Thursday, April 28, 2011

Japan's Radioactive Nightmare Hits Home for Navajos

Once in a while I get off facebook because what I repost on facebook should actually be permanently archived somewhere I can access it later.

Reposted from Censored News --

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Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Japan's Radioactive Nightmare Hits Home for Navajos

Japan's Radioactive Nightmare Hits Home for Navajos

By Groundswell Films
Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- As Japan struggles to contain radioactive contamination, Groundswell is reminding Americans that over a thousand abandoned Cold War-era uranium mines still contaminate the American Southwest. The US Department of Energy will feature The Return of Navajo Boy project as a case study in film, media, public engagement and measurable impacts at its State of Environmental Justice Conference on April 28th and 29th in Washington, DC. This month, the US Environmental Protection Agency began clean up at Skyline Mine, the site featured in the documentary.

Since 2000, when the film's cautionary tale stunned Sundance Film Festival audiences, Groundswell Educational Films has brought it and Navajo activists across the country to advocate for a clean up of radioactive waste in the Navajo Nation. The filmmaker, Jeff Spitz, and Navajo participants triggered a federal investigation into uranium houses.  Many Navajos, including the grandmother in the film, Elsie Mae Begay, built their homes with uranium rocks from the abandoned mines.  The US government failed to warn Navajos about the dangers of radioactive waste.

Decades after ceasing operations, the radiation from more than 1,000 abandoned uranium mines continues to impact homes, livestock, land, and water across the 27,000 square mile reservation. The Navajo Nation is home to approximately 200,000 people. It holds the largest uranium deposits in the United States and suffers from the highest cancer rates in the Southwest region.

Partially as a response to the Groundswell advocacy campaign, the US Environmental Protection Agency has now begun to clean up the area around the abandoned Skyline Mine, including Elsie Mae Begay's yard spotlighted in the documentary. This month tractors and heavy equipment rolled into Elsie's yard eleven years after the film's debut.

"Americans have been rightfully horrified by the unfolding nuclear disaster in Japan. But we forget that there is highly dangerous radioactive waste poisoning communities right here in America," said Groundswell co-founder Jeff Spitz, who directed the film. "This clean up of the Skyline Mine and Elsie Begay's yard offers a ray of hope to other families living in remote areas hoping for the same attention.  We show how to get it."

Groundswell's unique model of film and public awareness campaign empowers Navajos to get attention by equipping them with Flip video cameras, multi-media tools, and opportunities to speak at film events, conferences, on campuses, and in the media nationwide.  Navajos upload footage and Groundswell edits short videos that allow thousands of followers to stay engaged in the story unfolding online at www.navajoboy.com/webisodes.

"Using our own video cameras to document what we are struggling with every day gives us hope that the world has not forgotten about us. It gives us a voice," said Mary Helen Begay, Elsie's daughter in law and creator of two recent webisodes.  "Our hearts go out to the people of Japan. We hope that they won't have to live with radioactive waste as we have for more than 50 years now."

 About Groundswell: Groundswell Educational Films is a nonprofit organization with a mission to collaborate cross-culturally in all facets of documentary filmmaking, transfer media skills into disadvantaged communities, and partner with stakeholders to leverage changes that address the social justice issues raised in our films.
Groundswell Educational Films, NFP
100 N. LaSalle St, Suite 300
Chicago, IL 60602

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Friday, April 8, 2011

Women and Climate Change

GenderCC, the progressive women's organization that helped to found and anchor the Women's Caucus at the UNFCCC talks every year, released this statement on the current state of the proceedings.

---------- Forwarded message ----------

PRESS STATEMENT:
7 April 2011
Contact person: Nina Somera, nina@gendercc.net, +63 9218122066

http://www.gendercc.net/
http://www.gendercc.net/metanavigation/press.html

Still A Frozen Pie:
GenderCC – Women for Climate Justice on the Bangkok Intersessional Meeting 2011

As the Bangkok climate talks are about to end, there are more reasonsfor women to be worried about, not only on substantive issues but the very direction where the talks are heading. Efforts of developed countries in keeping the Kyoto Protocol and the Bali Action Plan in oblivion are quite apparent while discussion on the Long Term Cooperative Action has been stalled. We fear that we are stuck with a half-baked pie from Copenhagen and Cancun.

Moreover, we find the flour hardly sifted as commitments of developed
countries continue to evade their historical responsibility, the heavy
reliance on false and risky solutions and the other pending tasks to
avert the current climate crisis.

Mitigation - The level of ambition among developed countries in
cutting down their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions is way below what science prescribes. And because most of them are so dependent on the carbon economy, developing countries are likely to account for at least 70 per cent of mitigation pledges to be done by 2020.

