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Old growth protest group says it spray-painted Vancouver landmarks

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The Gastown steam clock in Vancouver is seen spraypainted with slogans in this image provided by the Save Old Growth activist group on Thursday, July 28, 2022. SAVE OLD GROWTH VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS

VANCOUVER — An activist group opposed to old-growth logging in sa国际传媒 says it has been spray-painting Vancouver tourist attractions and landmarks as an act of civil disobedience.

The Save Old Growth group says targets have included the Gastown steam clock, artist Douglas Coupland’s Digital Orca sculpture, the Olympic torch, Science World and the CBC’s offices.

The group, which distributed a photo of the steam clock covered with slogans, said it painted the messages as a reminder of what it called the sa国际传媒 government’s “broken promises” on logging.

Save Old Growth says its actions coincided with Overshoot Day, which is designed to mark the date when humanity has used up all biological resources the planet is capable of regenerating each year.

The group was previously behind road blockades but said at the end of June it would “de-escalate” such actions and instead turn to other tactics.

Those protests saw dozens of people arrested and triggered major traffic disruptions in Vancouver and elsewhere.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 28, 2022.