"The climate talks in
Chile were canceled because of the very issues that are at the heart of the
climate emergency: social inequality, disrespect for human rights, and an
economy that prioritizes big business and polluters over the needs of everyday
people."
Wednesday, October 30, 2019
Environmental campaigners
stressed the need to combat both the climate crisis and social injustice after
Chilean President Sebastián Piñera announced Wednesday his country would no
longer host the upcoming COP25 United Nations climate summit, blaming ongoing social
unrest.
The billionaire, right-wing
president added in
his address that the planned Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation conference,
which would have taken place next month, is also canceled.
The cancellations,
Piñera said on
Twitter, are to "guarantee order and social peace."
German climate activist Luisa
Neubauer tweeted in
response, "Now someone cancel the climate crisis too please."
The COP, scheduled to take
place December 2-13, may not be completely scrapped. "We are currently
exploring alternative hosting options," U.N. Climate Change executive
secretary Patricia Espinosa said Wednesday.
With a potential new location
for the conference in mind, advocacy group Friends of the Earth (FOE) said that
"wherever the #COP25 U.N. Climate Summit is held, it's essential that the
voices of those most impacted by climate chaos are present and heard,
especially voices from South and Central America."
In the ongoing and massive
Chilean protests, as Agence France-Presse reported,
Demonstrators have demanded
that the 69-year-old right-wing leader—whose personal fortune is estimated by
Forbes at $2.8 billion—step down.
They have been angered by low
salaries and pensions, poor public health care and education, and a yawning gap
between rich and poor.
According to climate movement
350.org, those issues should not be seen as disconnected from the climate
crisis.
"The climate talks in
Chile were canceled because of the very issues that are at the heart of the
climate emergency: social inequality, disrespect for human rights, and an
economy that prioritizes big business and polluters over the needs of everyday
people," said the group's executive director May Boeve. "We cannot
solve the social crisis without tackling the climate crisis, and any efforts to
prevent climate catastrophe without tackling inequality and improving human
rights will simply not work."
Backing the calls of the
protesters, Boeve added, "Demanding social equity is a fundamental right
of people anywhere in the world, as is addressing the climate emergency. We
stand in solidarity with the Chilean people who are calling for an end to
military presence in the streets and a restoration of human rights."
"The climate talks must
now move forward with a new focus on public participation and human
rights," Boeve continued. "We need a People's Climate Talks. For far
too long, this process has prioritized the voices of big business and corporate
polluters."
What the United nations needs
to do, Boeve said, is to boot "the fossil fuel industry out of the climate
talks and make more space for the voices of the people. Only then can we begin
to develop real solutions to this joint crisis of inequality, injustice, and
climate emergency."
Sébastien Duyck, senior
attorney at the Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL), issued a
similar message following Piñera's announcement.
"The climate crisis and
profound social inequities have common root causes: prioritizing private and
corporate interests over those of people and of the planet. Governments have an
obligation to serve the public, protect the commons, and respect their human
rights obligations—not retaliate against demonstrators, withhold civil
liberties, and violate human rights," said Duyck.
"If Chile hopes the world
will turn a blind eye to the repression in its streets by canceling COP25, it
is sorely mistaken," Duyck added. "We commit to remaining vigilant as
this dangerous, unjust situation develops in Chile, and we call upon the
government to uphold its human rights obligations and to investigate and hold
perpetrators of human rights violations to account."
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