It is alarming that mitigation efforts include a shift to nuclear
energy that has recently demonstrated its devastating impact that even a very advanced and prepared country like Japan could not control. Despite the dearth of gender differentiated data, some studies have shown that women are more keen towards renewable energy sources rather than nuclear. In two surveys in the 1995 and 1997, more Korean women rejected nuclear power. In 2005, only 22 per cent of women favored the delay of Germany’s nuclear power’s phase out.

“Clean energy” likewise still includes large-scale hydropower, despite
its long history of forcibly evicting communities in the Mekong and
other areas, and degrading river flows and biodiversity, regardless of
the “safeguards” funding agencies particularly the multilateral
development banks have adopted.

And however important to integrate gender in the carbon markets and
REDD Plus, the latter are still false solutions which can lead to a
poisonous scramble for resources and engender danger, displacement and disempowerment.

Technology Transfer - There are also no signs of the “intellectual
property” regime of being tempered at the very least, making the more
appropriate and strategic technologies available and affordable to
communities whose climate resiliency needs to be built and
strengthened. The same regime saw on many occasions, seeds and plant varieties grown for generations by women and their communities have been taken by companies, if not destroyed by the genetically-modified ones.

Adaptation - We welcome some countries’ call for gender balance in the adaptation committee. However, there is still no clarity on whether
gender will remain as a criterion in the selection of adaptation
initiatives. There is also no assurance yet whether 50 per cent of the
funds will go to adaptation. Even the very constitution of the Green
Climate Fund (GCF) remains unclear. We ask for at least 30 per cent
allocation of the GCF and so-called innovative sources for women and gender-focused adaptation initiatives.

Finance - But we are not merely asking for a share of the pie:
Financial resources for the GCF must be additional, scaled-up, public, grant-based, directly accessible, adequate and predictable. Also developing countries must have a huge stake in the governance and operationalization of the Fund.

With the outcome of Bangkok, we feel that many opportunities were
missed. We therefore urge governments particularly developed countries especially the United States to move forward in a way that respects a multilateral process and act on the interest of women and communities.
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NEW FIGURES: POOR COUNTRIES LEAD RICH COUNTRIES IN REDUCING EMISSIONS

News from Bangkok, where one of the intersessionals in preparation towards this year's Durban COP ...


PRESS RELEASE
8 April 2011
For Immediate Release
Contact:
bolivia.climate.media@gmail.com

NEW FIGURES SHOW DEVELOPING COUNTRIES ARE LEADING RICH COUNTRIES ON CUTTING EMISSIONS
 

BANGKOK - Today, as the UN climate talks came to a close in Bangkok, Ambassador Pablo Solon of the Plurinational State of Bolivia released UN statistics that showed, contrary to conventional wisdom, that developing countries are taking more climate action than developed countries.
 
"What's on the table in these negotiations is that 65% of emission reductions happen in developing countries and just 35% happen in developed countries, even though it is they who caused the problem of climate change. This is like someone burning down your crops, making you do all the work to replant them and then acting like a hero when they give you a tiny discount on the seeds . "  Ambassador Solon said.
 
"Developed countries have decided that a limitation of a 2 degree temperature rise should be the object of the climate negotiations, despite that goal being unsafe for millions of lives and livelihoods across the world." Ambassador Solon said.
 
"Nevertheless, to achieve their inadequate goal, countries across the world would need to cut their emissions by 14 gigatonnes per year by 2020." Ambassador Solon said.
 
"At best, countries of the world have currently pledged to do 8.7 gigatonnes of emission reductions and at worst 6.6 gigatonnes - which shows how far we are from achieving an outcome that reflects the science and preserves life." Ambassador Solon said.
 
"Of these inadequate pledges, in the worst case scenario, only 3 gigatonnes are included in rich countries pledges, in contrast to 3.6 gigatonnes in developing countries- giving up the lie that it is developed countries which are "leading" emission reductions." Ambassador Solon said.
 
"Rich country promises are even more hollow when the use of 'offsets' are included to their low pledges, those offsets transfer 1.1 gigatonnes of emission reductions from developed countries to developing countries." Ambassador Solon said.
 
"In total this analysis shows that, with the use of offsets 3.6 gigatonnes of emission reductions will happen in developing countries in contrast to just 1.9 gigatonnes in developed countries." Ambassador Solon said.
 
"To spend five days discussing an agenda seems insane but what is behind the discussion of the agenda is what kind of outcome we will have in South Africa." Ambassador Solon added in answers to questions.
 
NOTE TO EDITORS - A copy of the presentation is available here.

