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- Info
0421
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media advisory
friends of the earth international
world bank meeting protest april
22-25
campaigners mark 60th anniversary of
international monetary fund and world
bank
Washington, DC (US) -- Hundreds of people
from across the globe will gather in
Washington this week for the 60th anniversary
meeting of the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund (Apr 22-25).
Friends of the Earth are among them.
Human rights groups, environmental charities
and indigenous peoples protest against the
misuse of public money by both international
financial institutions through their
investment in projects that cause climate
change, damage the environment and lead to
human rights abuses, while failing to tackle
poverty.
"The meetings are an opportunity for the
World Bank to sign up to the recommendations
of its own Extractive Industries Review',
said Janneke Bruil of Friends of the Earth
International.
"These include respecting human rights,
ending support for all oil industries within
five years, and giving affected people the
right to consent. It is crucial that the
world Bank adopt these recommendations."
Non-governmantal organisations, Nobel Peace
prize winners, politicians and religious
leaders – including Members of the European
Parliament and FoEI Patron Desmond Tutu –
have already called on the World Bank to put
its new recommendations in place.
Friends of the Earth International Finance
Institutions Campaigner, Hannah Ellis
said:
“The World Bank gives millions of dollars of
taxpayers money to multinational companies
like Shell for projects which lead to
climate-change, damage the environment and
lead to human rights abuses. Today's
meeting is a chance for the World Bank to
really make a positive difference to people's
lives and their environment by putting in
place its own recommendations from its
Extractive Industries Review.”
Representatives from Friends of the Earth in
England , Wales and Northern Ireland , El
Salvador , Paraguay , France , Nigeria , the
Netherlands , Canada , Ghana and the US are
taking part in this week's events in
Washington DC .
The World Bank and the IMF hold significant
power over the economies of developing
countries and are controlled by wealthy
countries. They have been severely criticised
for using public money to invest in
environmentally damaging projects including
the Baku-Ceyhan gas pipeline crossing
Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey and financing
multinational corporations like Shell and
BP.
The European Parliament passed a resolution
(April 2004) endorsing the Review and Desmond
Tutu has written to Wolfensohn asking for
full implementation of the Review.
Several banks, including Barclays and HSBC,
have made commitments to ‘sustainable
development' by signing the Equator
Principles Declaration to adhere to World
Bank Policy in their lending
activities. See
http://www.equator-principles.com/
. However, a recent letter leaked to
press
http://www.foe.org/new/releases/404eirpr.html
from the Banks to Wolfensohn implies a hidden
agenda.
For more information contact in
Washington
:
Ricardo Navarro (FoEI Chair) + 31 6 51005630
(mobile)
Janneke Bruil + 31 6 51005630 (mobile)
Jon Sohn +1 202 412 2467 (mobile)
Hannah Ellis +44 7810 558 246 (mobile)
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Journalists: For media inquiries contact Niccolo Sarno, FoEI media coordinator.

Tel: +31-20-6221369 (Office landline in Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
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