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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/summary-for-download">
    <title>annual report 2009 - executive summary</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/summary-for-download</link>
    <description>Download a summarized version of the 2009 annual report.</description>
    
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2010-10-04T14:46:55Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>File</dc:type>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/funding-and-membership-support/funding-and-membership-support">
    <title>funding and membership support</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/funding-and-membership-support/funding-and-membership-support</link>
    <description></description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<h3>contributions from our members</h3>
<p>12 percent of the funding for Friends of the Earth International comes&nbsp;from the membership dues paid by the member groups, and 0.7&nbsp;percent&nbsp;comes from sales and donations. Member groups contribute a&nbsp;percentage of their income on the basis of their revenue from two years&nbsp;ago to the international network. This core funding is used to cover the</p>
<p>operational costs of the Secretariat.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>subsidies</h3>
<p>86.5 percent of our income is subsidies received from&nbsp;government agencies and foundations. These funds are granted&nbsp;</p>
<p>to us for&nbsp;specific projects and campaigns and for our Membership Support Fund.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>membership support fund</h3>
<p>Our Membership Support Fund seeks to pool resources and&nbsp;share them across FoE member groups for the following&nbsp;</p>
<p>objectives: network&nbsp;development, program coordination, capacity building,&nbsp;strengthening national campaigns, and increasing&nbsp;participation in international campaigns.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In 2009, we distributed 995,266 Euros to 32 of our members:&nbsp;Bangladesh, Brazil, Cameroon, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica,&nbsp;Croatia, Cyprus, El Salvador, England, Wales &amp; Northern&nbsp;Ireland, Ghana, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Indonesia,&nbsp;Liberia, Malaysia, Malawi,Mozambique, Netherlands, Nigeria, Palestina, Papua New&nbsp;Guinea, Paraguay, Peru,&nbsp;Philippines, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Togo,&nbsp;Tunesia, Uganda and&nbsp;Uruguay.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>We also distributed 106,142 Euros to the our regional&nbsp;groupings for regional meetings and capacity building.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>our funders</h3>
<p>Friends of the Earth International gratefully acknowledges&nbsp;financial support from:</p>
<ul><li><a href="resolveuid/2668ff8909ccfafe9c6e4dcbb6d2781f" class="internal-link" title="hivos"><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">HIVOS</span></a></li><li><a href="resolveuid/a62c0ab4ba2abaa8bea03144666e9ca8" class="internal-link" title="oxfam novib"><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">NOVIB/Oxfam Netherlands</span></a></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span"><a href="resolveuid/d5ebc3f0e9640f2ba3ac2144cd6d496c" class="internal-link" title="The Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs">The Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs</a> (DGIS-TMF/MFS)</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span"><a href="resolveuid/d5ebc3f0e9640f2ba3ac2144cd6d496c" class="internal-link" title="The Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs">The Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs</a> (Matra)</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span"><a href="resolveuid/d9695e4d99cf35ae77dc71c27021610b" class="internal-link" title="europeaid">The European Union</a> (joint grant with IPS)</span></li><li><a href="resolveuid/712b74a16a33bf8575a9c62fec2ab6a9" class="internal-link" title="The Sigrid Rausing Trust"><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The Sigrid Rausing Trust</span></a></li><li><a href="resolveuid/42107955aababe60a664a086909994e2" class="internal-link" title="The Swedish Society for Nature Conservation"><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The Swedish Society for Nature Conservation</span></a></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span"><a href="resolveuid/51e90fb9e45b649da3238ee5671d9b93" class="internal-link" title="The Netherlands Committee for Sustainable Development">The Netherlands Committee for Sustainable Development</a>&nbsp;(NCDO)</span></li><li><a href="resolveuid/e11b4312a4ddd6d24cedaeab398edf87" class="internal-link" title="The Isvara Foundation"><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The Isvara Foundation</span></a></li><li><a href="resolveuid/9db8c3486be122e2cb60b79113b96b1e" class="internal-link" title="The C.S. Mott Foundation"><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The C.S. Mott Foundation</span></a></li><li><a href="resolveuid/54fcea98f33f84c300bb5acd3ecbe7e9" class="internal-link" title="The Wallace Global Fund"><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The Wallace Global Fund</span></a></li><li><a href="resolveuid/ac771c01294d71f0f2d63c38f5cc418d" class="internal-link" title="The Rockefeller Brothers Fund"><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The Rockefeller Brothers Fund</span></a></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span"><a href="resolveuid/092d23d42c55ea4cd3439d145d24d509" class="internal-link" title="The V. Kahn-Rasmussen Foundation">The V. Kahn-Rasmussen Foundation</a></span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Their financial support has been crucial in strengthening&nbsp;our campaigns&nbsp;and our network.</p>
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    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>PhilLee</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2010-10-06T10:06:52Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/our-strategic-plan/sustainability-school">
    <title>sustainability school</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/our-strategic-plan/sustainability-school</link>
    <description>The annual Sustainability School convened by Friends of the Earth Latin America and the Caribbean (ATALC) provides space for a new form of learning and information exchange in Latin America and the Caribbean. Now in its third year, it is also forging strong new links between member groups, and with allies in the region.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p></p>
<p><img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/06332a7ed43f8385a7bccb23c7fc1785/image_preview" alt="sustainability school" />The first Sustainability School took place in 2007, and was
organized by Friends of the Earth Colombia/CENSAT. It set the scene for the School’s
future activities by considering the theoretical and conceptual perspectives of
the environmental movement, and its actions and development within the
economic, political and social contexts of the region. Friends of the Earth
Uruguay/REDES then hosted the second Sustainability School in 2008, focusing on
Friends of the Earth International’s programs and campaigns, and ATALC’s
involvement in them.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3><strong>what
happened</strong></h3>
<p>In 2009, the Sustainability School moved to Costa Rica. 35
participants joined FoE Costa Rica/COECOCeiba in the community of Juanilama, a
rural settlement in the Northern Zone that is home to some 124 <em>campesinos</em>, who grow grains and manage a
small forest reserve. The participants - who came from Argentina, Brazil, Chile,
Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru
and Uruguay - enjoyed the generous hospitality of the community, staying with
peasant families for the duration of their visit.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The Sustainability School’s activities were developed collectively and
the central theme was the defense of land. In this way, the five-day School
aimed to integrate the realities - faced by communities across the region - in to
ATALC’s fights and campaigns, including on plantations, forests, biodiversity,
food sovereignty, mining, climate change and free trade.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>A detailed and colorful report of the meeting was subsequently
published, to ensure that the results of the school were accurately recorded
and can be shared with others.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>what
changed</h3>
<p>ATALC’s member groups and its allies were enriched by the
learning and information exchange that took place at the Sustainability School:
35 personnel have deepened their understanding about the social and
environmental concerns prevalent in the continent and associated political
implications. They now have a much greater understanding of the complex
realities of rural life in the region, including its challenges and
opportunities.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The strong friendships built during the
Sustainability School will also help these new links between member groups to
flourish and endure.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3><strong>what next?</strong></h3>
<p>The Sustainability School will take place again in 2010,
with a new focus, building on and developing its important work to date.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Friends of the Earth
Costa Rica, which invited a Costa Rican youth group to participate in the
School, is now developing a political partnership and common activities with
them.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><a href="http://www.foei.org/es/publications/publicaciones-2/pdfs-por-ano/2009/el-buen-vivir-como-fundamento-de-la-sustentabilidad" class="external-link">Read the report from the school</a> (in spanish)<br /></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>with thanks to our funders: the isvara foundation<br /></em></p>
<p>

</p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>PhilLee</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2010-08-04T09:00:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/resisting-oil-mining-and-gas">
    <title>Resisting oil, mining and gas program highlights</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/resisting-oil-mining-and-gas</link>
    <description>The Resisting Mining, Oil and Gas Program is based on a vision in which the world does not depend on minerals, oil and gas. Its objective is to dismantle corporate control over minerals, oil and gas, and to stop the destruction and violations of communities and ecosystems.
</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p><img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/8b1c52368daa275623c3a129ea7ee4d0/image_preview" alt="IMG_6508 USED RMOG.JPG" />The Resisting Mining, Oil and Gas (RMOG) Program is a new FoEI program, and groups are concentrating on mapping FoEI’s current work with communities, as well as planning joint campaign work on mining, oil and gas corporations. Work on a campaigning manual on resisting mining, oil and gas is already underway; and the RMOG Program has also agreed to establish a campaign against Holcin, a cement, aggregates and concrete transnational corporation. An international campaign against Goldcorp is also planned.<br /><br />Some collaborative international activities are also underway. On 22 July, Friends of the Earth groups participated in a number of actions against Canadian open-pit mines, in countries including Australia, Canada, Mexico and Thailand, to mark the Global Day of Action Against Open Pit Mining on 22 July. <br /><br />Another important event was the Conference on "Extractive Industries: Blessing or Curse? Impacts of the Oil and Gas Industry," held by FoE Europe in Brussels on 13 October. The conference focused on the environmental, climate and social impacts of oil and gas industry operations; the sustainable use of natural resources; accountability for damages; financial subsidies; an assessment of the oil and gas industry’s performance in relation to poverty eradication and environmental impacts; and case studies on Canadian tar sands, Arctic oil exploration, and the impacts of European oil and gas operations in Nigeria and Russia. The conference was a great success, and was given coverage on the BBC's Record Europe show. A photo exhibit showing the negative impact of extractive industries was also shown in France and Italy.<br /><br />FoEI co-sponsored an event on Climate Change, Debt and Dissent, organized by Oilwatch South America and the Southern Peoples Creditors Alliance, 9-12 October 2009, in Quito, Ecuador. FoE Nigeria currently hosts the secretariat of Oilwatch Africa, and participated in the event, together with FoE Costa Rica. <br /><br />Testimonies from mining communities also featured in FoEI’s new media projects. For example, a series of women from Sulawesi, Indonesia share their stories and struggles resisting mining activities by Canadian nickel mining corporation Vale Inco. The Chief of Mbikikiki village talks about water pollution caused by the construction of the Chad-Cameroon oil pipeline owned by Exxon Mobil, Chevron and Petronas. Ada Zuñiga Hernandez from Honduras talks about the health impacts of mining activities by Canadian corporation, Goldcorp Inc, and a woman from Peru describes the feared destruction of an area because of plans by another Canadian company, Manhattan Minerals, to develop a gold mine in Tambogrande. A video produced by FoE Indonesia and FoE Netherlands that shows how tin mining in Indonesia is wrecking forests and coral reefs, and another short FoE Netherlands movie about oil pollution in Nigeria, "Back to Nature Travels Nigeria," can both be seen on YouTube. <br /><br />FoEI also embarked on an ambitious project to create a series of video testimonies of women affected by large-scale metal mining. These 'Women Re-Sisters' are strong, impressive women who talk about the impacts of mining on their lives: their food, health, water, economic situation, land, families and personal security. They also share strategies for resistance and mobilization. Testimonies from women affected by mining in Bulgaria and Guatemala can currently be viewed on the FoEI YouTube channel. With deep respect and recognition for the work of the participating groups, and the sisters who were brave enough to feature in these films.<br /><br />In 2009, FoEI groups around the world continued their national and regional campaigns against mining, oil and gas. Africa is focusing on conducting research into mining, shedding light on its negative effects. Asia also continues its struggle to support communities that resist mining. There have been some significant achievements.<br /><br />In the Netherlands, for example, the first court hearing in the case against Shell, brought by&nbsp;four Nigerian victims of Shell oil leaks&nbsp;and FoE Netherlands is now underway. On 3 December 2009, this unique legal action started at the court in The Hague. Shell asked the court to rule that the Dutch court has no jurisdiction over Shell Nigeria. But on 30 December the court held that the Dutch court does have jurisdiction over the operations of Shell Nigeria. Given that Shell has now lost this point, an important hurdle has been overcome, and the 'real' lawsuit can begin. This is the first time in history that a Dutch company has been brought to trial in a Dutch court for damages occurring abroad. FoEI also collaborated with several organizations to publish "Shell's Big Dirty Secret," which documents Shell's continued investment in the dirtiest forms of energy and its position as the world's most carbon intensive oil company. <br /><br />In the US, the ShellGuilty campaign launched by FoEI, Oil Change and Platform London, finally saw justice done in 2009. After legal battles lasting nearly fourteen years, oil giant Royal Dutch Shell has also been forced to pay a US$15.5 million out-of-court settlement. Plaintiffs from the Ogoni region of the Niger Delta have successfully held Shell accountable for complicity in human rights atrocities committed against the Ogoni people in the 1990s, including the execution of writer and activist Ken Saro-Wiwa. <br /><br />Some FoEI groups aim to change national mining laws through advocacy and legal routes. In December 2009, for example, FoE Hungary celebrated the introduction of a landmark ban on the use of cyanide in mining ten years after the tragic Baia Mare spill. It was passed with a virtually unprecedented majority. FoE Philippines has filed an Alternative Mining Bill, now known as House Bill 6342. The bill is intended to scrap and replace the Mining Act of 1995 and introduce a new mining policy to regulate the exploration, development and utilization of mineral resources and to ensure the equitable sharing of benefits, including for the State, indigenous peoples and local communities. <br /><br />Many FoE groups, including those seeking to change legislation, are working with local communities affected by mining to challenge the presence of specific mining and extraction companies more directly. For example:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">In January 2009, FoE Indonesia sent a complaint to Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, following the Australian government’s failure to fulfil a promise to respond directly to Indonesian organizations challenging the activities of Australian mining companies. FoE Indonesia has compiled a dossier detailing the involvement of numerous Australian mining companies in environmental destruction and human rights violations.