With song, dance and swirls of colour in stark contrast to the seriousness of the official talks a few kilometres away, the COP16 summit's so-called "green zone" has attracted thousands of non-delegate visitors
While delegates in suits gathered to hash out plans for protecting Earth's biodiversity at a UN summit, activists and ordinary citizens in T-shirts and feathered headgear celebrated nature's bounty at a colorful side-event in the Colombian city of Cali.
With song, dance and swirls of color in stark contrast to the seriousness of the official talks a few kilometers away, the COP16 summit's so-called "green zone" has attracted thousands of non-delegate visitors to the heart of the city of some 2.4 million people.
It is a part-educational, part-festive showcase of the country's natural, cultural and culinary riches, underscored by a weighty reminder of the need to preserve nature for future generations.
"There will be a before COP16 and an after COP16. I believe this event will help people take better care of the planet," 60-year-old artist Maria Ruiz told AFP at the zone.
"The world must think and act with an awareness of the importance of biodiversity, animals, plants," said Francia Garces, another visitor to the vast outdoor venue also hosting activist rallies, music performances and dance shows.