|
johannesburg:
tuesday 3rd september.
betrayal....
but see you all in mexico!
friends of the earth’s art installation
“hear our voice” (inside sandton security
zone, corner of maude and 5th), with 6,000
mute witnesses and a 6 metre high corporate
giant, has been specially adapted for the end
of the earth summit.
After nine days of talks, the Earth Summit
is finally winding to an end. We have
analysed the final text of the Programme of
Implementation and found precisely TWO new
and specific targets in the whole thing:
-
To halve by 2015 the proportion of
people who … do not have access to basic
sanitation (para 7), and
-
Establishment of marine protected
networks … including representative
networks by 2012 (para 31c) – which is
really half a target, but we prefer to be
generous in our praise.
And that’s it. In every other case,
existing commitments are simply reaffirmed,
watered down, or trashed altogether.
Paragraph 5(a) promises to “urge the
developed countries … to make concrete
efforts towards the target of 0.7% of GNP as
official development assistance”. Paragraph
19(e) contains the disgraceful promotion of
“clean” fossil fuels, a betrayal of the Kyoto
Protocol to combat climate change (although
the announcement of ratification by both
Canada and Russia this week is a welcome
step). Paragraph 22 talks about dangerous
chemicals but is only “aiming to achieve by
2020 that chemicals are produced in ways that
lead to the minimisation of significant
adverse effects on human health” (!).
Paragraph 42 talks of “a significant
reduction in the current rate of loss of
biological diversity”, a clear step backwards
from the UN Convention on Biological
Diversity. We could go on, but the list of
weasel words and lost promises is nearly
endless. Do not believe Government spin
doctors who claim success for this Summit. It
is by any objective test a failure.
Friends of the Earth International has
strongly supported the Earth Summit. We
desperately need binding international
agreements to fight environmental threats to
our common home, and such agreements require
negotiations, open to media and civil
society. But the so-called Programme of
Implementation agreed at this summit barely
begins to deal with the scale of the problems
the world faces. It is a betrayal of hundreds
of millions of poor and vulnerable people and
their communities around the world.
Governments have failed to set the necessary
social and ecological limits to economic
globalisation.
The chance to stem the tide of damage
caused by the neoliberal economic ideology
that dominates the developed world and
institutions such as the World Trade
Organisation has, for now, been missed.
Instead many references to the WTO and its
rules have been included in the Programme of
Implementation. Even campaign victories such
as preventing an unprecedented statement that
would have made all commitments to
environment and development subservient to
WTO rules cannot change the bleak picture.
The relationship between multilateral
environmental agreements and world trade
rules will still be left to the WTO to
decide.
One important success was achieved by
Friends of the Earth – the inclusion of clear
language on the need to establish corporate
accountability. However, the US is still
attempting to undermine these words through
squalid manoeuvres around a “Letter of
Interpretation” from Ambassador Ashe. FoEI
now calls for a UN conference on corporate
accountability by the end of 2003. This
conference should be included in the
Political Declaration. The draft text
produced by the South African Government
would place the issue before the UN General
Assembly.
FoEI is disappointed with what was
achieved here in Johannesburg. But we will
continue its campaign for trade justice,
rights for communities and rules for big
business. We will also continue to call on
developed countries to acknowledge their
ecological debt to the developing world. FoEI
will now be taking its campaign “Don’t let
big business rule the world” to the Cancun
WTO Conference.
Ricardo Navarro, Chair of Friends of the
Earth International, commented:
“The Earth Summit should have been about
protecting the environment and fighting
poverty and social destruction. Instead it
has been hijacked by free market ideology, by
a backward-looking, insular and ignorant US
administration and its friends in Japan,
Canada, Australia and OPEC, by a timid and
confused European Union, and by the global
corporations that help keep reactionary
politicians in limousines. So, after nine
days of waffle and posturing and
horse-trading we have only two significant
new targets to protect the environment and
fight poverty and deprivation.
Daniel Mittler, Earth Summit Coordinator,
commented:
This is a betrayal of the millions of people
around the world who looked to this Summit
for real action, and particularly of poor
people and vulnerable communities in the
South. It is an indictment of the world
leaders who came to this Summit and posed for
photographs but lacked the vision and
commitment to face the scale of the world’s
problems. A world where the economy runs
beyond the capacity of political institutions
to regulate and control it is in a deep
crisis, and can never be fully secure or at
peace. Nothing could make us more determined
to fight on for the radical environmental
action the world needs. See you all in
Mexico!”
CONTACTS:
Ricardo Navarro (FoEI Chair, El Salvador)
+27 72 401 5392
Tony Juniper (FoEI Vice-Chair, UK) +27 72
401 5393
Daniel Mittler (FoEI Summit Co-ordinator,
Germany) +27 72 401 5394
Carol Welch (US) +27 82 858 6073
Yuri Onodera (Japan) +27 72 401 5391
Ian Willmore (Media) +27 72 401 5386
|