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">In February 2009, communities in Guatemala asked the legislature and the Ministry of Energy and Mines to issue a moratorium on mining licenses of all types, until reforms to the Mining Act are agreed with them. Social organizations in the affected municipalities claim that current amendments to the document do not provide for community interests.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Also in February, and after years of being marginalized in relation to decisions about their ancestral lands, the Subanon people on Mindanao island came another step closer to asserting control over their territory. Their lands are currently being exploited by TVI Resource Development Phils (TVIRDI), a subsidiary of Canadian mining company TVI Pacific. Around 20 Subanon Indigenous People and farmers living within the TVIRDI mining area in Mount Canatuan, the Subanon tribe’s sacred site, halted blasting and drilling activities at the Canadian company’s open-pit mining operation, after a successful occupation of the site.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">In March 2009, the Ghana National Coalition on Mining, a group of communities affected by mining in Ghana and civil society organizations including FoE Ghana, opposed the Ghanaian Environmental Protection Agency, which had granted environmental permits to Newmont Ghana Gold Limited and Adamus Resources to conduct surface gold mining activities.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">In September 2009, FoE Hungary published their first annual alternative report on the Hungarian Oil Company (MOL). The report held a mirror up to the company’s annual report and assessed the company’s activities in 2008. After examining company data, the authors gave examples showing that the company’s practices do not actually match up to its rhetoric.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Also in September, FoE Costa Rica, together with and as part of Costa Rica’s popular movement, participated in a visit to mining company Crucitas, organized by the Supreme Court of Costa Rica, which had suspended Crucitas’s mining permit. There is a risk that the Supreme Court will favor the mining company, in which case FoE Costa Rica plans more mobilizations across the country, to stop this mining company restarting its activities.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Again in September, FoE Guatemala organized an international mission to verify violations of human, environmental and economic rights by mining transnational corporations operating in Guatemala, such as GoldCorp. The aim of the mission was to ensure that the voices of victims, who are criminalized in Guatemala, can be heard at the international level. Participants included FoE Uruguay, FoE El Salvador, and FoE Costa Rica, together with people from Amnesty International and others.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<p><br />Building strong networks and alliances against the mining and extractive industries is also a priority for the RMOG Program. For example, a new network in Colombia, the Colombian Network Against Mining, has been established to challenge transnational corporations operating in Colombia with the support of the Colombian government. One of the first acts of this network was to support the demands of workers and the population struggling against British Petroleum in Tauramena, Colombia.<br /><br />Many other critical activities were also undertaken by the Federation in 2009. For example:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">In Nigeria, the Second National Consultation on the Environment, 25 - 26 November 2009, saw civil society leaders, community-based organizations, civil society organizations, development experts, academia, legal practitioners, the media and representatives of government agencies come together to consider a post-petroleum Nigeria. The event was organized by FoE Nigeria in collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Environment.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">FoE Philippines and Alyansa Tigil Mina co-hosted a discussion on "Tracing the Gold, Tracing the Money," in Cagayan de Oro City on 29 June. The event was designed to give participants the knowledge and skills they need to find out how mining companies finance their activities and where they sell their products. This kind of research often reveals excellent intervention points for advocates wanting to stop mining operations in their localities.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">A new report from FoE Netherlands, "Mining Matters," which was published in June 2009, reviewed practices used in mining tin (in Indonesia, Bolivia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Burma), bauxite (Guinea and Jamaica), and copper (Chile, Peru, Zambia and Indonesia (Grasberg)). It also examined the policies of seven companies using imported metals in the Netherlands.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Security forces arrested the director of FoE Indonesia and the Head of FoE Indonesia's Regional Department&nbsp;during a peaceful protest organized by FoE Indonesia and other NGOs together with fisherfolk organizations. The groups organized an event parallel to the World Ocean Conference (WOC) and Coal Triangle Summit 2009 which was held in Manado, Indonesia, 11-14 May. The peoples’ gathering was to draw the attention of WOC to small fisherfolks’ concerns – especially their call to ban the dumping of tailing minings into the sea - and to demand that these concerns be put on the WOC’s agenda.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">In 2009 Young FoE Norway’s priority campaign was against oil drilling off the beautiful Lofoten Islands, home to the world’s largest stock of cod and biggest cold water coral reef. They started several local groups in a network called "O`olkaction against oil drilling outside the Lofoten Islands." They also took a group of representatives from political youth parties out to the Lofoten Islands for one week, to highlight the fact that there are other possibilities besides drilling for oil in Northern Norway.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">FoE France has published a synthesis report "Public subsidies to fossil fuels in France and the European Union," which reveals that the wealthy oil industry benefited from French subsidies of over €400 million between 2004 and 2008, mainly in the form of export guarantees. FoE’s research also shows that €6 billion of European money has been given to the fossil fuel industry over the past five years.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<p><br />The main areas of work of the program are:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Community Resistance</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Campaign Against Corporations</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Policies and Mechanisms that Promote Mining, Oil and Gas</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Decreasing Consumption to Stop Demand for Mining, Oil and Gas</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>coordinators and participants</h3>
<p>Co-coordinator: Natalia Atz Sunuc, FoE Guatemala<br />Co-coordinator: Romel Cardenas de Vera, FoE Philippines<br /><br />The RMOG steering group includes:<br /><br /></p>
<ul><li>For Africa, Chima Williams, FoE Nigeria</li><li>For APac, Natalie Lowrey, Australia</li><li>For ATALC, Andres Idarraga, Colombia</li><li>For Europe, Geert Ritsema, Netherlands</li><li>For North America, Adina Matisoff, FoE USA</li></ul>
<p><br />This is a new FoEI program and the co-coordinators and steering group are still in the processing of developing and implementing a fully-fledged strategy and workplan. Groups that have expressed an interest in participating include: Argentina, Australia, Austria, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Curacao, El Salvador, FoE Europe, EWNI, France, Guatemala, Honduras, Hungary, Indonesia, Ireland, Japan, Liberia, Malawi, Malaysia, Mozambique, Nigeria, Papua New Guinea, Peru, Philippines, Sierra Leone, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Togo and the US.</p>
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    <dc:creator>PhilLee</dc:creator>
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    <dc:date>2010-07-23T11:25:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/member-groups/member-groups">
    <title>member groups</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/member-groups/member-groups</link>
    <description>Friends of the Earth International is made up of the activities and actions of our 76 member groups, and it is our mission to support and strengthen their work at the local level. </description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<div><img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/2722d6125dc160e8a811cffbcb5d6400/image_preview" alt="germany member groups" />These groups mobilize people, resist socially and environmentally damaging projects and policies, and help to transform their societies in tens of countries around the world. Their local work in turn allows us to campaign on the regional and international levels, and to seek political support for the rights of people everywhere to sustainable livelihoods and for social, economic, gender and environmental justice.</div>
<div>&nbsp;</div>
<h3>membership support</h3>
<div>In 2009, we conducted many activities to support the development of our member groups, as we understand that the strength of FoEI lies in the strength of our member organizations, their capacity to win victories at the local and national level, relate their struggles in a global context, and act in solidarity with fellow member groups in other countries and across regions.&nbsp;</div>
<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>Our Membership Support Fund seeks to pool resources and share them across FoE member groups for the following objectives: network development, capacity building, strengthening national campaigns, and increasing participation in international campaigns.&nbsp;</div>
<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>In 2009, we distributed €995,266 to 32 of our members: Bangladesh, Brazil, Cameroon, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Cyprus, El Salvador, England, Wales &amp; Northern Ireland, Ghana, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Indonesia, Liberia, Malaysia, Malawi, Mozambique, Netherlands, Nigeria, Palestina, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Togo, Tunisia, Uganda and Uruguay.</div>
<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>We also distributed €106,142 to the our regional groupings for regional meetings and capacity building</div>
<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>Other areas of membership development are the facilitation of relationship building among member groups across regions; helping to overcome language barriers through timely translations; creating spaces for sharing experiences, such as exchanges and gatherings; and ensuring that member groups are really able to engage in the federation and don't fall off the map.</div>
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    <dc:creator>PhilLee</dc:creator>
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    <dc:date>2010-06-10T09:40:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/ejrn/corporate-abuses">
    <title>disclosing the truth, building awareness and mobilizing against corporate abuses</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/ejrn/corporate-abuses</link>
    <description>In 2008, FoEI continued campaigning on specific corporations in sectors that harm the environment. This entailed research and monitoring of EU-based companies working in the oil and gas, agrofuels and forest extraction sectors, and their actions in the South.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/a118b2b76041797df6e4e60905c5e34c" alt="disclosing the truth, building awareness and mobilizing against corporate abuses" width="300" />
<p>To do this more effectively, we focused on the use of innovative and mass means of communication, to disclose our research findings to a much wider audience than ever before, and to mobilize people to fight for environmental justice.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>We have developed new ideas to convey our campaign messages in more innovative and creative ways; and used creative campaign tools so that people can understand and support our messages more easily. These included a series of video clips (community testimonies) and using YouTube to broadcast them to the public. We have also started to work with artists in designing strong visuals with a clear message.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
In the period 2005-08, FoEI produced two quality TV programs, <a href="resolveuid/4922a496fca56d1598a3b08fee8298c1" class="internal-link" title="foei documentary shows dark side of palm oil plantations">Lost in Palm Oil</a> and <a href="resolveuid/2789ffb9ed1abb20eb05d10f46fb73cd" class="internal-link" title="poison fire: foei documentary on gas flaring in nigeria">Poison Fire</a>. We also focused on producing quality footage suitable for TV broadcast on a series of issues related to sustainable livelihoods and environmental protection, including extractive industries, biodiversity, and women and the environment.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>‘Lost in Palm Oil’ is a documentary about the impacts of oil palm plantations on local communities in Indonesia, and the production, trade and consumption of palm oil. The documentary was screened (sometimes fully, sometimes partially) on TV and at film festivals. Many of these broadcasts reached out to audiences of more than 100,000 viewers. A list of TV broadcasts and slots in 2008 includes: Eenvandaag (Netherlands); ORF Weltjournal (Austria); TV Eco (Switzerland); French TV channel France 2; YLE (Finland); SWR Auslandsreporter, Phönix and NDR ARD (Germany); RTP (Portugal); TVN27 (Poland); TV2 (Finland); SVT (Sweden); Green Film Festival-Seoul (Korea); NHK (Japan); and the Berlin Film Festival (Germany). ‘Lost in palm oil’ was also screened at an alternative summit in Bali, Indonesia, during the United Nations climate talks (UNFCCC) in December 2007; and about 500 DVD copies of the film were circulated to communities in Indonesia (in Bahasa Indonesia). The DVD version is available in English, French, German and Bahasa.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>For ‘Poison Fire’ FoEI contracted Lars Johansson to make a documentary about the impacts of oil in Nigeria, using a 'participatory approach' to film-making and at the same time training local community members in Nigeria to use video tools in their campaign activities. Poison Fire shows how increasing people’s capacity to advocate on their own behalf with video tools and skills led to exposing oil giant Shell’s violations of Nigerian law and the fact that it was ignoring court judgments in Nigeria.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
‘<a href="resolveuid/2789ffb9ed1abb20eb05d10f46fb73cd" class="internal-link" title="poison fire: foei documentary on gas flaring in nigeria">Poison Fire</a>’ was selected by and launched at the world's largest documentary festival, IDFA. The film was screened at IDFA five times (always sold out), and public debates followed the screenings. The documentary was also broadcast in its entirety on BEN TV (Great Britain and Ireland), reaching more than 8 million homes via the popular BSKYB platform (channel 184). This channel also reaches out to Western Europe and Africa potentially reaching more than 30 million homes.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Footage of the documentary was even aired by the Dutch investigative program 'Netwerk' and mainstream news program 'RTL news' in the years previous to the film’s formal launch.&nbsp; A short film based on footage from Lars Johansson was produced with Element TV (a project focused on the UN millennium development goals) and broadcast on other MTV channels in 2007. Element was initially broadcast on three European MTV 'feeds' and in Israel, and was picked up for 'Switch', a global campaign for MTV which reached a potential audience of 1.5 billion viewers in 62 countries. Guardian films also used footage from Poison Fire (and took on board information exposed in the film) in a video report by The Guardian's George Monbiot (a renowned environmental writer and author of a number of bestselling books). The report focused on an interview with Shell CEO Jeroen van der Veer, and generated substantial debate on The Guardian newspaper’s website. A short version of the documentary was also aired on MTV and at the March 2008 Amnesty ‘Movies that Matter’ film festival in Amsterdam.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The film, which can be viewed online on various websites including its own, at www.poisonfire.org, also caused intense debate in Nigeria, where it has been screened to many local communities and policy makers. Nigerian lawmakers have watched it in special screenings and commented on it. A high policy committee annexed it to its report on the Niger Delta sent to the Nigerian President. It also had an impact on Shell; the company made direct references to the film in a Shell video online on www.shell.com. In 2008, the film-maker entered a co-production agreement with Danish production company Everest Pictures (Anders Ostergaard, the director of the highly successful documentary 'Burma VJ') which decided to finance a longer, more ambitious version of Poison Fire.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
