AN ECO-warrior glued her breasts to the road in one of the most bizarre stunts yet by protesters causing havoc across London.

On the final day of the Extinction Rebellion protests - which have disrupted journeys for thousands of commuters - campaigners glued themselves to the London Stock Exchange and climbed on top of a train at Canary Wharf.

25 The woman glued her breasts to the ground in a bizarre stunt Credit: Jamie Lorriman

25 The stunt happened outside Goldman Sachs office on Fleet Street in London Credit: Jamie Lorriman

25 Officers struggled to remove the woman from the road Credit: Jamie Lorriman

25 Police removed the woman who glued her breasts to the road in the latest Extinction Rebellion stunt Credit: Jamie Lorriman

25 Extinction Rebellion environmental activists glued themselves to the main entrance of the London Stock Exchange this morning Credit: Getty - Contributor

25 One of the first members of Extinction Rebellion Phil Kingston, 83, was removed by police Credit: Rex Features

The protester who glued her breasts to the road outside the Goldman Sachs office in Fleet Street was eventually removed from the floor and led away by cops.

Just before 7am this morning two men and five women dressed in black suits, red ties and visors glued themselves in a chain to a wall and to each other at the Stock Exchange.

They wore LED signs saying "climate emergency", "tell the truth" and "you can't eat money".

Protester Adam Woodall said they had targeted the building because "people are making millions, even billions of pounds out of trading ecological destruction".

Financial workers arrived at the Stock Exchange to learn they could not enter.

One said: “It’s annoying. I want to earn a living and I need to make sure that I do. I need to live on the planet too.”

DISRUPT LONDON'S FINANCIAL DISTRICTS

Campaigners also climbed on top of a Docklands Light Railway train at Canary Wharf station, the heart of the financial district on the 10th and final day of the protest.

Activists sang hymns and held placards saying "business as usual = death" and "don't jail the canaries".

Diana Warner, 60, a retired GP who glued her hand to the train, said: "It's bizarre we have to do this in order for governments to listen to the scientists.

"I've got children who are grown up so I can do this, so I'm doing it for everyone who can't."

Police later detached Warner and arrested her.

Among the protesters at Canary Wharf was 83-year-old Phil Kingston, one of the first members of the group who gained notoriety after chaining himself to a pipe in Oxford Circus.

Eating a sandwich on top of the train he said: "Like all parents and grandparents I want a future".

British Transport Police used ladders, ropes and harnesses to slowly guide the five protesters - including Mr Kingston - from the top of the train.

The force said five people had been arrested on suspicion of obstructing the railway.

Cops also removed the protesters who glued themselves to the London Stock Exchange and transferred them to police vans nearby.

Scotland Yard said 26 people had been arrested so far outside the Exchange on suspicion of aggravated trespassing.

Around 20 activists later blocked the road beside the Bank of England, singing Bob Marley's "One Love".

Campaigners also demonstrated outside the officers of bankers Goldman Sachs on Fleet Street.

As the protest neared its conclusion nine eco-warriors glued themselves to the front of the Treasury in Westminster.

The nine protesters, two men and seven women, formed a human chain preventing people from entering One Horse Guards Road.

MORE THAN 1,000 ARRESTS

Extinction Rebellion said today's action was in protest against the role of the finance industry in fuelling climate change.

A spokeswoman for the group said: "The financial industry is responsible for funding climate and ecological destruction and we are calling on them, the companies and the institutions that allow this to happen, to tell the truth".

She added: "And we're asking the Government to take action to address the climate emergency."

Scotland Yard have arrested 1,130 people linked to the group which has staged protests on London's bridges, brought traffic to a standstill, occupied Oxford Circus and taken part in a "die in" at the Natural History Museum.

Activists have also glued themselves to Jeremy Corbyn's Islington house. However the Labour leader left without speaking to them and declined their gift of chocolates in a paper bag marked "Jeremy's love hamper".

Roger Hallam, a founder and organiser of Extinction Rebellion, said it had been the biggest civil disobedience event in recent British history.

The number of arrests had surpassed that at the anti-nuclear protests at Upper Heyford in 1982 (752), he said.

HOW DO YOU UNGLUE A PROTESTER? Scotland Yard says it uses a 'fluid de-bonding agent' but refuses to elaborate on what specifically that contains for operational reasons. Dr Mark Elliott, a senior lecturer in organic chemistry at Cardiff University, said warm, soapy water or the compound acetone would be the most suitable method - but warned any removal was likely to be painful. He said the general advice is to use warm, soapy warm and then to apply gentle pressure - for example by inserting a spatula.

More than 10,000 police officers have been deployed during the action.

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said the protests had been a "huge challenge for our over-stretched and under-resourced Metropolitan Police".

The group said its action in the City of London today was likely to last a few hours, on the day it's due to end blockades at Parliament Square and Marble Arch.

They thanked Londoners in a statement on Wednesday, saying: "We know we have disrupted your lives. We do not do this lightly. We only do this because this is an emergency."

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Extinction Rebellion is calling for greater acknowledgement from the Government of the problem of climate change, and a move towards a zero-carbon economy by 2025.

They have urged ministers to declare a climate emergency to avoid what it calls a "sixth mass extinction" of species on Earth.

On Easter Monday, at least 100 protesters lay down under the blue whale skeleton at the Natural History Museum in a stunt organisers called a "die in".

Some protesters, wearing red face paint, veils and robes, remained to give a performance to classical music on the steps beneath the skeleton.

25 Protesters unfurled signs saying 'business as usual = death' Credit: PA:Press Association

25 Phil Kingston, 83, sat on top of a train at Canary Wharf Station this morning Credit: Reuters

25 Mr Kingston was led away after blocking traffic at Canary Wharf Station Credit: Reuters

25 A demonstrator disrupted London commuters journey to work this morning on the final day of Extinction Rebellion protests Credit: Reuters

25 Police eventually removed the protesters from the top of the train Credit: Reuters

25 Protesters glued themselves to the wall and to each other outside the London Stock Exchange Credit: Mason Boycott-Owen/PA

25 Protesters attached themselves to walls and to each at the building in the City of London Credit: PA:Press Association

25 Police removed the protesters who glued themselves to the entrances of the London Stock Exchange Credit: PA:Press Association

25 The climate change campaigners were taken away in police cars Credit: PA:Press Association

25 Another Extinction Rebellion campaigner was driven away in a police car Credit: PA:Press Association

25 Specialist police officers used de-bonding kit to remove the glue from the protesters' hands Credit: Jamie Lorriman

25 Protesters from Extinction Rebellion later protested outside Goldman Sachs offices on Fleet Street Credit: PA:Press Association

25 Climate change activists later blocked the junction at Bank on the final day of protests across the capital Credit: Getty Images - Getty

25 Campaigners block traffic along Upper Thames Street as part of their ongoing actions Credit: Getty Images - Getty

25 Police remove protesters who blocked the road outside the Goldman Sachs office on Fleet Street Credit: AP:Associated Press

25 Police officers work to untie the protesters who glued themselves together on Fleet Street Credit: PA:Press Association

25 Hundreds of protesters took over the Natural History Museum on Easter Monday Credit: PA:Press Association

25 They lay on the floor underneath the famous blue whale skeleton to protest against climate change Credit: PA:Press Association

25 Extinction Rebellion protesters have blocked London's street since April 15 causing severe travel disruption Credit: Rex Features