The
campaigners - who did not have official permission for their
protest - parked a rental van outside the ministry, and unloaded
panels which they then assembled into a box, as security guards
looked on.
The box was decorated with the Amazon logo and the slogan: "#StopAmazon".
The campaigners also used spray paint and stencils to write the
phrase: "Amazon: the state must say stop" on the pavement in
front of the ministry.
"We put this parcel in front of the ministry to challenge the
government about the dangers of the expansion of e-commerce in
France," said Alma Dufour, a campaigner with the French chapter
of green group Friends of the Earth.
The activists behind the protest say Amazon promotes a culture
of consumption which hurts the environment, and that it squeezes
out small businesses.
Amazon said in a statement it believed e-commerce was less
harmful for the environment than traditional retail and that it
was committed to reaching the threshold of net zero carbon for
all its businesses by 2040.
It said it had created over 30,000 direct and indirect jobs in
France in the past 20 years, including at small businesses which
trade on the Amazon platform.
(Reporting by Christian Lowe; Editing by Mike Collett-White)
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