FoE Europe also created and displayed <a class="external-link" href="http://www.foeeurope.org/events/2008/Shell%20action.html">an exhibition</a> on the extractive industry with images of Shell's operations around the world, showing the negative social and environmental effects of some of their activities. We started touring with it at the 2008 Shell shareholder meeting in The Hague, at the 2008 EU Green Week, and at an event organized by Shell in Brussels on future energy scenarios, where our campaigners distributed an <a class="external-link" href="http://www.foeeurope.org/events/2008/friends%20of%20earth%20shellleaflet-1.pdf">alternative publication</a> depicting what Shell's future energy scenarios are likely to be. We also spoke directly to Shell CEO, Jeroen Van Der Veer, and EU High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy, Javier Solana. Our report, ‘<a class="external-link" href="http://www.foeeurope.org/corporates/Extractives/Extractingthetruth_April08.pdf">Extracting the truth</a>’ also revealed the oil industry’s attempts to undermine the European Commission’s Fuel Quality Directive through a barrage of oil company advertisements, which had appeared in European media in the previous year; and exposed the industry’s combative approach towards European efforts to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from fossil fuels.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In February 2008, following up on a project which started in 2006, a map with details of 50 environmentally damaging and economically dubious infrastructure projects in Central and Eastern Europe was launched by CEE Bankwatch Network and FoE Europe. The projects are either already financed, or in preparation and likely to be financed by EU structural and cohesion funds and/or the European Investment Bank (EIB). FoE Europe continues to monitor the developments of these projects, raise public awareness and campaign to stop them.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
From 28 May through to 2 June 2008, representatives of Sakhalin Environment Watch, FoE Japan and Pacific Environment conducted a fact-finding mission along the pipeline right of way for the Sakhalin-II oil and gas project. During the trip, these groups documented serious violations of public and private bank policies, internationally accepted good practice and Russian law. This <a class="external-link" href="http://www.foejapan.org/aid/jbic02/sakhalin/pdf/20080611.pdf">photo report</a> provides graphic evidence of these violations.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>To respond to various destructive projects in Southern and Eastern Africa, FoE South Africa and FoE Mozambique, together with the International Working Group on Oil, hosted the East and Southern African workshop in September 2008. Participation was from a variety of sectors that had close links to the daily reality on the ground: fishermen from Mauritius, Islamic clerics from rural Mozambique, community members from Lake Albert in Uganda, and rural community folk from Ethiopia, together with other representatives of social organizations and local communities from Angola, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Malawi, Somalia, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania and Uganda, A number of participants also came from West African countries including Chad, Congo Brazzaville, Mali and Nigeria. Critically, community people shared the experience of their present struggles and considered how these struggles could provide a platform for articulating their efforts in the future.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
FoEI also convened a network of groups focusing on the environment and social impacts of ArcelorMittal, connecting civil society organizations in the Czech Republic, Kazakhstan, Liberia, South Africa, Ukraine and the US. In 2008, we produced <a href="resolveuid/7617b0c5cc684f806f8b8513e6da3156" class="internal-link" title="south africa: in the wake of arcelormittal">a report</a> on these impacts and visited the shareholder meeting. We also met with the board of ArcelorMittal, who committed to improving their performance.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoEI continued, along with others around the world, to denounce the abuse by companies aiming to put Latin American governments under pressure. ATALC is monitoring the cases with ETI Telecom in Bolivia, RDC in Guatemala, Harken and other oil companies in Costa Rica, and Katoen Natie in Uruguay.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
FoE groups also continue to monitor regional infrastructure projects under the Initiative for the Integration of Regional Infrastructure in South America (IIRSA). Throughout 2008, FoE Uruguay monitored all infrastructure projects planned for Uruguay, especially those related to ports and harbors. FoE Brazil and FoE Argentina jointly carried out activities on the Garabi Hydro-electric complex, alerting local organizations and individuals about the potential socio-ecological impacts of this mega-project. FoE Brazil produced and screened a <a class="external-link" href="http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=anMuL699DPc">video on the Garabi project</a>, using it at schools, at rural workers’ labor unions at the Brazil-Argentina border, and on various web sites. The video was launched in the Argentinean Social Forum of Misiones, which around 500 people attended. In this process, FoE Brazil worked very closely with the large and influential Brazilian Movement of Dam Affected People (MAB).
<p>&nbsp;</p>
Together with various FoE groups, FoEI also produced a booklet '<a href="resolveuid/181ad16c1c92900e5563d5566677db21" class="internal-link" title="IIRSA: integration at risk">The story of IIRSA; Latin American people versus mega infrastructure projects and trade negotiations with the European Union</a>' This booklet is designed with popular education in mind, in line with the new FoEI communications strategy, and is currently being used in activities by us and by social movements and local leaders in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Peru and Uruguay.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoE groups in Europe and Latin America also worked together to address the impacts of European (mostly Scandinavian) pulp and paper producers in Latin America. At the European Social Forum, an exhibition exposing these impacts was displayed. Groups also worked together on a specific project relating to the Finnish company Botnia, and its activities in Uruguay. Several European investors, such as ING, decided not to finance the project as it has been highly controversial in Uruguay and Argentina and did not adhere to World Bank’s environmental standards.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In 2008, we also exposed the myth that fossil fuels are central to development. FoEI believes this assumption is misguided on both climate and development grounds, and subsidies to the fossil fuel sector must be ended. We challenged the Asian Development Bank during at its annual meeting in Madrid in May 2008. The ADB issues calls for clean energy investments to fight global warming, while providing massive financial support to dirty coal projects in Asia. Together with WEED, Oil Change International and APMDD Jubilee South, we produced a concise argument about the link between oil and poverty, which was distributed at the 2008 ADB annual meeting, the Netherlands conference in July 2008 on ‘The Future of the World Bank,’ and at the national level.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
Several FoE groups (Bolivia, Guatemala, Honduras, Indonesia, Malaysia and South Africa and affiliate member the Mineral Policy Institute) participated in the International Mining Conference and Skillshare organized by FoE Philippines in November 2007; and a 10 minute-video of women resisters, campaigners and advocates from Australia, Indonesia, Guatemala, Honduras, Mongolia, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines and Thailand was produced. The video is available at the following link: <a class="external-link" href="http://www.youtube.com/lrckskvideos">www.youtube.com/lrckskvideos</a>. Inspired by this experience, FoE national groups working with communities resisting large-scale mining projects are beginning to record testimonies in order to make another video, which will highlight women’s roles and contributions to community-based resistance movements. It is hoped that this project will also inspire other civil society groups, prompting them to give due attention to women and the gender dimensions of extractive projects such as mining.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoEI had a strong presence at several international events in 2008. We also supported the participation of community representatives and civil society organizations from the South in many international events, giving them an opportunity to publicize their experiences and struggles.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Some of the events in 2008 included:</p>
<ul><li>the annual meeting of the Asian Development Bank</li><li>the spring and annual meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF)</li><li>the annual meeting of the Inter-American Development Bank</li><li>UN Framework Convention for Climate Change meetings</li><li>UN Convention for Biological Diversity meetings</li><li>MOVIAC’s meetings</li><li>Via Campesina´s 5th International Conference </li><li>the EU-Latin American Summit and the Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal on Corporations</li><li>the III Americas Social Forum </li><li>the European Social Forum 2008 </li><li>meetings of the Latin American Network on Dams</li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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    <dc:creator>UrskaMerc</dc:creator>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/ejrn">
    <title>Economic Justice - Resisting Neoliberalism (ejrn) program highlights</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/ejrn</link>
    <description>The EJRN Program’s objective is to build sustainable societies by building people’s power and dismantling corporate power, stopping corporate-led neo-liberalism and globalization, and challenging the institutions and governments that promote unequal and unsustainable economic systems.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<blockquote>
<p><img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/229921784feeb267c991f46e3bdf6895/image_preview" alt="4187467967_91f0df52ca_b USED EJRN.jpg" /></p>
</blockquote>
<p>In 2009, FoEI’s advocacy efforts in the area of economic justice contributed to several positive developments in the EU, the OECD, the UN and a number of countries, regarding corporate practices that threaten the environment, human rights, and people's livelihoods. They have variously helped to influence policies and policy dialogue, and to strengthen civil society.</p>
<p><br />For example, through the European Coalition for Corporate Justice (ECCJ), which FoEI is a very active member of, the EJRN Program has developed legal proposals for corporate accountability and to improve OECD guidelines. The OECD now plans to revise its guidelines for multinational companies in order to improve them. <br /><br />The EJRN Program has also been successful in its efforts to persuade the EU to improve its policies and practices with respect to human rights, international trade, and corporate regulation. The EU has finally started research into improving protections for developing country citizens, against the negative impacts of EU-based business.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />EJRN also developed proposals for the EU and G-20 to regulate both EU lobbying and the financial sector. This included a campaign for the implementation of an EU lobby registry, which has now been implemented, although it only calls for voluntary registration. FoE is now pushing for this registry to be made mandatory, and together with ALTER EU has published research on current low levels of participation in the register and insufficient data quality ("The Commission's Lobby Register One Year On: Success or Failure?").<br /><br />Friends of the Earth also filed a complaint with the European Commission arguing that the European Chemical Industry Council (CEFIC), the main lobby group of the chemical industry in Brussels, had falsified its lobby expenditure report. The European Commission agreed with our conclusions and deemed CEFIC's lobby registration inaccurate and in breach of the code of conduct. The Commission temporarily suspended CEFIC and asked it to correct its stated lobby budget. <br /><br />FoE also won a case with the European Ombudsman, challenging a case of conflict of interest, concerning EU officials that accepted gifts from companies that they were supervising. The EU is now preparing new rules concerning EU officials and conflicts of interest. &nbsp;<br /><br />A successful multilingual, easy-to-use cyberaction also saw 381 parliamentary candidates, including 75 MEPs-elect from 16 countries, signing pledges on lobby transparency and ethics, trade policy, financial market rules and corporate accountability.<br /><br />As part of its ‘Global Europe’ campaign, the EJRN Program continued to support and strengthen civil society organizations representing Indigenous communities and local communities impacted by these policies. In 2009, this included calling for the suspension of the EU-Peru trade negotiations particularly over concerns about human rights violations. FoE also supported a delegation of representatives of Indigenous Peoples from Peru, Bolivia and Colombia, who toured European capitals to publicize the impacts of mining and biofuels.&nbsp;Although the EU-Peru negotiations have not yet been
suspended, this collaborative campaign has so far resulted in a commitment from
the European Commission that the negotiated Associated Agreement with Peru will
not contain any provision which would be detrimental to the rights of
indigenous people; and will contain proposals that guarantee that trade and
economic development respect the environment, as well as a binding human rights clause.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p><br />A focused effort to persuade Shell in particular to improve its business practices continues to be a priority for the EJRN Program. This has included support to FoE Nigeria in its campaign to expose the harmful nature of gas flaring. Shell's Utorogu Gas Plant and Chevron’s Escravos Gas Plant are the main sources of gas that feed the West African Gas Pipeline Project (WAGP) financed by the World Bank and its private sector insurance arm, the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA). FoE Nigeria's research and consultation with local communities revealed the harmful health impacts of processing a local cassava snack which is dried directly from the heat emitted from the flared gas. As a result, local residents raised the issue with the government and the campaign contributed to the decision by the Foreign Minister to publicly commit to enforcing the ban on gas flaring as of January 2010. FoE Nigeria has also prepared a lawsuit against ENI, an Italian gas company, for gas flaring. &nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Efforts in Nigeria have been complemented by campaigning at the international level. FoEI collaborated with several organizations to publish "Shell's Big Dirty Secret," which documents Shell's continued investment in the dirtiest forms of energy and its position as the world's most carbon intensive oil company. An OECD complaint filed by FoE Netherlands resulted in a commitment by Shell to improve its oil depot in the Philippines and its communication with surrounding communities, but Shell refused to engage on the most crucial element of the case, relocation of an oil depot.</p>
<p><br /></p>
<p class="documentdescription"><span style="font-weight: normal;" class="Apple-style-span">
On 3 December the Netherlands-based court
case against Shell got under way in The Hague. The
case has
been brought by three
Nigerian communities and FoE Netherlands/Miluedefensie
over oil
pollution in Nigeria.&nbsp;Shell&nbsp;asked the court to rule that the Dutch court has no jurisdiction over&nbsp;Shell&nbsp;Nigeria, but on 30 December the court held that the Dutch court does have jurisdiction. Given that&nbsp;Shell&nbsp;has now lost this point, an important hurdle has
been overcome, and the 'real' lawsuit can begin. This is the first time in
history that a Dutch company has been brought to trial in a Dutch court for
damages occurring abroad.



