Just Stop Oil protesters have sprayed Stonehenge orange on the eve of the summer solstice, to demand the UK's next government legally commit to phasing out fossil fuels by 2030. UK police have arrested two people today after environmental activists sprayed an orange substance on Stonehenge, the renowned prehistoric UNESCO World Heritage Site in southwest England. The said a pair of its activists, named by the group as Niamh Lynch, 21, and Rajan Naidu, 73, had "decorated Stonehenge in orange powder paint" to demand that the UK's next government legally commit to phasing out fossil fuels by 2030.
The footage was posted on social media, with the group sayng that they has used "orange cornflour" so that it "will soon wash away with the rain". Wiltshire Police said in a statement it had "arrested two people following an incident at Stonehenge this afternoon". "Officers attended the scene and arrested two people on suspicion of damaging the ancient monumen.
Our inquiries are ongoing and we are working closely with English Heritage.” The incident comes in the middle of the UK's general election campaign, ahead of voters going to the polls on 4 July. Current Prime Minister Rishi Sunak called the incident "a disgraceful act of vandalism to one of the UK's and the world's oldest and most important monuments".
"Just Stop Oil should be ashamed of their activists," he added. A spokesperson for Just Stop Oil said that although the Labour party, which is expected to win next month's elect.
