Just Stop Oil campaigners have blocked London’s Park Lane and spray-painted the front of a luxury car showroom in their latest protest.
Demonstrators from the environmental group, who are calling for the government to halt all new oil and gas licences, glued themselves to the road in central London at around 11am on Sunday.
One was then filmed spraying the front of Aston Martin’s showroom with bright orange paint.
It comes after Home Secretary Suella Braverman outlined plans to crack down on such protests as part of the Public Order Bill.
Ms Braverman, Mayor of London Sadiq Khan, and Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Nadhim Zahawi met this morning to apply for a new injunction against Just Stop Oil causing disruption on London’s roads, Sky News understands.
Transport for London already has an order against Insulate Britain, which engages in similar activities, but a separate one needs to be taken out for Just Stop Oil.
Under the home secretary’s plans a new criminal offence would be created for disrupting the functioning of key infrastructure such as airports, railways and oil refineries.
“Locking on” – when people glue themselves to roads or buildings – would be punishable by either six months in prison or an unlimited fine under the new proposals.
Ms Braverman has said she “will not bend to protesters attempting to hold the British public to ransom”.
‘We will not be stopped by injunctions’
On Sunday the protester spraying paint was heard saying: “We will not be stopped by injunctions that are intended to silence protest. We are a non-violent civil disobedience movement.
“We know that the injunctions against us are irrelevant in comparison to mass starvation, with the genocidal policies our government is pushing for, with the 100 fossil fuel licences in the North Sea.”
On Friday, members of the group also threw tomato soup over Van Gogh’s famous Sunflowers painting at the National Gallery.
Two women have since been charged with causing criminal damage.
More activists spray-painted the Metropolitan Police headquarters New Scotland Yard with orange paint earlier this week.
The following day, demonstrators staged further road blocks in London by glueing themselves to roads.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
0:49
Activists cover Waitrose floor in milk
And protesters from another group, Animal Rebellion, poured milk on to shop floors, displays and products across the country, including Harrods, on Saturday, calling for a plant-based future and highlighting the need to support farmers in transitioning to such a food system.
Footage shows two protesters pouring milk in a Waitrose store in Edinburgh, while another group was filmed emptying milk bottles on to the floor and across a table laden with cheeses in Fortnum and Mason in London’s Piccadilly.