</span></p>
<p class="documentdescription"><span style="font-weight: normal;" class="Apple-style-span"><br /></span></p>
<p>

</p>
<p>In the US, the ShellGuilty campaign launched by FoEI, Oil Change and Platform London, finally saw justice done when Shell was forced to pay US$15.5 million in an out-of-court settlement for its complicity in the 1995 murder of nine Nigerian activists who opposed its gas flaring, under the US Alien Tort Statute.<br /><br />Among the many national campaigns that fall under the umbrella of the EJRN Program, FoE Uganda's efforts to stop or improve the Bujagali dam has been very effective. Bujagali Electricity Limited (BEL) and the Ugandan government have revized their compensation policies and procedures for communities affected by the construction of a dam on the River Nile that is financed by World Bank and the African Development Bank. Bujagali Electricity Limited is now providing water tanks to communities affected by the dam and those affected by the transmission line have been promised electricity to their homes. FoE Uganda has also succeeded in submitting a legal case against Lafarge group (a mining company) for illegal mining operations in Queen Elizabeth National Park, a 1,978 square kilometer protected area.<br /><br />Friends of the Earth has also succeeded in getting the world’s largest steel company, Arcelor-Mittal to make some improvements to its operations in India, South Africa, and Liberia. In collaboration with several other organizations including Vaal Environmental Justice Alliance, Karaganda Ecological Museum in Kazakhstan and the Sustainable Development Institute in Liberia, we published a report on the company's operations operations in Bosnia-Herzegovina, India, Liberia, Kazakhstan, South Africa, Romania and the Czech Republic. The report, "Arcelor-Mittal: Going nowhere slowly - A review of the global steel giant's environmental and social impacts in 2008-2009," looks at the company's current practices and makes concrete recommendations to management, shareholders, International Financial Institutions and local and national authorities. FoEI also participated in shareholder meetings of ArcelorMittal and a community meeting with the board; and sent a fact finding mission to Liberia, with seven national and European media representatives, to investigate the company’s environmental, social and human rights impacts.<br /><br />In 2009, the UN adopted the Ruggie Framework for Business and Human Rights, in response to pressure to improve its oversight of corporate behavior, from civil society groups including Friends of the Earth International. In a Joint NGO statement, a group of NGOs including FoEI congratulated the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Human Rights and Transnational Corporations and other Business Enterprises, whilst agreeing with him that the&nbsp;“international community is still in the early stages of adapting the human rights regime to provide more effective protection to individuals and communities against corporate-related human rights harms.” The Human Rights Council must now broaden the focus beyond the elaboration of the ‘protect, respect, and remedy’ framework, to include an explicit capacity to examine situations of corporate abuse.<br /><br />The EJRN Program was also very successful in strengthening the impact of hundreds of community individuals and activists across the world, including through:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Friends of the Earth's Third Annual Latin American <a href="resolveuid/6eb93f5a3244291f6163cf156453570c" class="internal-link" title="sustainability school">Sustainability School</a>, which trained 40 activists from&nbsp;</span><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Argentina, Brazil,&nbsp;</span><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Chile,</span><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">&nbsp;Colombia,&nbsp;</span><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Costa Rica,&nbsp;</span><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">El Salvador,&nbsp;</span><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Guatemala, &nbsp;Honduras,&nbsp;</span><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Mexico,&nbsp;</span><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Paraguay,</span><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">&nbsp;Peru and Uruguay. &nbsp;&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The Asia Pacific Workshop on Economic Justice and Strategic Planning for Campaigns, which trained 25 activists from&nbsp;Australia,&nbsp;Bangladesh,&nbsp;Indonesia,&nbsp;Japan,&nbsp;Malaysia,&nbsp;Nepal,&nbsp;Palestine,&nbsp;Papua New Guinea,&nbsp;the Philippines,&nbsp;South Korea,&nbsp;Sri Lanka and Timor Leste.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Community exchanges between communities in Central America affected by climate change (120 individuals attended), between communities throughout Latin America affected by agribusiness (150 individuals), and between communities in Africa affected by Arcelor-Mittal's mining operations.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Supporting FoEI representatives to attend EU conferences on corporate social responsibility, transparency with respect to lobbying, and meetings with members of the European Parliament. This included a delegation of FoEI representatives from Central American to the European Parliament, to testify to the behavior of European companies in Latin America.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">On-going technical assistance for civil society organizations in the South campaigning against harmful corporate practices. This assistance has facilitated joint North-South work on many European companies including Stora Enso, Shell, Arcelor Mittal, Monsanto, ENI, and Wilmar.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<p><br />Many other publications and other communications materials have been published including:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">"Global Europe: The tyranny of ‘free trade’ the European Way," which examined the negative consequences of Europe's shift away from a social-liberal foreign policy discourse to an approach that puts economic motivations front and center. &nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">"Poison Fire," a video documentary exposing oil and gas abuses in Nigeria and featuring FoE Nigeria volunteers.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">"Would you Bank on Them?" a report on the biased composition of La Rosiere group, that advised the EU on policies to address the financial crisis, which was published in collaboration with SpinWatch, Corporate Europe Observatory and Lobby Control.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">"A Captive Commission, the role of the financial industry in shaping EU regulation," a report on the biased composition of EU advisory groups in the financial sector. The findings of the report formed the substance of a FoE complaint to the EU Ombudsman.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">"Public money for fossil fuels in the EU and in three EU member states," by Friends of the Earth, Oil Change International and PLATFORM.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">In the US, a written presentation was submitted to the&nbsp;Obama Administration&nbsp;committee reviewing Investor Protection Agreements, at the beginning of 2009.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">In addition, research and preparation of the upcoming publication "Calling the EU’s Bluff: Who are the real champions of biodiversity and traditional knowledge in the EU-Central American and EU-Community of Andean Nations Association Agreements?" was completed.</span></li></ul>
<p><br />The EJRN Program working areas are:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Global Europe. The objective is to expose the negative impacts and the corporate bias of the European Union’s ‘Global Europe’ agenda, and to counter trade and investment agreements that are likely to harm men and women and the environment. The ATALC region is very much involved in the Global Europe campaign, as is Friends of the Earth Europe, which has called on the EU to suspend trade negotiations with Peru and Honduras, especially after the killings of Indigenous People in Peru, and the military coup in Honduras. These violent events are indicative of the harmful effects that the EU’s Global Europe agenda can have on indigenous and local communities.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Corporate Power: The objective is to expose and counter corporate crimes and their social, environmental and human rights impacts, specifically on women and men’s productive and reproductive activities. This campaign also aims to counter corporate influence over governments and institutions including international financial institutions, and the World Trade Organization (WTO). In particular, it seeks to develop and advocate for legal measures that give rights to women, men and communities, to protect themselves against corporate power.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<p><br />The EJRN Program is very much engaged in collaborative work with the other FoEI Programs. Cross-cutting areas, include the following:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With the Forests and Biodiversity Program, EJRN is driving the Campaign against Plantations, currently focused on ATALC and some FoE Europe groups, and soon to include the African and APac regions. EJRN’s contribution is to contribute to the Plantations campaign by exposing and countering the role of relevant corporations, trade and investments; and to foster activities that enable communities to resist.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With the Resisting Mining Program, the EJRN is supporting concrete campaigns to stop the mining activities of certain companies such as Shell, Holcim and Arcelor Mittal.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With the Climate Justice and Energy Program, EJRN is focusing on Climate and Finance, particularly building a common position at the federation level, including on carbon markets and the Clean Development Mechanism. EJRN is also involved in efforts to build the Movement of Victims and People Affected by Climate Change in Latin America (MOVIAC); and exposing and rejecting World Bank involvement in climate change, including through policies and programs to promote Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD) and its Climate Investment Funds (CIFs).</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With the Food Sovereignty Program, EJRN is working to create a joint campaign against agribusiness companies worldwide.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Similarly, the EJRN Programme is contributing to the Agrofuels Campaign by exposing and countering the role of corporations, trade and investments.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Coordinators and participants</h3>
<p style="margin: 0px;">Co-coordinator: Sebastián Valdomir, FoE Uruguay, sebastian@redes.org.uy&nbsp;</p>
<p style="margin: 0px;">Co-coordinator: Anne van Schaik, FoE Netherlands, anne.van.schaik@milieudefensie.nl (until Sept 2009)<br />Corporates Campaign Coordinator: Paul de Clerck, FoE Netherlands, paul@milieudefensie.nl</p>
<p style="margin: 0px;">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="margin: 0px;">The EJRN Steering Group includes:</p>
<p style="margin: 0px;">&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">For ATALC: Grace García (FoE Costa Rica), Mario Godínez (FoE Guatemala) as alternate;&nbsp;</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">For Africa: Bobby Peek (FoE South Africa);&nbsp;</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">For Europe: Asad Rehman (FoE EWNI), Charly Poppe (FoE Europe) as alternate;&nbsp;</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">For the US: Karen Orenstein (FoE US);&nbsp;</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">For Asia Pacific: Hemantha Withanage (FoE Sri Lanka)</span></li></ul>
<p style="margin: 0px;"><br />Groups that participated actively in the EJRN Program during 2009 included Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, EWNI, FoE Europe, France, Guatemala, Honduras, Indonesia, Liberia, Malawi, Malaysia, Mauritius, México, Mozambique, Netherlands, Nigeria, Papua New Guinea, Sierra Leona, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sri Lanka, Uganda, Uruguay and the United States.</p>
<p class="caption">Photo: FoEI's Angry Mermaid Award targeted the worst corporate<span class="highlightedSearchTerm"></span> lobbyists around 
climate change in Copenhagen, December 2009<span class="highlightedSearchTerm"></span>. Naomi Klein and FoEI's 
Nnimmo Bassey helped to deliver the award at the ceremony.</p>
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      <dc:subject>justice</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>economics</dc:subject>
    
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/food-sovereignty/industrial-agriculture-and-agriculture">
    <title>focusing on the links between industrial agriculture and trade</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/food-sovereignty/industrial-agriculture-and-agriculture</link>
    <description>In 2008, FoE groups from all regions compiled case studies focused on defending territories and land rights from agribusiness and controversial agricultural expansions, such as deforestation for palm plantations in Asia or land evictions for soy and tree monocultures in South America.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/4ead505000b960afb7a66a1396478469/image_preview" alt="focusing on the links between industrial agriculture and trade" />
<p>FoEI has also consolidated the joint work with social movements and
organizations around Agribusiness. This will allow the Federation to strengthen their resistance strategies, as well as the promotion of
solutions, throughout the joint fight with our allies.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>
FoE groups have produced materials (documented studies, briefings, fact
sheets and websites in different languages, and short films) and have
made strategic use of the internet for media outreach and advocacy
work to fight corporate control over food systems. This corporate
control includes monopolistic technologies such as the production and
commercialization of GMOs, agrofuels, industrial fishing and
aquaculture. For example:</p>
<ul><li>FoE EWNI’s <a class="external-link" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JamriYNT9t4">Food Chain Campaign</a> and report “What's feeding our food?” (December 2008), which highlights the environmental and social impacts of the intensive livestock sector.</li><li>FoE Australia’s <a class="external-link" href="http://www.foe.org.au/sustainable-food">Real Food Campaign.</a></li><li>FoE Uruguay’s influential research work and publications on agribusiness such as: “<a class="external-link" href="http://www.redes.org.uy/2008/03/01/agronegocios-versus-soberania-alimentaria/">Agronegocios Ltda. Nuevas modalidades de colonialismo en el Cono Sur de América Latina</a>”; and their documentary: <a class="external-link" href="http://www.redes.org.uy/2008/06/24/soberania-alimentaria-en-marcha-recuperacion-del-molino-santa-rosa">Soberanía Alimentaria en marcha. Recuperación del Molino Santa Rosa.</a> </li><li>The report “<a href="resolveuid/3f8552ea912a0539edc5e8ddf0f5f4e4" class="internal-link" title="malaysian palm oil: green gold or green wash?">Malaysian palm oil - green gold or green wash?</a>” (October 2008), which reveals that Malaysian palm oil exported for use in food, biofuels and cosmetics is far from 'green', contrary to claims by Malaysian palm oil producers. <br /></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>These materials are helping to mobilize people; they help European
consumers to make informed choices; help to ensure that social and
environmental issues are taken into account by companies; mobilize the
public and decision-makers to support changes that will help to build a
more equitable North-South relationship in a key area affecting
biodiversity, food security and poverty reduction; and contribute to
the debate about Europe’s overall levels of consumption.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>
The EU is one of the world’s biggest importers of agriculture
commodities, to supply a range of needs, from the food on our plates to
animal feed for our livestock. In addition, in response to demands to
reduce dependence on oil imports, and in order to minimize
climate-damaging greenhouse gas emissions, EU and national energy
policies are now resulting in the rapid increase of a new commodity –
agrofuels.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>
This has raised new and complex challenges for developing countries
that are expanding agricultural production to meet Europe’s demand. In
2008, FoE groups in Europe (Austria Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark,
England Wales &amp; N Ireland, Estonia, France, Malta, the Netherlands,
Poland and Spain) developed a campaign called “<a class="external-link" href="http://www.foeeurope.org/activities/general.htm">Feeding and Fuelling
Europe</a>” to raise public awareness in the EU about the impacts of the food
commodities trade, on food security, rural livelihoods and the
environment in developing countries. The campaign provides
opportunities, solutions and recommendations for citizens, policy
makers and industry. The work is coordinated with national campaign
activities aimed at fighting agribusiness and promoting food
sovereignty in FoE groups in Asia (Indonesia, Malaysia and
Philippines), Africa (Cameroon, Ghana, Nigeria and Sierra Leone) and
Latin America and the Caribbean (Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, El
Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Paraguay, Peru and Uruguay).</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/food-sovereignty/gm-free-world">
