Around 2,000 demonstrators gathered in the German town of Greifswald on Saturday ahead of next week’s planned nuclear-waste transport to the nearby storage facility in Lubmin.
The protesters waved placards, chanted in unison and banged drums. They warned against Germany becoming a “nuclear toilet” or dumping ground for atomic waste.
Local bishop Hans-Juergen Abromeit told the crowd the storage of the waste was a breach of promise. He claimed that in the past year the interim storage facility promised it would only accept atomic waste from former East German nuclear power plants. The bishop said that the issue was shaking the credibility of politics.
The waste due to arrive next week comes from a facility in the southern German city of Karlsruhe and from the research vessel “Otto Hahn.”
The bishop warned that the responsibility for nuclear policy should not be given over to market forces. He said it was impossible to be proud whilst Germany’s association with nuclear waste continues.
The nuclear waste transport is due to set off from the southern French research center Cadarache at the start of next week and should arrive in the German facility in Lubmin a few days later.
– from dw-world.de