5-speed listening (Magna Carta - Level 5)

Anti-oil protestors try to damage the Magna Carta


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READING:

Climate protestors tried to damage one of the world's most famous documents – the Magna Carta. Two women in their 80s went to the British Library in London and attacked the case that contained the Magna Carta. The women damaged the glass using a hammer and a chisel. Police charged them with criminal damage. The British Library said security staff prevented the women from doing further damage. The Magna Carta stayed safe. The women are from the Just Stop Oil protest group. They held up a sign that read: "The government is breaking the law."

The Magna Carta is a royal charter that was agreed to in 1215. It states that everyone is equal under the law. It guarantees that everyone should have a fair trial, with a jury. Historians say the document influenced the development of Western democracy, and the U.S. Constitution. The two protestors said: "The Magna Carta is…of great importance…to our freedoms and to our laws. But, there will be no freedom, no lawfulness, no rights, if we allow climate breakdown to become the catastrophe that is now threatened."

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