    <title>strengthening the fight for a GM-free world</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/food-sovereignty/gm-free-world</link>
    <description>The fight for a GM-free world is still a priority for the food sovereignty movement. In 2008, FoEI continued providing a comprehensive assessment of the impact of genetically modified (GM) crops in agriculture. </description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-left" src="resolveuid/6251366d22d1637d81fc7b04eae2a8d6/image_preview" alt="strengthening the fight for a GM-free world" />Once again we challenged the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications (ISAAA) with our publication <a href="resolveuid/70d6937f31a0bc9f2ce03e8016eeb36a" class="internal-link" title="who benefits from gm crops? the rise of pesticide use">Who Benefits from GM crops – the rise in pesticide use</a>, which was launched on the same day as the industry’s report. FoEI’s now annual publication has been crucial to providing an alternative analysis of the biotechnology industry’s figures on GM crops around the world. Largely as a result of FoEI media work, most news items described ISAAA as an "industry organization that promotes GM crops" instead of an "independent non-profit organization" as they did in the past. Many major newspapers covered the launch of our report, and academics, politicians and non-governmental organizations used it in their research, positioning and campaigning.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
FoEI also continued to track the liability discussions within the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety and participated in the <a class="external-link" href="http://www.iisd.ca/vol09/enb09432e.html">Fifth Meeting of the Ad Hoc Group on Liability and Redress</a>. FoEI coordinated its activities with the core group of NGOs following the Protocol’s negotiations, including Third World Network, Ecoropa, and Greenpeace. These collaborative efforts influenced governments' agreement to work towards a <a href="resolveuid/8a17327107ab7703d933902ad033fe06" class="internal-link" title="CORPORATIONS THREATEN BIOTECH TALKS">legally binding liability regime in the Biosafety Protocol</a>, during the <a href="resolveuid/868d9b41e4dc2e54b032508f18313c79" class="internal-link" title="may: urging action on biodiversity in bonn">ninth Conference of the Parties</a> in May 2008.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
FoE groups in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Paraguay, Uruguay and the USA continued to support the Landless Peasant’s Movement (MST) and other grassroots members of La Via Campesina. They also helped to expose the crimes of companies such as Chiquita, Syngenta, Monsanto, in scientific and international policy making fora, and civil society gatherings such as the Permanent People’s Tribunals in Vienna (2006), the <a href="resolveuid/868d9b41e4dc2e54b032508f18313c79" class="internal-link" title="may: urging action on biodiversity in bonn">Permanent People's Tribunal Session on Biodiversity</a>&nbsp; in Colombia (2007), Peru <a href="resolveuid/1bcde796a81226feb651f5f760721ed7" class="internal-link" title="Enlazando Alternativas 3, Lima">Enlazando Alternativas 3</a> and Guatemala (at the Americas Social Forum) 2008. In April 2008, the <a class="external-link" href="http://www.agassessment.org">International Assessment for Agriculture Science and Technology for Development </a>(IAASTD) published its report calling for a complete overhaul of corporate controlled agriculture, with more support going to peasant-based sustainable food production. FoEI was active in the final phase of the report’s development: we commented on the biotechnology sections, participated as a member of the Bureau of the IAASTD at the final plenary in Johannesburg, and provided input to the Synthesis report and the Global Summary for Decision Makers.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>These reports were very controversial as far as industry participants were concerned, and Syngenta and others walked out of the process in December. The final report was remarkably strong about the need for a radical change in agriculture, and did not promote genetically modified organisms (GMOs). It addressed the need to strengthen regional markets and protecting natural resources; the importance of traditional knowledge; diversity; agro-ecology; and the role of women in agriculture. It recognized the threats from agrofuels; GMOs; intellectual property rights rules; and the model of industrial agriculture. In short it called for more Food Sovereignty! The report was supported by 58 governments.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Europe continued to be an essentially GMO-free zone, which is a very important achievement for the European people, but also for other regions in the world. The food price crisis was cleverly used to try and persuade the EU to weaken its GMO laws and therefore get other regions of the world to grow more kinds of GMOs. FoE groups in Europe researched the issue and were able to prove that lobby groups had manipulated the facts. While this is an important success, however, we need to continue to monitor the process and ensure that laws aren’t weakened behind closed doors.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
Over the last few years, African FoE groups and civil society organizations have increased their capacities to <a href="resolveuid/ee4a35b1bcd02cd9dbe7513643751cb9" class="internal-link" title="africa: monitoring the introduction of gmos">monitor the activities of the biotech industry</a>, particularly by testing for GM presence in food supplies, including those provided as food aid (especially in Cameroon, Ghana, Mali, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Togo and Swaziland). The results of this monitoring underscore the fact that the African continent has now become a target for contaminated food exports.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
There has been significant media coverage on radio and TV and in local newspapers in Africa over the last few years. Most groups reported that public awareness about GMOs had increased among the grassroots, opinion leaders, community leaders, farmers and women; and that grassroots resistance to GMOs was building up. Sustainable agriculture has also been encouraged, and community leaders have been empowered to make informed technological choices. Furthermore, FoE Africa groups have played a key role in the creation of multi-stakeholder coalitions opposing false solutions for food security and food sovereignty (such as GMOs), like T<a href="resolveuid/61e23b4ea464750a97083dab56616b0e" class="internal-link" title="togo: reducing poverty and promoting biodiversity conservation">ogo and the COPAGEN coalition</a>. As result of these developments, many African governments have opened the door for civil society organizations to engage in the process of building domestic biosafety regimes and implementing the Cartagena Protocol.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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      <dc:subject>gmos</dc:subject>
    
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/cje">
    <title>Climate justice and energy program highlights</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/cje</link>
    <description>The CJE Program’s overall objective is to build a diverse, effective and global movement for climate justice. Climate justice is a right-based approach to the climate crisis with holds those historically responsible for the climate crisis to account. Climate justice demands structural changes to tackle neo-liberalism and radically reduce consumption. In keeping with FoEI’s mission to influence policies and policy dialogue, the CJE Program also aims to ensure that by rich industrialized Annex I countries commit to needed emissions reductions, and appropriate and sufficient financing and transfers of technology to help developing countries mitigate and adapt to climate change, allowing a just transition to sustainable, fossil-free societies.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/18777fc177f1e2acc55cfba4c3fee419/image_preview" alt="IMG_3730 USED CJE.jpg" />
<p>An excellent example of our work to empower communities is the Movement of Victims Affected by Climate Change in Central America (MOVIAC) initiative, which continued in 2009. As part of this, more than a hundred representatives of Central American movements, organizations and networks, met in June, in El Salvador. MOVIAC is an invaluable and inspirational component of the Affected Peoples Campaign. Many other FoEI member groups are now inspired to create similar national and regional grassroots movements with affected communities.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoEI’s work with affected communities also included the Climate School: Building and Mobilizing Climate Justice, which took place on 24 March 2009, in Medellin, Colombia, within the framework of the actions against the Inter-American Development Bank’s 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting, also in Medellin. In addition, a series of community exchanges between communities in Central America has enabled 120 individuals to live in and exchange experiences with other communities challenged by climate change.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoEI has also focused on developing and deepening key alliances, in order to contribute to building a diverse, effective and global movement for climate justice and energy sovereignty. For the CJE Program this has involved working closely with key social movements such as La Via Campesina and the World March of Women, throughout the year. In particular, we agreed to cohost a joint assembly at Klimaforum09 in Copenhagen, to advance the design of a political agenda that would allow us to move forward in mobilizing and organizing the defence of land. Additionally, we enhanced our cooperation with other coalitions and strategic alliances including Indigenous Peoples’ organizations, Jubilee South, the Global Forest Coalition, Jubilee South, the Durban Group, REDLAR and others.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Key moments in the evolution of these alliances in 2009 included:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">An event, "Talks between Environmentalists and Indigenous Peoples," at the World Social Forum, 31 January 2009, Belem do Para, Brazil. Organized by FoEI and the Global Forest Coalition, these strategic talks between Indigenous Peoples and environmentalists, with over 100 participants, allowed us to advance in the establishment of political agreements and strategic actions to build climate justice and to fight against the exploitation of nature.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">"Environmentalists and Indigenous Peoples united for Climate Justice," at the Foro Andino, in Colombia, 18-19 March 2009. Organized by Friends of the Earth, this event also strengthened the developing relationship between environmentalists and Indigenous Peoples from the Andean region including the U`wa, Wayuú, Nasa, Misak, Quichua and Aymara. The focus of the meeting was the impact of climate change on Indigenous Peoples’ lands and the need to move forward with a shared strategy and joint actions for climate justice.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The 5th REDLAR Mesoamerican Conference, Boquete, Panama, 22-25 April 2009.&nbsp;FoE was able to promote the idea of combining Energy Sovereignty, Climate Justice and <em>buen vivir</em>&nbsp; (literally ‘good living’) to the 264 representatives from Mesoamerica and other areas of the continent. This latter concept is central to the social movement and Indigenous Peoples in America, and is referred to as Abya Yala.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">1st Continental Summit of Indigenous Women of Abya Yala and the 4th Continental Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nationalities of Abya Yala, in Puno, Peru, 27-31 May 2009. Together with over 5,000 attendees, Friends of the Earth participated in talks, workshops and meetings at both summits. This was an excellent opportunity to contribute to the establishment of the concept of <em>buen vivir </em>and to strengthen ties and move forward with strategies for climate justice.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Friends of the Earth also participated in the Asia Pacific Peoples’ Solidarity for Climate Justice organizing meeting, to contribute to preparations for the week of civil society activities that took place in parallel to the Bangkok UNFCCC intersessional meeting, 28 September to 9 October 2009.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">At the 1st International Climate Justice Tribunal, Cochabamba, Bolivia, 14-16 October 2009, FoEI presented a case about sugarcane cutters in South-western Colombia to the tribunal, contributing to the debate on environmental crimes, the climate and environmental debt. This case was the direct result of an international mission for the verification of agrofuels in Colombia, which FoEI organized in July 2009, with the participation of more than 40 international delegates. The mission visited five regions in Colombia which have been severely impacted by the expansion of sugar cane and palm oil to produce agrofuels.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The months preceding COP-15 in Copenhagen involved extensive and improved collaboration with social movements - especially Via Campesina and the World March of Women - and other civil society organizations, around plans for Copenhagen, including the joint Klimaforum events, mobilizations and media work. FoEI also participated in Climate Justice Action preparations, and organized and participated in a Climate Justice Now! strategy meeting in Bangkok in October.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In 2009 FoEI's campaigning on the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) negotiations&nbsp;involved the production and distribution of a substantial number of policy proposals and analyses in the run-up to COP-15 in Copenhagen. A new and rapidly developing focus in this respect is climate finance, a cross-cutting campaign being run with FoEI’s&nbsp;Economic Justice Resisting Neoliberalism (EJRN) program. We developed a robust position paper in collaboration with campaigners from the EJRN campaign, which formed the foundation for much of our campaigning before and during Copenhagen. FoEI also began to contribute to the climate finance debate within the climate justice movement. Nearly 10,000 copies of our climate finance materials, "Financing Climate Justice: Ensuring a Just Agreement on Climate Change," and "Financing Climate Justice: Summary of Demands and Ethical Criteria Matrix" were distributed in Copenhagen, in English, French and Spanish. FoEI’s ethical criteria matrix provides governments with a set of criteria for judging climate financing mechanisms proposed during negotiations.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Thousands of copies of our 2008 publication "REDD Myths: a critical review of proposed mechanisms to reduce emissions from deforestation and degradation in developing countries" were also re-printed and distributed in Copenhagen, as was "Voices from communities affected by climate change." In addition, 5,000 copies of the popular FoEI newspaper, "Climate Justice Times," were also distributed. &nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The joint efforts of FoEI and key allies has helped to ensure that a number of governments, such as Bolivia, have officially voiced their concerns about the potential negative impacts of UNFCCC, World Bank and national policies to finance Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD), especially if REDD is used to support plantations and is funded through carbon markets. As a result of lobbying by FoEI and allies, the UNFCCC’s REDD draft reflected these concerns. A key element in this effort was a side event on the potential impacts of REDD on Indigenous Peoples’ rights and biodiversity and the risks of GE trees, on 3 June, parallel to the meetings of the Subsidiary Bodies to the UNFCCC in Bonn. This was co-organized with the Global Forest Coalition and the International Alliance on Indigenous and Tribal Peoples of the Tropical Forest. Many FoEI member groups have also been informed and thus enabled to participate in national REDD policy discussions currently underway.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>During the year we also produced a video trilogy, "Towards Solutions on Sustainable Energy Practices". In addition, we distributed and publicized a Friends of the Earth Europe Study entitled "The 40% Study: Mobilizing Europe to Achieve Climate Justice," which shows that domestic emissions cuts of at least 40% in Europe by 2020 are both feasible and affordable.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>This research, combined with our advocacy activities, also allowed us to be particularly effective in persuading governments in many countries in the global North to introduce binding climate change laws that will help to reduce those countries’ carbon emissions. This was especially the case in Europe where FoE has focused on its Big Ask campaign: France, Scotland and the UK passed climate change laws setting emissions reductions targets, and it seems likely that similar laws will soon be passed in a number of other European countries including Austria, Belgium, Hungary, Ireland and Slovenia.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Other member groups have also been very active on climate change. In March 2009, for example, FoE Japan organized an international workshop on climate change impacts and solutions faced by developing countries, with presentations from the Japanese government, the World Bank and several international organizations. FoEI’s involvement focused on showing how climate change and its false solutions are a result of the current neoliberal production and consumption model.