (AN Photo)
Thousands join global climate strike in Pakistan
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Hundreds of activists rallied in Lahore, Pakistan’s second largest city, on September 20, 2019 as they joined the global climate strike to highlight the issue of changing weather patterns. (AN Photo)
Thousands join global climate strike in Pakistan
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Youth and members of civil society participated in a climate march in Peshawar on September 20, 2019. (AN Photo)
Thousands join global climate strike in Pakistan
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"Eco not Ego" reads a poster next to "Winter is Not Coming," a play on the popular catchphrase from the book and TV series, "Game of Thrones," spotted inside the gathering point tent at the Islamabad Press Club on September 20, 2019. (AN Photo)
Thousands join global climate strike in Pakistan
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This image taken in Islamabad on September 20, 2019 shows a protester carrying a poster that reads "Planet over Profit." The slogan criticizes governments and corporations who have contributed to environmental degradation around the world. (AN Photo)
Thousands join global climate strike in Pakistan
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This picture taken in Islamabad on September 20, 2019 shows a poster that questions the priorities of many people and institutions. Pakistan is the 8th country in the world that is most vulnerable to catastrophic disasters due to changing weather patterns. (AN Photo)
Thousands join global climate strike in Pakistan
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Hundreds of activists rallied in Lahore, Pakistan’s second largest city, on September 20, 2019 as they joined the global climate strike to highlight the issue of changing weather patterns. (AN Photo)
Thousands join global climate strike in Pakistan
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Nirmala, a folk singer from Sindh's Tharparkar region, sings a famous poem by Faiz Ahmed Faiz at Karachi’s climate march on September 20, 2019. (AN Photo)
Updated 20 September 2019
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Thousands join global climate strike in Pakistan

Thousands join global climate strike in Pakistan
  • The South Asian nation is among the top ten countries most vulnerable to climate change
  • Pakistan only emits one percent of global greenhouse gases every year

ISLAMABAD: Thousands of Pakistanis gathered across the country on Friday to join the worldwide protest demanding action against climate change ahead of a United Nations summit on the subject next week.
Students, civil society activists, officials and people belonging to other walks of life enthusiastically participated in the event.
“Unlike the protesters abroad, we are calling our intervention a march, not a strike, since we are victims of climate change despite our negligible emissions,” Saleem Sheikh, deputy media director at the climate change ministry, told Arab News while referring to the internationally used phrase, global climate strike, for the day of protest.
Tens of thousands of people in other parts of the world poured into the streets of their countries to express concern about the global climate change challenge.
Sheikh said that more than 2,500 events had been planned in 117 countries, including Pakistan, on September 20.
According to officials, Pakistan emits less than one percent of the total annual global greenhouse gases, though it still remains in the top ten countries most vulnerable to climate change.
“Global warming is already causing more droughts, floods, severe storms, wildfires and melting ice across the planet,” Sheikh said, adding that the Earth’s average temperature had gone up by one degree and could continue to go beyond that point unless carbon emissions were drastically reduced.
Pakistan’s Minister of State for Climate Change Zartaj Gul said in a video message that the country was facing the adverse impact of climate change.
Humayun Khan, who works with the Climate Change Center of the University of Agriculture Peshawar, participated in the march in his city. He told Arab News it was imperative to plant saplings on an emergency basis throughout Pakistan to protect the environment and avoid negative impact of changing weather patterns.
“Various species of saplings need to be planted in order to minimize the worst effects of climate change,” he noted.