Extinction Rebellion target Amazon warehouses in Black Friday blockade

A person wearing a head mask depicting Amazon founder Jeff Bezos sits on a fake rocket as Extinction Rebellion activists block an entrance to an Amazon fulfilment centre in Tilbury, Essex, Britain, November 26, 2021. - Henry Nicholls/Reuters
A person wearing a head mask depicting Amazon founder Jeff Bezos sits on a fake rocket as Extinction Rebellion activists block an entrance to an Amazon fulfilment centre in Tilbury, Essex, Britain, November 26, 2021. - Henry Nicholls/Reuters

Extinction Rebellion demonstrators have targeted Amazon's largest UK warehouse to protest against the company’s Black Friday working conditions and output.

Extinction Rebellion’s demonstration, which involves around 20 activists, started at 4am at the Amazon distribution centre in Dunfermline, Fife.

Protesters with “lock-ons” and placards prevented lorries from entering the site and some from leaving.

XR said all of Amazon’s UK distribution centres will be targeted.

Meg Paton-Jones, XR's spokesperson at the Dunfermline blockade, said: "The police have one van on site and they are watching us.

"We started here at about 4am but are not blocking the employees' car park so the night shift can leave. We have good vibes and music."

An XR spokesperson added: "The action is intended to draw attention to Amazon's exploitative and environmentally destructive business practices, disregard for workers' rights in the name of company profits, as well as the wastefulness of Black Friday.”

Black Friday is Amazon’s busiest operating day of the year, with prices of thousands of products slashed. Millions of shoppers visit the site to secure bargains such as Alexa devices, TVs and game consoles.

Protester Eleanor Harris, from Glasgow, said: "It is essential we move to a new model of economics that prioritises well-being and sustainability over profit.

"The era of exploitative throw-away capitalism will soon be over, either by changing to meet the challenges we now face or by the destruction of our global habitats and societies."