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Although Copenhagen was an abject failure, it was a key moment in the intergovernmental debate on mitigating and adapting to climate change, because of the urgent need to agree and develop a successor to the first phase of the Kyoto Protocol before it expires in 2012. FoEI took a team of 400 activists to Copenhagen: some of them were engaged in lobbying and advocacy work within the Bella Center, whilst others were focused on the daily mobilizations and alternative events, including the Klimaforum, which were so important to ensuring governments heard the critical voices of civil society.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>From the talks in the Klimaforum, demonstrations on the streets, and actions in the conference centre, the message was loud and clear: any climate agreement must be based on climate justice. This was an important development: before Copenhagen the term ‘climate justice’ was much discussed in civil society meetings but more-or-less unknown elsewhere. During Copenhagen on the other hand, it began appearing frequently in the mainstream media.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>We promoted the development of many actions/spaces for campaigning and mobilizing during COP-15 and Klimaforum09. This included FoE Europe’s work developing the Flood for Climate Justice, an extremely successful demonstration which more than 5,000 people from many countries participated in. The event also involved mock carbon traders trying to sell carbon offsets to protestors, and a fake carbon stock exchange. It ended in front of the Danish Parliament with the creation of a massive human banner reading “Offsetting is a false solution.”</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoEI also drew public attention to our positions and alternatives for sustainable livelihoods through both traditional and new creative media activities and actions. During Copenhagen, we posted 37 blog entries and 9 videos on FoEI's You Tube channel, and 300 high-quality images on Flickr. Prior to Copenhagen, we created a website to feature the <a class="external-link" href="http://www.angrymermaid.org/">Angry Mermaid Award</a> which included an animation story on the effect of corporate neglect of climate change on communities in the South: the website had 23,851 views. In Copenhagen's Klimaforum09, we presented an interactive <a href="resolveuid/db198cf5963d5772e8101fc159a5ef49" class="internal-link" title="climate capsule delivers people’s messages to copenhagen">Climate Capsule installation</a> with videos, photos and drawings from around the world. We also conducted outreach on climate change during the international tour of the rock band Radiohead, and produced the graphic novel "<a href="resolveuid/f3678b505ac03a6bc426a34b6809e7d9" class="internal-link" title="speechless: a wordless history of the world">Speechless</a>" about the history of economic globalization.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>A further key objective for the CJE program is to stop World Bank pollution of the climate debate. During 2009 we continued to monitor and conduct advocacy around the World Bank’s framework on clean energy investment and the emission-trading schemes promoted by IFIs. In September we organized a public forum on climate debt alongside the Intersessional Meeting on Climate Change in Bangkok, and a public forum on climate change and financing. FoEI was co-organizer of an international meeting on Financing Strategy and Climate, along with other networks and organizations including Jubilee South, Focus on the Global South, and Oilwatch. FoEI also supported the production of the FoEI Asia Pacific (APac) region’s first climate publication, "Climate Impacts of the ADB's Business: How the Asian Development Bank Finances Climate Change."</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoE also participated in the civil society campaign to stop governments subsidizing the climate-wrecking fossil fuels industry. In April 2009, we published Public Money for Fossil Fuels in the EU and three EU Member States, to identify the many sources of public investments in harmful industries. In 2009, both the G-20 and the UN made agreements to phase out subsidies for fossil fuels, which will have a positive impact on policies regarding renewable energy.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Some FoE groups are also focusing on private finance and its role in driving climate change. FoE Netherlands, for example, has conducted research into systems for measuring carbon footprints, which was presented during a Banktrack meeting for private banks in Washington. The Climate Working Group of banks involved in the Equator Principles is now organizing workshops to develop and implement such a methodology. The outcome of our activities is that among these banks the question is not 'whether' or 'why' they should measure carbon footprints, but 'how'. FoE Netherlands has also convinced private banks in the Netherlands to commit to improving their energy-related investment policies.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The Climate Justice &amp; Energy Program working areas are:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span"></span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Energy sovereignty</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Climate and finance / Carbon and forest markets</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">UNFCCC (including REDD), and</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Stopping World Bank pollution of the climate debate.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Cross campaign areas include:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With the Forests and Biodiversity Program - the REDD campaign</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With the Forests and Biodiversity Program, the Food Sovereignty Program, and the EJRN Program - Agrofuels</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With the EJRN program - Financing and Climate, particularly building a common position at the federation level, including on carbon markets and the Clean Development Mechanism</span></li></ul>
<div>&nbsp;</div>
<h3>Coordinators and participants<br /></h3>
<p>In 2009, the co-coordinators of the Climate Justice &amp; Energy (CJE) Program were:</p>
<ul><li>Hildebrando Vélez and Irene Vélez, FoE Colombia</li><li>Joseph Zacune, FoE EWNI</li><li>Stephanie Long, FoE Australia<br /></li></ul>
<p><br />&nbsp;The CJE Steering Group included:<br /><br /></p>
<ul><li>For ATALC: Eduardo Giesen, FoE Chile,</li><li>For Europe: Sonja Meister, FoE Europe,</li><li>For Africa: Michael Keania Karikpo, FoE Nigeria</li><li>For North America: Karen Orenstein, FoE US</li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Groups that participated actively in the CJE Program in 2009 included: Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Belgium, Belgium (Flanders and Brussels), Brazil, Cameroon, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, El Salvador, England, Wales &amp; N Ireland, Finland, France, Germany, Ghana, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Liberia, Malawi, Malaysia, Mauritius, Mexico, Mozambique, Nepal, Netherlands, Nigeria, Norway, Palestine, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Philippines, Poland, Scotland, South Africa, Spain, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, Uganda, Ukraine, Uruguay and the US.</p>
<p><br /><br /></p>
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      <dc:subject>justice</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>climate</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2009-07-08T16:40:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/member-groups/europe/europe-the-netherlands-and-uruguay-ex-changing">
    <title>foe europe, the netherlands and uruguay: (ex)changing worlds!</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/member-groups/europe/europe-the-netherlands-and-uruguay-ex-changing</link>
    <description>Neoliberal economic globalization creates unfair and often damaging links between impoverished nations in the south and rich industrialized countries in the north.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/02089d81f1ed386233e6855f0d890109/image_preview" alt="foe europe, the netherlands and uruguay: (ex)changing worlds!" />
<p>Powerful transnational corporations drive the process, perpetuating the unsustainable transfer of natural resources between the two worlds. International trade can be devastating for people and their environment in exporting countries, and is squeezing the life out of local economies everywhere.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Friends of the Earth groups campaigning for economic justice aim to challenge these corporate giants head-on, and change the dynamics of international trade. To do this they need a thorough understanding of the different economic, political, social and cultural forces driving production, trade and consumption – and thus each other’s campaigns - in different parts of the world.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4>what happened?</h4>
<p><a href="resolveuid/1a339d9d1c3def5b9e78f124d5db7962" class="internal-link" title="uruguay">FoE Uruguay / REDES</a> and <a href="resolveuid/317e05eba5e9ed24cbafeb311d234804" class="internal-link" title="paraguay">FoE Paraguay / Sobrevivencia</a> hosted European campaigners in the first step of a staff exchange designed to facilitate a deeper shared understanding of the different contexts within which their Economic Justice campaigns operate.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Anne van Schaik, head of <a href="resolveuid/e35c0ee85d5d67a7fc38e8816c4712a7" class="internal-link" title="Netherlands">FoE Netherlands</a>’ campaign on globalization and the environment, was welcomed by FoE Uruguay and FoE Paraguay. They compared their approaches to campaigning on corporates and globalization, and deepened their understanding of the different political and economic contexts in Europe and Latin America. Anne also met local communities, gave radio interviews in both Uruguay and Paraguay, and talked to farmers and regional activists in Paraguay during training courses on sustainability. Field trips also gave her an opportunity to see the impacts of the expansion of transgenic soybean cultivation first-hand.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Christine Pohl, FoE Europe’s campaigner on pulp mills and plantations helped to prepare a dossier on the Botnia pulp mill and plantation with FoE Uruguay, working from their office in Montevideo. She traveled to Peru with FoE Uruguay and the Radio Mundo Real team, who submitted the dossier to the people’s tribunal on environmental and human rights violations committed by European companies in Latin America. (This tribunal was held on the 16-17 May 2008, and was part of the Enlazando Alternativas III peoples' summit.) Christine also presented the results of FoE Europe’s research on “European financing of agrofuel production in Latin America” to a workshop at the summit.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Christine said, “I was warmly and kindly welcomed and very well cared for, and when I had to leave again, I was sad to leave these lovely people behind. These friendships I now have with people on the other side of the world are the most motivating and encouraging experience of the exchange for me. I believe that such friendships and personal bonds form a very large and important part of effective international cooperation.”</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4>lessons learned</h4>
<p>The exchanges deepened campaigners’ understanding of each other’s work and the various forces shaping their campaigns on globalization, market mechanisms and corporations. Anne and Christine, for example, gained a much deeper insight into the way in which foreign politics impacts peoples’ day-to-day life in Latin America. This means that campaigns challenging neoliberal politics, which are considered radical in Europe, attract strong public support in Latin America. They also met and talked to communities and farmers living with the social and environmental problems created by international trade in commodities like soy.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>All the participants benefited from a renewed focus on campaign communications. Together they considered how to strengthen Radio Mundo Real as a tool to communicate the Environmental Justice program’s activities, and planned ways of bringing the voices of affected peoples to a northern public. Christine learned about engaging the media in a Latin American context, from media work around the Botnia dossier.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The experience of working together closely on a day-to-day basis also helped to create friendships and build better working relationships across the federation. Anne, for example, is now working very closely with Sebastian Valdomir from FoE Uruguay as they jointly coordinate FoEI’s Economic Justice program.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>It also gave all participants a better understanding of each others’ social and political contexts, which lead to different ways of working with people and the media in different regions.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Anne explained, “It has given me better understanding of why the groups in Uruguay and Paraguay work the way they do. I was very impressed with their local campaigns, like the seed-gathering project to prevent biodiversity being lost, and the organic farm which also acts as a base for national activists in Uruguay and their international visitors. These are new forms of organizing that we don’t have in the Netherlands.”</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4>what next?</h4>
<p>Anne has invited groups from the Latin American region to visit the Netherlands, Brussels and the UK in 2009, to participate in a return staff exchange.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The seeds have also been sown for future campaigning, including on deforestation, plantations and the cellulose chain. The first steps of this have happened already, when FoE Uruguay and other FoE groups prepared a photo exhibition on Paper and Ethanol, and met at the 2008 European Social Forum in Malmo, Sweden, to plan future cooperation on the cellulose chain campaign.<strong><br /></strong></p>
<p><strong><br /></strong></p>
<p><strong>see:</strong> The picture exhibition at: <a class="external-link" href="http://www.foeeurope.org/exhibitions/spip.php?article2">http://www.foeeurope.org/exhibitions/spip.php?article2</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><em>with thanks to our funders: the dutch ministry of foreign affairs (dgis)</em></strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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    <dc:date>2009-04-15T16:05:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/member-groups/latin-america-and-the-caribbean/uruguay-radio-mundo-real">
    <title>uruguay: real world radio voices concerns of thousands</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/member-groups/latin-america-and-the-caribbean/uruguay-radio-mundo-real</link>
    <description>Radio Mundo Real (Real World Radio) is an online multilingual radio service run by Friends of the Earth Uruguay / REDES. </description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p><a class="external-link" href="http://www.radiomundoreal.fm/"><img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/1de0e831c7bcfb0e908184b39bce1b57" alt="radio mundo real - logo" /></a>
It was established in September 2003, during the World Trade Organization’s Ministerial Conference in Cancun, Mexico, to support the social movements, networks and organizations resisting liberalization. Ever since, the radio has covered key events dealing with social and environmental issues, has opened up a space for the voices and testimonies of those worst affected by liberalization and privatization policies and mega infrastructure projects, and has reported on the impacts of the neoliberal agenda in different parts of the world.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4>what happened?</h4>
<p><a class="external-link" href="http://www.radiomundoreal.fm">Real World Radio</a> produces a daily news report, which is syndicated to community radio stations around the world. The report is offered in a variety of formats, both audio and written, and CDs are distributed weekly to radio stations in regions without good internet access. <a href="resolveuid/1a339d9d1c3def5b9e78f124d5db7962" class="internal-link" title="uruguay">Friends of the Earth Uruguay / REDES</a> has also given assistance to countries where internet connectivity is a problem and has worked to reach a wider audience. A newsletter with the most relevant news stories and features on specific themes is distributed to a list of subscribers - mostly organizations - and to several electronic lists.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The different categories it covers have been organized to foster and facilitate interaction with FoEI programs. New sections have also been created, such as the one for Peoples Affected by Climate Change.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>During 2008, Real World Radio covered events including the Forum of the Peoples Affected by Climate Change in Guatemala; the Conference of Parties to the Biodiversity Convention in Bonn, Germany; the Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal against TNCs held during the Peoples’ Summit in Lima, Peru; and the Americas Social Forum in Guatemala. It has also followed the free trade agenda, and more specifically the Global Europe Strategy and the negotiation of Association or Partnership Agreements led by the European Union.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In 2008, a new program was introduced. ‘Thousand Voices’ is a lively one-hour program, which is broadcast from Montevideo every Friday and then played by different radio stations and networks in the region. Correspondents from other countries, as well as activists and leaders from social movements, all contribute to the program.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4>lessons learned</h4>
