15 july 2002
make a noise to save the planet!
radio earth summit goes on-line
The sound of a mother crying, a scream of
frustration, the sounds of clock ticking, a
kookaburra calling, a beer bottle opening,
the whirr of a chainsaw, a tiger's roar, the
sound of silence⦠noises reflecting our world
under threat on
www.radioearthsummit.org
.
Thousands of people - including Radiohead
singer Thom Yorke and writer Arundhati Roy -
will be sending sound messages to this year's
Earth Summit, via a new audio web-site
launched by Friends of the Earth today at
www.radioearthsummit.org
.
Friends of the Earth has created the site
to provide people around the world with the
chance to send a noise to the Summit, to show
world leaders that they want action taken to
protect the environment and people from
exploitation by unaccountable global
corporations. Individuals can choose a sound
to send to the Summit, or record their own
noise or message to show how their world is
under threat.
Radio Earth Summit will also provide news,
features and interviews with individuals from
around the world in the run up to the Summit,
which takes place in Johannesburg from 26th
August to 4th September 2002.
Messages so far include a hard-hitting
interview with the internationally-renowned
anti-dam campaigner and Booker prize-winning
author Arundhati Roy, a message of support
from Radiohead lead singer Thom Yorke, and
Ricardo Navarro of Friends of the Earth
International talking about the impact of
corporations in El Salvador. Noises people
have recorded and sent in include the sound
of the Sumatran gibbon, under threat from
logging activities in Indonesia, and the
hissing sound of polluting gas, released by
petrochemical plants in South Africa [1].
-
as a writer, it's not my home that's
going under water, under the dams in the
Narmada, but it's my world view and as a
writer, my world view is more personal to
me than my home." Arundhati Roy, in an
exclusive interview with Radio Earth
Summit.
The sounds sent to the site will provide a
soundscape for Friends of the Earth
International's (FOEI) giant art
installation, on display outside the Earth
Summit [2].
Friends of the Earth is calling on world
leaders meeting at the Earth Summit to
introduce a new treaty on global rules for
big business [3], providing protection for
local communities and the environment. The
call has already received the support of NGOs
and campaigners around the world - and the
environmental organisation is calling on
politicians at the Summit to listen to what
communities and their representatives have to
say.
Liana Stupples of Friends of the Earth,
said:
-
This Summit will be crucial in
determining the future of our planet.
Either we choose to act and regulate our
behaviour - and this means regulating the
behaviour of international business - or
we sit back and watch the gap between
rich and poor widen, while our natural
environment is destroyed.
-
The noises and messages of support on
Radio Earth Summit reflect the real
issues at stake here. We are talking
about the threat to people's health from
pollution; about communities' livelihoods
being destroyed by deforestation; about
countries under threat from climatic
change.
-
We want people to send their messages to
world leaders via Radio Earth Summit -
but most of all, we want government
leaders around the world to listen to
what they have to say and take action to
protect the planet.
Radio Earth Summit will broadcast on-line
throughout the Summit, providing news and
comment - with updates and more interviews
added to the site every day. All audio from
the site is downloadable and can be broadcast
copyright free.
Notes:
[1] Full details of all the messages of
support can be found at
www.radioearthsummit.org - all material on
the site is available for downloading and can
be broadcast copyright free. A transcript of
the interview with Arundhati Roy is available
from the press office at Friends of the
Earth.
[2] Friends of the Earth International is
working with local artists and community
centres in South Africa to build a giant art
installation, representing the struggle of
individuals against corporate power. The
installation will be unveiled during the
Earth Summit. Further information from the
press office at Friends of the Earth.
[3] For more information about Friends of
the Earth's campaign for corporate
accountability - and for more information
about the Earth Summit, visit
www.foe.co.uk/earth_summit/
or
contact the press office.
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