An animal activist interrupts an act in which Díaz, Garzón and Colau participated

An activist from the Animal Rebellion collective has interrupted this Saturday in Barcelona the institutional act Live healthy, live better, held in Barcelona on the occasion of the celebration of World Food Day and in which the Minister of Consumption, Alberto Garzón, also participated.

Thomas Osborne
Thomas Osborne
15 October 2022 Saturday 07:31
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An animal activist interrupts an act in which Díaz, Garzón and Colau participated

An activist from the Animal Rebellion collective has interrupted this Saturday in Barcelona the institutional act Live healthy, live better, held in Barcelona on the occasion of the celebration of World Food Day and in which the Minister of Consumption, Alberto Garzón, also participated. and the mayor of Barcelona, ​​Ada Colau, and where most of the speakers have demanded this regulation.

The spontaneous agitator has stuck with contact glue to the lectern of the stage after Garzón and Colau finished their interventions and just when a round table with entities began. And after hooking herself to the lectern, she has asked the Government for measures to promote a vegan diet, and the Generalitat not to give aid to the livestock sector.

"Many dialogues, but nothing is being done," she has cried from the stage while members of the organization tried to make her leave through one of the ends.

Then, those responsible for the act have realized that the activist had been hooked to the lectern using contact glue, so a group of workers has intervened to dismantle the platform and thus be able to evacuate it from the room.

After a few minutes, with the incident already resolved, the activist was escorted to the exit while shouting: "Climate justice now! Animal justice now! We don't have planet B!"

Regarding the act, Díaz assured this Saturday that the Government "is close" to regulating the advertising of "unhealthy or unhealthy" foods aimed at children, because it can have a detrimental impact on minors.

The vice president has said that studies by the World Health Organization show that advertising has a very obvious and harmful impact on minors and has opted to "look at the problems head-on", while stating that the industry and the lobbies opposed to advertising regulation "are powerful".

Díaz, who has recognized that he does not eat meat, has said that this decree is "necessary and fair" and has defended that citizens have the right to know what they eat, where it comes from and, above all, what effects eating certain types of food.