<a class="external-link" href="http://www.radiomundoreal.fm/?q=es/taxonomy/term/27">Thousand Voices</a> has been a great success. It was quickly taken up by community radio stations and radio networks, proving that the culture of listening to radio programs is still alive and strong, and is an excellent way of communicating with local communities.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4>what next?</h4>
<p>FoE Uruguay is currently working with FoE groups from Africa to develop the service in French. They aim to expand the number of languages offered and to reach Asian community radio stations too. In the near future, they hope to produce video as well as audio programs and interviews.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em><strong>with thanks to our funders: the isvara foundation and the dutch ministry of foreign affairs (dgis)</strong></em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/member-groups/latin-america-and-the-caribbean/atalc-working-with-ip-on-climate">
    <title>atalc: working together with indigenous peoples in the fight for climate justice</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/member-groups/latin-america-and-the-caribbean/atalc-working-with-ip-on-climate</link>
    <description>Many of the people most affected by the impacts of climate change are Indigenous Peoples and local communities who have not previously been engaged in or able to influence the development of climate change policies.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-left" src="resolveuid/c81fa0ea7683aee14c220432099c4141/image_preview" alt="atalc: working together with indigenous peoples in the fight for climate justice" />
<p>But Indigenous communities also possess a vast knowledge capable of contributing significantly to the construction of climate justice and energy sovereignty at the local and global levels. They both need and have a right to be heard when it comes to the development of local and national policies and decision-making processes relating to their natural patrimony: climate change and the policies reponses selected are both likely to have a significant impact on their communities, their livelihoods and their territories.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The relationship between environmentalists and Indigenous Peoples needs to be strengthened so that we can work together to build local climate regimes founded in justice and dignity. Opportunities to discuss and develop ideas, and build spaces of resistance are critical.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4>what happened?</h4>
<p>FoE Latin America and the Caribbean (ATALC) has been developing a programme of activities together with the Movement of Victims and People Affected by Climate Change (MOVIAC), to strengthen the combined capacity of indigenous peoples and environmentalists to shape the climate change agenda.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
In June 2008, <a href="resolveuid/f9dc64c1ca312a9a24938651f42eda54" class="internal-link" title="El Salvador">Friends of the Earth El Salvador / CESTA</a> hosted the first regional meeting of MOVIAC. Later, in October, MOVIAC and ATALC organized a series of activities and workshops which were mainly attended by indigenous groups at the <a href="resolveuid/e88e8d50b0cda23f89b932325d911790" class="internal-link" title="el salvador: building a movement to resist climate change">Third Social Forum of the Americas in Guatemala.</a>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a href="resolveuid/52f986b2047790eb4fa275c3f237fcb5" class="internal-link" title="Colombia">CENSAT Agua Viva / FoE Colombia</a> hosted the Caribbean Environmental Initiative, 1-4 December 2008 in Cartagena, Colombia, where various Indigenous Peoples affected by unsustainable energy projects (such as the Urra dam, the Jepirrachí wind farm, the operations of Electricaribe and EPM, among others) met other social organizations (including campesinos, fishers, and public service users). This provided an excellent opportunity to identify the impact of these various projects on their different constituencies and to find out more about the false solutions to climate change proposed by the World Bank and related institutions like the Clean Development Mechanism.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
A workshop on climate change negotiating proposals on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) was also hosted by <a href="resolveuid/317e05eba5e9ed24cbafeb311d234804" class="internal-link" title="paraguay">Sobrevivencia / FoE Paraguay</a> in Asunción, Paraguay, in November 2008. It was attended by 30 representatives from social organizations from the Americas. The workshop included a strategy meeting to adopt a position about the impact of REDD on Indigenous Peoples and other vulnerable communities and groups, which included demands for Climate Justice Now!, energy sovereignty, recognition of the victims of climate change, climate debt, and the implementation of realistic and effective measures to face the climate crisis. This position was then circulated internationally and has been presented at regional and global forums including the climate change talks in Poznan in 2008, and the World Social Forum (WSF) in Brazil in January 2009.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Indigenous Peoples from Colombia, Ecuador, and Bolivia were also able to participate in international spaces, informing debates with their vision of the cosmos; their experiences in fighting, resisting and suffering environmental injustices; and the increasing criminalization of their struggles. This contributed to much great shared understanding and solidarity and the gradual development of a common agenda amongst many social movements.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4>what changed?</h4>
<p>The project contributed to increased understanding of global and local visions around climate change, and provided a series of opportunities for Indigenous Peoples and environmentalists to exchanges ideas, perspectives and information.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Everyone participating is now better informed about the structural causes of climate change; resistance struggles against plantations, hydroelectric and other energy projects; and ‘consultation’ processes that actually seek to implement false solutions to climate change that will involve the privatization of territories.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The relationship between FoEI and Indigenous Peoples Organizations has been deepened and reinforced, especially around the defense of territories and ancestral cultures as an alternative to the economic model, which is the main cause of climate change. This has resulted in the development of a common agenda to mobilize for Climate Justice and the evolution of a transformation agenda around the ‘buen vivir’ (good life), the sustainability of pachamama, and peoples territorial sovereignty and autonomy.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>It is also important to highlight the increased visibility, at the local, national and international levels,&nbsp; of Indigenous Peoples’ political, cultural and artistic dynamics, which increases the mobilization capacity of both Indigenous Peoples and environmentalists.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4>lessons learned?</h4>
<p>The lack of knowledge and recognition about the structural causes of climate change slow the process of expansion of the Climate Justice approach. Asymmetries in organizational and resistance processes among IPs, where few are still in the process of reaffirming their identities. The process initiated with this project will certainly benefit them as will bring together experiences of IPs with stronger organizational structures and processes. The underlying challenge is the process of de-colonization of the occidental world, as the transformation agenda connected with the “buen vivir”implies the destructing of many of concepts we use in the normal discur.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4>what next?</h4>
<p>The World Social Forum 2009 will provide an excellent opportunity for a strategic dialogue among environmentalists and Indigenous Peoples. The Andean Forum (18-19 March 2009, in Popayán, Colombia), will also bring together Indigenous Peoples and environmental and social organizations from across the Andean region. As outcomes of the forum we seek the reaffirmation of 12 October as a day to celebrate freedom and the defence of pachamama (mother earth). We also hope to agree on common actions in preparation for the Copenhagen climate change talks in December 2009, and activities to promote territorial sovereignty, among others.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Highlights of the common mobilization agenda for 2009 will include Indigenous Peoples’ gatherings in Brazil at the WSF (January), the USA and Colombia (April), and Peru (May); participation in a global week of action against social and ecological debt, the global day for freedom and the defense of pachamama, and global food day (all in October); and many actions in support of climate justice in December. There is also a proposal to organize a thematic World Social Forum about the crisis of civilization, in 2010.</p>
<p><br /><strong><em>with thanks to our funders: the isvara foundation</em></strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p class="caption">Photo credits: CENSAT Agua Viva / FoE Colombia</p>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/communications/publications-and-materials/the-story-of-iirsa">
    <title>the story of iirsa</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/communications/publications-and-materials/the-story-of-iirsa</link>
    <description>One of the biggest threats to people and ecosystems in Latin America is a grand scheme for infrastructure projects known as “IIRSA” for short.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p><img class="image-left" src="resolveuid/b011d4f2915db7ce0e953128aa6cb924/image_preview" alt="the story of IIRSA - front page" />Rather than serving local economies and preserving biodiversity, the so-called ‘Initiative for the Integration of Regional Infrastructure in South America’ emphasizes highways and waterways, mainly for commercial purposes. &nbsp;<br /><br />In 2008, Friends of the Earth International produced a popular outreach booklet full of colorful drawings made by a collective of women illustrators in Colombia. The booklet introduces the reader to Lucia and members of her rural community, who together discover the story of IIRSA. <br /><br />The booklet was extremely well received in Latin America. Some 500 copies were distributed at events such as the Indigenous Peoples Summit and Enlazando Alternativas in Peru in May 2008, at a workshop with 200 Amazonian community leaders in Brazil in July, and among communities and primary school teachers in Argentina.<br /><br />The booklet is available from the Friends of the Earth International website in <a href="resolveuid/f193911d8314d1b6a1df578273cbaffc" class="internal-link" title="iirsa: integración en riesgo">Spanish</a> and <a href="resolveuid/181ad16c1c92900e5563d5566677db21" class="internal-link" title="IIRSA: integration at risk">English</a>.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><em>with thanks to our funders: the c.s. mott foundation</em></strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/program-highlights">
    <title>programs and campaigns highlights in 2009</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/program-highlights</link>
    <description> In 2009, Friends of the Earth International had six active international programs and campaigns. Within these we coordinated a wide range of actions at the international, regional, national and local levels, that improve the ability of peoples and communities around the world to secure sustainable livelihoods and protect our environment for generations to come.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/5e90f1116660e8fabdf0438e5f2f3310/image_preview" alt="nnimmo-copenhagen" />
<h3>climate justice and energy</h3>
<p>Our <a href="resolveuid/2b1148b04b917f1dd54159f1b4f38149" class="internal-link" title="Climate justice and energy sovereignty program highlights in 2009">Climate Justice and Energy (CJE) Program</a>’s overall objective is to build a diverse, effective and global movement for climate justice. In 2009, FoEI continued our close collaboration with key social movements, especially La Via Campesina, and the World March of Women, and the new Movement of Victims Affected by Climate Change in Central America (MOVIAC). New links with indigenous networks and movements were also fostered at key events during the year, and FoEI collaborated with many other networks including Climate Justice Now!, Asia Pacific Peoples’ Solidarity for Climate Justice, and Climate Justice Action.<br /><br />The CJE Program’s goal is to ensure that rich industrialized Annex I countries had committed to needed emissions reductions, and to financing and transferring technology to help developing countries mitigate and adapt to climate change. We published a substantial number of policy proposals and analyses in the run-up to the COP-15 UNFCCC in Copenhagen, in December 2009. This included an ethical climate finance criteria matrix, which provided governments with a set of criteria for judging climate financing mechanisms proposed during negotiations. <br /><br />FoEI took a team of 400 activists to Copenhagen, who variously engaged in lobbying and advocacy work, and organizing and participating in alternative events and daily mobilizations, including our hugely successful Flood for Climate Justice mobilization. The joint efforts of FoEI and key allies helped to ensure that a number of governments, including Bolivia, officially voiced their concerns about the potential negative impacts of UNFCCC, World Bank and national policies to finance Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD).<br /><br />Although the results of the Copenhagen summit were extremely disappointing, many FoEI member groups in the global North have been very effective in persuading their governments to introduce binding national climate change laws, which will help to reduce those countries’ carbon emissions. This was especially the case in Europe where France, Scotland and the UK passed climate change laws setting binding emissions reductions targets. It seems likely that similar laws will soon be passed in a number of other European countries including Austria, Belgium, Hungary, Ireland and Slovenia.<br /><br />During 2009 we also continued to monitor and conduct advocacy around the World Bank’s framework on ‘clean energy investment’ and the emissions trading schemes promoted by the international financial institutions (IFIs). In 2009, both the G-20 and the UN made agreements to phase out subsidies for fossil fuels, which will have a positive impact on the development and spread of renewable energy technologies.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>food sovereignty</h3>
<p>FoEI’s <a href="resolveuid/f08719e320f862403079c0d2557ef35f" class="internal-link" title="Food Sovereignty Program highlights in 2009">Food Sovereignty Program</a>&nbsp;aims to halt the corporate control of food, and stop the spread of genetically modified organisms: it defends the right of people to determine and control their own food systems. In 2009, we attended the High-Level Meeting on Food Security in Madrid where Via Campesina and FoE Spain’s joint actions outside the conference got excellent coverage, and Henry Saragih from Via Campesina was eventually invited to speak on behalf of civil society in the final plenary session. The response from the conference was striking: the applause was deafening, and the meeting ended without consensus on a new 'Global Partnership', which was in line with civil society proposals (although the official website is less clear about this outcome).<br /><br />The 17th session of the UN Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD) also saw important progress on food sovereignty when proposals from the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food included peoples’ right to access land and define their own food policies, and the need for governments to support the least protected people and implement food production models that do not contribute to climate change. This position strongly echoes the positions of Vía Campesina and FoEI, although it does not yet go far enough.<br /><br />The struggle for a GM-free world remains a priority, and includes campaigns against soy monocultures, genetically modified (GM) food aid, and the dominant model of production. FoEI is campaigning to increase land available to family farmers and for rural agriculture. In 2009, we published our annual research report on GM crops, "Who Benefits from GM Crops? Feeding the biotech giants, not the world’s poor," which challenges the ability of GM crops to contribute to poverty reduction, global food security or sustainable farming.<br /><br />Friends of the Earth groups and allies are also maintaining pressure on the GM industry at the national and regional levels. This has had a particularly marked impact in Europe, where European Commission efforts to allow two new varieties of genetically modified (GM) maize to be grown in Europe, and to force Greece, Hungary and France to drop their national bans on a similar GM maize, were overturned by member states. Civil society organizations were clearly instrumental in this. This resistance received a further boost in April, when Germany banned Monsanto's GM maize MON810. This was a huge success for FoE Germany and other environmental and agricultural organizations who have worked hard for this outcome for many years. There have also been strong FoE campaigns against GM crops in many countries, including Mexico, Nigeria and Paraguay.<br /><br />FoEI is also starting to build a new global campaign challenging agribusiness, with Via Campesina and the World March of Women. In 2009, this included regional food sovereignty forums in Paraguay and Nigeria. Together with Food and Water Watch and the European Co-ordination of Via Campesina, we also produced a groundbreaking film, "Killing Fields: the battle to feed factory farms," which investigates the impacts of growing soy in South America to feed factory farms in Europe.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>agrofuels</h3>
