AMSTERDAM — Climate activists blocked part of the main highway around Amsterdam near the former headquarters of ING bank for hours on Saturday to protest its financing of fossil fuels.
Dozens of Extinction Rebellion protesters were detained by police late in the afternoon after ignoring orders to end their blockade. Police said the operation to clear the road was peaceful.
Activist Sebastiaan Vannisselroy said the protesters were demonstrating "for the safety for us all. The Netherlands is a low-lying country. We're threatened by ocean rise. So we want to ... safeguard the future for all of us."
Amsterdam Municipality said in a message on X, formerly Twitter, that traffic authorities closed part of the road and diverted traffic "to prevent a life-threatening situation."
Hundreds of activists walked onto the road in the latest road blockade organized by the Dutch branch of Extinction Rebellion. Earlier this year, the activist organization repeatedly blocked a highway leading into The Hague.
Some of Saturday's protesters walked along the closed A10 highway carrying a banner emblazoned with the words "Change or die" as two police vans drove slowly behind them.
Another person carried a handwritten banner that said: "ING get out of oil and gas now!" Others glued their hands to the road surface.
Police criticized the protesters for blocking the road close to the VU medical center, one of Amsterdam's main hospitals.