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Just Stop Oil will no longer throw soup at paintings as it ends direct action

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Just Stop Oil is to stop throwing soup on paintings and slow marching in streets as it announces its final protest.

In a statement, the environmental campaign group said: “Just Stop Oil’s initial demand to end new oil and gas is now government policy, making us one of the most successful civil resistance campaigns in recent history.

“We’ve kept over 4.4 billion barrels of oil in the ground, and the courts have ruled new oil and gas licences unlawful.

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JSO protesters paint Darwin’s grave

Image:
Just Stop Oil spraying on Stonehenge in 2024. Pic: Just Stop Oil/PA

“So it is the end of soup on Van Goghs, cornstarch on Stonehenge, and slow marching in the streets. But it is not the end of trials, of tagging and surveillance, of fines, probation and years in prison.”

It added: “As corporations and billionaires corrupt political systems across the world, we need a different approach. We are creating a new strategy, to face this reality and to carry our responsibilities at this time. Nothing short of a revolution is going to protect us from the coming storms.”

Just Stop Oil has called for the British government to halt new fossil fuel projects in the UK.

The group’s actions have grabbed headlines – with campaigners having glued themselves to roads and attached themselves to infrastructure at oil facilities.

They have also disrupted sport events and vandalised famous artworks.

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Hundreds of the protesters have been arrested and some have been handed lengthy jail terms.

Image:
Just Stop Oil campaigners in Edinburgh protest against Shell’s Jackdaw gas field in the North Sea in 2022. File pic: PA

Last week, nine Just Stop Oil protesters were convicted after police intervened to prevent them from gluing themselves to the runways at Heathrow Airport.

Seven of the demonstrators, aged between 26 and 61, were arrested after they were found with glue and angle grinders close to the perimeter fence of the airport in July 2024.

Earlier this month, the group’s co-founder Roger Hallam had his five-year prison sentence reduced by a year after a High Court appeal.

Hallam was jailed last July over a plot to disrupt M25 traffic, which saw 45 people climbing onto gantries over the motorway.

He was among a group of 16 activists who challenged jail terms of between 15 months and five years for their roles in four demonstrations between August and November 2022.

Ten of them had their appeals dismissed.

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