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Greenpeace plants tombstone at House of Representatives

Greenpeace activists keep watch in front of the Philippine House of 
Representatives in Quezon City after planting an 8-foot tall tombstone 
with the words "R.I.P. BNPP" at the entrance of Congress compound. The 
activity is meant to send a message to lawmakers not to revive the 
mothballed Bataan Nuclear Power Plant and not to pursue the path of 
nuclear power which Greenpeace contends is grotesquely expensive and 
based on faulty economics.

Greenpeace activists keep watch in front of the Philippine House of Representatives in Quezon City after planting an 8-foot tall tombstone with the words "R.I.P. BNPP" at the entrance of Congress compound. The activity is meant to send a message to lawmakers not to revive the mothballed Bataan Nuclear Power Plant and not to pursue the path of nuclear power which Greenpeace contends is grotesquely expensive and based on faulty economics.

Enlarge Image
Greenpeace activists keep watch in front of the Philippine House of 
Representatives in Quezon City after planting an 8-foot tall tombstone 
with the words "R.I.P. BNPP" at the entrance of Congress compound. The 
activity is meant to send a message to lawmakers not to revive the 
mothballed Bataan Nuclear Power Plant and not to pursue the path of 
nuclear power which Greenpeace contends is grotesquely expensive and 
based on faulty economics.

Greenpeace activists keep watch in front of the Philippine House of Representatives in Quezon City after planting an 8-foot tall tombstone with the words "R.I.P. BNPP" at the entrance of Congress compound. The activity is meant to send a message to lawmakers not to revive the mothballed Bataan Nuclear Power Plant and not to pursue the path of nuclear power which Greenpeace contends is grotesquely expensive and based on faulty economics.

Enlarge Image
A Greenpeace activist places flowers at a "tombstone" with the words 
"R.I.P. BNPP" in front of the Philippine House of Representatives in 
Quezon City. The activity is meant to send a message to lawmakers not 
to revive the mothballed Bataan Nuclear Power Plant and not to pursue 
the path of nuclear power which Greenpeace contends is grotesquely 
expensive and based on faulty economics.

A Greenpeace activist places flowers at a "tombstone" with the words "R.I.P. BNPP" in front of the Philippine House of Representatives in Quezon City. The activity is meant to send a message to lawmakers not to revive the mothballed Bataan Nuclear Power Plant and not to pursue the path of nuclear power which Greenpeace contends is grotesquely expensive and based on faulty economics.

Enlarge Image