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- Info
e971301
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issue
97
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april/june 2001
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NUCLEAR JUSTICE
Environmental injustices hurt the same
groups in Germany as elsewhere. Immigrant
and poorer communities have the waste of
affluence dumped upon them. This is well
known, and a shocking documentary, "At Rock
Bottom", proved it beyond doubt some 15
years ago. Journalist Günter Wallraff
pretended to be Turkish-German for a year.
He soon discovered that he was forced to
work in unsafe conditions and to live
"where people don´t get old".
And yet environmental justice is not a
word widely used or understood in Germany.
Even environmentalists involved in the
struggle for environmental human rights do
not think of what they are doing as
"campaigning for environmental justice".
Those concerned with overuse of the world´s
resources by the industrialized North call
for "development policies for Germany",
turning the development debate on its head.
Those fighting environmental injustices
locally will describe what they do simply
as struggles for the public good.
The groups fighting permanent nuclear
waste storage at Gorleben are a case in
point. Gorleben is a classic marginalized
community. Gorleben, like many other
nuclear waste storage sites around the
world, was chosen for its remoteness, its
sparse population and its weak local
economy. Though Gorleben is now in the
middle of united Germany, it was close to
the former border between the two Germanys
and thus in economic no-man´s land.
Politicians assumed that the locals would
jump at the jobs that nuclear storage would
bring.
They were wrong, as the March protests
against all waste transports to Gorleben
showed yet again. Ask anyone in Gorleben
about environmental justice and they will
ask: "What? We are just fighting for a
safe, clean and decent local environment -
and against the juggernaut nuclear
industry". Well, precisely!
Daniel Mittler,
FoE Germany
First published in "Catalyst", FoE
Scotland's environmental justice
newsletter.
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