Just Stop Oil activists sentenced after new van Gogh attack
The court ruling sentencing activists from the Just Stop Oil organization to four years in prison did not sit well with the activists. In retaliation, three individuals went to a museum where they attacked Vincent van Gogh's paintings again.
28 September 2024 17:04
Climate activists employ various methods to draw public attention to the issues Earth is facing. Blocking motorways, streets, and airports is often chosen because it disrupts people's daily lives. Vandalising monuments, such as paintings, sculptures, and buildings, is also a tactic. Some actions provoke only momentary outrage, but sometimes activists end up in court as defendants in various cases.
Just Stop Oil activists were sentenced
In October 2022, activists from the Just Stop Oil group, Phoebe Plummer and Anna Holland, went to the British National Gallery located at Trafalgar Square. The women had one objective—to pour soup on Vincent van Gogh's painting "Sunflowers". The activists managed to accomplish their goal, and the painting survived only thanks to the protective glass. During the attack, the frame of the painting was damaged, with costs estimated to be around £10,000.
On September 27, 2024, at the Crown Court in Southwark, a verdict was rendered sentencing the Just Stop Oil activists to prison. Twenty-three-year-old Phoebe Plummer will spend two years and three months in prison. Twenty-two-year-old Anna Holland was sentenced to 20 months in prison. During the reading of the verdict, Judge Christopher Hehir told them: "You had no right to do what you did to 'Sunflowers,' and your arrogance in thinking otherwise deserves the harshest condemnation. You were both a hair's breadth away from irreversibly damaging or even destroying this priceless treasure, and that must be reflected in the penalties meted out."
The judge also added: "Section 63 of the Penal Code requires me to consider not only the damage that was caused by your crime but also the damage that it could predictably have caused. For these reasons, this predictable damage is incalculable. Your crime is serious enough that the only appropriate penalties are prison sentences."
During the trial, Phoebe Plummer delivered a speech defending her actions. The activist said, among other things: "On October 14, 2022, and in November 2023, I made decisions to take actions that I knew would probably lead to my arrest and prosecution. I made these decisions because I believe that peaceful civil resistance is the best, if not the only tool people have to bring about the rapid changes that are necessary to protect life from the growing climate crisis and from political decisions that add fuel to the fire and doom us all to a catastrophic future. Of course, there are reasons why my life and the lives of those I love would be easier without receiving prison sentences today, but I do not intend to dwell on those reasons—my choice today is to accept the sentences with a smile, knowing I have found peace in what I can do to defend countless millions of innocent people suffering and dying. I chose peaceful disruption of an unjust, unfair, and murderous system."
Activists attacked van Gogh’s works again
Shortly after the verdict, on Friday, 27 September 2024, at 7:30 PM Greenwich Time, Just Stop Oil activists visited the National Gallery again. This time, three people entered the museum and attacked two Van Gogh paintings. After dousing the works with soup, one of the activists gave a speech, in which she said: "Future generations will recognize these prisoners of conscience as standing on the right side of history."
Seventy-one-year-old activist Ludi Simpson, who participated in the action, told "The Guardian": "We will be accountable for our actions and will face the full force of the law. When will the directors of fuel companies and the politicians they have bought be held accountable for the harm they do to every living creature?"