<p>FoEI’s <a href="resolveuid/7c6b87f79570c3e31bc678ce6164f6a2" class="internal-link" title="Agrofuels campaign highlights in 2009">Agrofuels Campaign</a> aims to stop the production, trade and consumption of agrofuels, by raising public awareness about its negative impacts on local communities and globally. In 2009, the campaign focused on strengthening local communities’ defence of their territories, and exposing ‘false solutions’ to the climate and energy crisis. A prerequisite for this was compiling FoEI members’ research, reports, and national and regional positions. <br /><br />The Agrofuels Campaign integrates FoEI’s ongoing campaign against deforestation caused by oil palm plantations. 2009 was particularly notable because of the World Bank’s suspension of its investments in oil palm plantation companies. A coalition of local and international NGOs, spearheaded by the UK organization Forest Peoples Program and including FoE Netherlands, had previously filed a complaint with the International Finance Corporation (IFC)'s internal watchdog, the Compliance Advisory Ombudsman office (CAO), about a series of loans to palm oil giant&nbsp;Wilmar International. A joint report by three NGOs (FoE Netherlands, Kontak Rakyat Borneo and Gemawan) had examined&nbsp;Wilmar's plantations in Sambas, West Kalimantan, Indonesia, and found that the company was working with dubious licenses, and was entangled in land rights conflicts and illegal logging activities. This complaint triggered an audit by the CAO, which concluded that the IFC had violated its own procedures, and that commercial interests had overruled the IFC's environmental and social standards.<br /><br />FoEI groups from Indonesia, Malaysia and Papua New Guinea also joined forces to develop and propose a mandatory code of conduct for Malaysian palm oil companies operating in Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. They received positive responses from Malaysia’s Human Rights Council and the Opposition Party, who accepted that Malaysian palm oil expansion has created adverse impacts. Friends of the Earth also filed a complaint with the UK Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) against the Malaysian Palm Oil Council for falsely advertising that palm oil is the "only product able to sustainably and efficiently meet a larger portion of the world's increasing demand for oil crop-based consumer goods, foodstuffs and biofuels." The ASA ruled that this statement was misleading, as was the Malaysian Palm Oil Council’s claim that palm oil contributes to alleviation of poverty. In November 2009, we also filed a grievance with the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) against the Malaysian Palm Oil Council, for violating the members' Code of Conduct and continuing to mislead the public and make unsubstantiated claims about the production, procurement and use of palm oil.<br /><br />A process of capacity-building on agrofuels, land rights and monoculture was also initiated in Central America. We helped to coordinate different groups and communities wanting to work together on agrofuels. A video on Monocultures, Land and Agrofuels in Central America was created by FoE El Salvador with communities’ support. FoEI also organized an international delegation to gather evidence on the impact of agrofuels in Colombia.<br /><br />Friends of the Earth’s aim of reaching a broader public was also substantially achieved through the broadcasting of footage from our commissioned film, "Lost in Palm Oil."<br /><br />Lobbying efforts in Europe remain focused on challenging the EU’s target of 10% of all road transport fuel coming from ‘renewable’ sources by 2020, with a majority likely to come from agrofuels. Key to this is increasing Europeans’ awareness of the impacts of agrofuels and about potential alternatives. This included the publication of "Biofuels: handle with care," an analysis of EU biofuels policy with recommendations for action, in November 2009.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>forests and biodiversity<br /></h3>
<p>FoEI’s<a href="resolveuid/b696371bc6ab3775cdcbcb21a924d5c7" class="internal-link" title="Forest and biodiversity program highlights in 2009"> Forests and Biodiversity Program</a> campaigns against illegal logging and deforestation, and works with communities and local people to uphold their rights to manage their forests. We also expose and oppose the negative impacts of monoculture plantations of crops such as sugar cane, palm oil and soy, planted to produce agrofuels. <br /><br />The Forests and Biodiversity program’s focus on strengthening and promoting sustainable local initiatives means that some of its key activities and successes occur at the national level. For example, in Uruguay Friends of the Earth successfully halted construction of the controversial pulp and paper mill proposed by ENCE who had been planning to invest US$1,500 million. In Malaysia, Friends of the Earth filed a lawsuit to save a water-catchment forest on the Jerai mountain in Kedah from a quarry project that has been illegally approved by the state government. The Indonesian President identified illegal logging as a form of entrenched corruption, saying that he appreciated the efforts of Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth which have been active in criticizing the forest management of his government. <br /><br />The Forests and Biodiversity Program is also focused on challenging and changing intergovernmental policies that already or potentially could contribute to the destruction of forests and biodiversity, For example, it participated in the Convention on Biological Diversity’s High-level Working Group on the 2010 biodiversity target and post-2010 target(s), and successfully persuaded governments to incorporate a number of key paragraphs into the final 2010 Biodiversity Targets. <br /><br />Collaborative side and parallel events during intergovernmental forums, including meetings of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) negotiations in Copenhagen, and the World Forestry Congress in Buenos Aires, were also successful in raising civil society’s concerns and challenging government perspectives. FoEI also produced a video about the performance of Finnish pulp and paper company Stora Enso in Uruguay, and created a photo exhibition on the impacts of cellulose/logging corporations in the Southern Cone of South America, which was exhibited at the World Forestry Congress. <br /><br />The program also participated in the 2009 World Social Forum in Belem, Brazil, co-hosting a workshop on plantations, market mechanisms and false solutions, with the Global Forest Coalition; and published "Community-based Forest Governance: from resistance to proposals for sustainable use."<br /><br /></p>
<h3>economic justice-resisting neoliberalism</h3>
<p>The <a href="resolveuid/0fb7a001bc90dc4dd07bccbfde244abb" class="internal-link" title="Economic Justice - Resisting Neoliberalism (ejrn) program">Economic Justice-Resisting Neoliberalism (EJRN) Program</a>’s objective is to build sustainable societies by building people’s power and dismantling corporate power, stopping corporate-led neo-liberalism and globalization, and challenging the institutions and governments that promote unequal and unsustainable economic systems. <br /><br />For example, through the European Coalition for Corporate Justice (ECCJ), which FoEI is a very active member of, the EJRN Program has developed legal proposals for corporate accountability and to improve OECD guidelines. The OECD now plans to revise its guidelines for multinational companies. The UN has also adopted the Ruggie Framework for Business and Human Rights, in response to pressure to improve its oversight of corporate behavior from civil society groups including FoEI. The EU has also started research into improving protection for developing country citizens, against the negative impacts of EU-based business.<br /><br />The EJRN Program also developed proposals for the EU and G-20 to regulate both EU lobbying and the financial sector. This included a campaign for the implementation of an EU lobby registry which has now been implemented (although it only calls for voluntary registration so far). FoE also convinced the European Commission that the European Chemical Industry Council (CEFIC) had falsified its lobby expenditure report, and the Commission temporarily suspended CEFIC as a result. Additionally, FoE won a case with the European Ombudsman concerning EU officials that accepted gifts from companies they were supervizing. The EU is now preparing new rules on conflicts of interest.<br /><br />In 2009, FoE’s ‘Global Europe’ campaign called for the suspension of the EU-Peru trade negotiations, particularly over concerns about human rights violations. FoE also supported a delegation of representatives of Indigenous Peoples from Peru, Bolivia and Colombia, who toured European capitals to publicize the impacts of mining and biofuels. Although the negotiations have not yet been suspended, this collaborative campaign has so far resulted in a commitment from the European Commission that the Associated Agreement with Peru will not contain any provision which would be detrimental to the rights of indigenous people; and will contain proposals that guarantee that trade and economic development respect the environment, as well as a binding human rights clause.<br /><br />A focused effort to persuade Shell to improve its business practices continues to be a priority for FoEI. This has included support to FoE Nigeria in its campaign to expose the harmful nature of gas flaring, which contributed to the Nigerian foreign minister publicly committing to enforcing the ban on gas flaring as of January 2010. Efforts in Nigeria have been complemented by campaigning at the international level: FoEI collaborated with several organizations to publish "Shell's Big Dirty Secret," which documents Shell's continued investment in the dirtiest forms of energy and its position as the world's most carbon intensive oil company. An OECD complaint filed by FoE Netherlands resulted in a commitment by Shell to improve its oil depot in the Philippines and its communication with surrounding communities.<br /><br />In the US, the ShellGuilty campaign launched by FoEI, Oil Change and Platform London, finally saw justice done when Shell was forced to pay a US$15.5 million out-of-court settlement for its complicity in the 1995 murder of nine Nigerian activists who opposed its gas flaring, under the US Alien Tort Statute. <br /><br />On 3 December the Netherlands-based court case against Shell got under way in The Hague. The case has been brought by three Nigerian communities and FoE Netherlands/Miluedefensie over oil pollution in Nigeria.&nbsp;Shell&nbsp;asked the court to rule that the Dutch court has no jurisdiction over&nbsp;Shell&nbsp;Nigeria, but on 30 December the court held that the Dutch court does have jurisdiction. Given that&nbsp;Shell&nbsp;has now lost this point, an important hurdle has been overcome, and the 'real' lawsuit can begin. This is the first time in history that a Dutch company has been brought to trial in a Dutch court for damages occurring abroad.<br /><br />The EJRN Program was also very successful in strengthening hundreds of community individuals and activists across the world, including through the Third Annual Latin American Sustainability School, and community exchanges in Latin America. Many other publications and communications materials were published during the year.<br /><br /></p>
<h3>resisting mining oil and gas</h3>
<p>FoEI’s <a href="resolveuid/28ddcb725f1aeec0bf9b15f538ccd044" class="internal-link" title="Resisting oil, mining and gas program highlights 2009">Resisting Mining, Oil and Gas Program </a>is a new FoEI program, and groups are concentrating on planning joint campaign work and mapping FoEI’s current work with communities. Some international activities are also underway however, and these included a number of actions against Canadian open-pit mines on 22 July, in countries including Australia, Canada, Mexico and Thailand, to mark the Global Day of Action Against Open Pit Mining. Another important event was the "Conference on Extractive Industries: Blessing or Curse? Impacts of the Oil and Gas Industry," held by FoE Europe in Brussels in October.<br /><br />Some FoEI groups already have established campaigns on mining, oil and gas, resulting in some important national developments and successes. In December 2009, for example, FoE Hungary celebrated the introduction of a landmark ban on the use of cyanide in mining. FoE Philippines has filed an Alternative Mining Bill, intended to introduce a new mining policy to regulate the exploration, development and utilization of mineral resources. Many FoE groups, including in Indonesia, Guatemala, the Philippines, Ghana, Hungary and Costa Rica, are also working on an on-going basis with local communities affected by mining.<br /><br />Testimonies from mining communities also feature strongly in FoEI’s new media projects, as do videos on tin mining in Indonesia, and oil pollution in Nigeria, both of which can be seen on YouTube. FoEI also embarked on an ambitious project to create a series of video testimonies by women affected by large-scale metal mining.<br /><br />Friends of the Earth member groups continue to work on issues related to water, defending water territories for the benefit of communities and biodiversity. We work together with local communities in protecting the right to water, and opposing privatization of water and ‘development’ projects that pollute rivers and that use large quantities of water. Finally, we mobilize the public to vote for new laws and regulations that keep water in the public domain and uphold water as a human right.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Gender<br /></h3>
<p></p>
<p><a href="resolveuid/bef96fea3d66aa60819622740b4e8510" class="internal-link" title="gender highlights">FoEI’s gender program</a> focuses on deepening our understanding
of why the feminist perspective&nbsp;is critical to the FoEI federation. Such
an understanding can shed light on the ways in which the current neoliberal economic
model affects men and women differently, both in terms of its social and
environmental impacts. It also reveals the self-perpetuating nature of the
patriarchal society. For FoEI, a fuller comprehension of the harsh realities
faced by women in different countries and regions across the world will help us
construct better and more effective campaign strategies, and change the way we
ourselves act. A document on how to work from a gender perspective has already
been completed and circulated internally.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Together with allied social movements including La Via
Campesina (LVC) and the World March of Women (WMW), we aim to support women to
resist, transform and mobilize, both at the local and international levels, to
bring about the world they want to live in.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In 2009, we focused on integrating a gender analysis into our programs on Food Sovereignty and Economic Justice-Resisting Neoliberalism (EJRN), and to support the inclusion of a feminist perspective into the EJRN Program’s analysis of the global financial crisis. FoEI was also invited to participate in WMW’s Second Regional Encounter in the Americas, in August 2009, in Cochabamba, Bolivia. Gender campaigners also supported the production of video testimonies from ‘Women Re-sisters’, women resisting mining, some of which can currently be viewed on the <a class="external-link" href="http://www.youtube.com/user/FriendsoftheEarthInt">FoEI YouTube channel</a>.&nbsp; Friends of the Earth also participated in La Escuela de Formación de Dirigentas (a school for future women leaders) organized by the Coordinadora de Organizaciones del Campo (CLOC) and Via Campesina del Cono Sur, in Paraguay, in July 2009.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Friends of the Earth Uruguay/REDES has been particularly
active in promoting FoEI’s focus on gender, in terms of supporting the
international coordination of this complex and cross-cutting issue, providing
conceptual contributions, and engaging actively at the national level. In June 2009,
this included publication of a book that considers the impacts of forest monocultures and
soya on the displacement of rural populations, with a special emphasis on the
consequences for human rights and gender relations. FoE Uruguay also drafted
numerous papers on food sovereignty and gender concerns including a report on
the role of rural women in the defense of food sovereignty, based on
investigation and interviews with women from <em>la Red de Grupos de Mujeres Rurales</em> (the Network of Rural Women).</p>
<p>

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    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>UrskaMerc</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2009-04-01T11:45:00Z</dc:date>
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