irn / foe international media release,
april 3, 2003:
ngos decry human rights crisis at three
gorges project as reservoir starts
filling
The reservoir of the controversial Three
Gorges Dam in China's Yangtze Valley will
start filling on April 10, aggravating
already serious human rights problems in the
resettlement areas. A new report documents
that the resettlement problems of this
publicly funded dam have not been resolved,
and that project construction is linked to
systematic human rights violations. At the
annual session of the UN Commission on Human
Rights in Geneva, International Rivers
Network and Friends of the Earth
International have called on China to suspend
submergence until the project's human rights
problems have been resolved. They have also
called on Western governments that fund the
dam to ensure that the project comply with
international norms.
So far, 640,000 people have been resettled
for the Three Gorges Project. An
investigative report published by
International Rivers Network (IRN) reveals
that the record of compensating and
rehabilitating the affected people has been
abysmal in many areas, and does not meet
international standards. "Land and jobs to
rehabilitate affected people are no longer
available", says Doris Shen, coordinator of
IRN's East Asia program. "In many cases,
resettlement funds have been diverted into
other investments, or into the pockets of
local officials."
A submission that IRN and FoE
International presented to the UN Commission
on Human Rights in Geneva on March 31
documents that the construction of the Three
Gorges Project is linked to the systematic
violation of human rights. "No independent
grievance mechanism exists in which people
can claim their right to fair compensation,
and the police have used excessive force to
quell many protests against the project",
IRN's policy director Peter Bosshard reported
in Geneva. "Many people have been detained,
and in some cases sentenced to long prison
terms, for engaging in peaceful
protests."
IRN and FoE International presented their
demands to the Chinese and Western
governments at an NGO briefing at the UNCHR.
The groups call for the submergence of the
Three Gorges reservoir to be suspended as
long as the resettlement and human rights
problems remain unresolved. Affected people
should not suffer repression for seeking
redress for the damage they have suffered,
and the people who have been imprisoned for
organizing and protesting peacefully should
be immediately released.
FoE International and IRN are also holding
the governments that have provided funding
for the Three Gorges Dam accountable for the
human rights impacts of the project. Brazil,
Canada, France, Germany, Sweden and
Switzerland have extended export credits and
guarantees to the tune of more than $1.4
billion for the project. In many cases the
governments claimed that their involvement
would reduce the risk of human rights abuses.
On March 31, the environmental groups called
on the involved governments to closely
monitor the human rights situation in the
project area, and to extend no further export
credits as long as the problems have not been
resolved.
In response to the IRN report, the Swiss
foreign minister committed to "gathering
additional information from a variety of
sources" on the problems of the Three Gorges
Project. Canada's foreign minister in turn
claimed that Canada's involvement in the
project was "minor" and "as a result, our
ability to influence project implementation
and impacts is very limited". The other
involved governments have so far not
responded to the IRN report. "The failure by
most Western governments to take any action
in the face of serious human rights
violations defeats the justification of why
these governments got involved in the Three
Gorges Project in the first place", comments
Janneke Bruil, coordinator of FoE's
international financial institutions
program.
Background: With a planned capacity of
18,200 megawatts, the Three Gorges Dam is the
world's largest power project. More than 1.2
million people and according to some
estimates, up to 1.9 million people will have
to be resettled for the project. Reservoir
filling will start on April 10, and will
continue to 2008. Project officials have
announced that additional contracts for
turbines and generators for the Three Gorges
power plant will be tendered before the end
of 2003.
Further information:
. Doris Shen, East Asia campaign
coordinator, IRN, Berkeley, phone +1 510 848
1155,
doris@irn.org
.
Peter Bosshard, policy director, IRN, Zurich,
phone +41 1 491 70 21,
powerfinance@irn.org
The investigative report on the Three Gorges
Project is available at
www.irn.org/programs/threeg/3gcolor.pdf
.
The NGO presentation to UNCHR of March 31 is
available at
www.irn.org/programs/threeg/index.asp?id=030331.unchrpres.html
.
Further background information on the Three
Gorges Project, video footage of the
resettlement process, and photos of the Three
Gorges area are available at
www.irn.org
.
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