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Wednesday, April 6, 2011

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE | SAN JOSE LGBT IMMIGRATION FORUM

RSVP to: ben_deguzman@nqapia.org

 

PRESS ADVISORY:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

Contact: Ben de Guzman, NQAPIA

Phone: 202-422-4909; E-mail: ben_deguzman@nqapia.org

 

The National Queer Asian Pacific Islander Alliance and

The Asian American Center for Advancing Justice present an

 

SAN JOSE LGBT IMMIGRATION FORUM

 

WHAT: Join Congressman Mike Honda (D-CA) and a distinguished panel for a special discussion about Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ) immigrants’ rights. Panelists will provide an update on developments from both the federal level in Washington, D.C. as well as in San Jose; how immigration reform may affect LGBTQ individuals, and how the audience can get involved.

 

Cost is FREE! Light refreshments will be provided.

 

WHEN: Saturday, April 9, 2011

Reception and Networking: 1:30 PM, Program starts at 2:00 PM

 

WHERE: Asian Americans for Community Involvement

2400 Moorpark Avenue

San Jose, CA

 

WHO: SPECIAL GUEST: Rep. Mike Honda (D-CA)

Ben de Guzman, NQAPIA Co-Director

Chris Punongbayan, Asian Law Caucus

Marta Donayre, Love Sees No Borders

Amos Lim, Out4Immigration

 

Activist and Author Judy Rickard will also be invited to talk about her book, Torn Apart: United by Love, Divided by Law.

 

HOW: To RSVP:

ben_deguzman@nqapia.org (e-mail)

 

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=191621290876261 (facebook)

 

Co-Sponsors:

National Queer Asian Pacific Islander Alliance (NQAPIA)

Asian American Justice Center (AAJC)

Asian Law Caucus (ALC)

South Bay Queer and Asian (SBQA)

Asian Americans for Community Involvement (AACI)

 

RSVP to ben_deguzman@nqapia.org

 

Posted via email from Decolonizing Environmentalism

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

G77+China and ALBA Back Bolivia in Climate Change Negotiations in Bangkok

News from Bangkok
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(Español abajo)


Communiqué

April 5, 2011

Bangkok, Thailand

 

G77+China and ALBA Back Bolivia in Climate Change Negotiations in Bangkok

 

“We would like to express our profound worry due to the fact that two decisions were adopted in the framework of the Cancun climate negotiations despite the formal and explicit objection made by a Member State. We consider this a dangerous precedent that should not be repeated under the Framework Convention on Climate Change,” said Bolivia, Cuba, Dominica, Ecuador, Nicaragua and Venezuela in the name of the regional group ALBA (the Bolivarian Alliance for the People of Our Americas) at United Nations climate talks in Bangkok today. The countries emphasized that “these illegal practices are affecting the Plurinational State of Bolivia, a country that has the same rights as all others, and tomorrow, any other country present here could be affected.”

 

During the inaugural session of the climate talks, the G77 and China, a group comprising 131 developing countries, said that “as we move toward Durban [for the next annual climate change conference], the path should be to ensure a multilateral process that is transparent, open, and driven by the Member States, and also brings us toward consensus.” The statement alluded to the fact that the adoption of decisions without consensus in Cancun should not be repeated.

 

In its speech, ALBA backed the positions of Bolivia, saying: “We do not consider the results of Cancun a step forward for the Working Group on the Kyoto Protocol, but rather, a step backward.”

 

On behalf of the Bolivian delegation, Ambassador Pablo Solón thanked countries for their support and offered the following analogy: “If we compare global warming to a wildfire, we would say that the process of negotiation in Cancun resembled a long meeting of firemen who decided to throw a single bucket of water onto the fire, while declaring, ‘one bucket is better than nothing,’ ‘ the perfect is the enemy of the good,’ and ‘this is just the first bucket’ – then held a press conference to announce that gradual progress was being made, and that they had ‘saved the process of negotiation among the firemen’ while the flames engulfed a town. Solón concluded: “Cancun saved the firemen and their bosses, and now in Durban we have to save the climate and humanity.”

 

In order for Durban to be a success, and to avoid a catastrophic rise in global temperature of 4° to 5° Celsius during this century, developed countries must make real, domestic emission reduction commitments of 40 to 50%.

 

##

 

G77+China y ALBA respaldan a Bolivia
en negociaciones de cambio climático en Bangkok

 

(Abril 5, Bangkok, Tailandia) “Queremos expresar nuestra más profunda preocupación por el hecho de que dos decisiones fueron adoptadas en el marco de las negociaciones de Cancún, sobrepasando la objeción formal, expresa y explicita de un Estado Parte. Nosotros consideramos que esto es un precedente peligroso que no debe repetirse dentro la Convención Marco de las Naciones Unidas sobre Cambio Climático” manifestaron Bolivia, Cuba, Dominica, Ecuador, Nicaragua, y Venezuela a nombre del ALBA, quienes enfatizaron que “estas prácticas ilegales afectan hoy al Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia, un país que tiene los mismos derechos que todos los demás. Mañana puede afectar a cualquiera de los países aquí presentes.”

 

Así mismo, en la sesión inaugural de la reunión de negociación sobre cambio climático  el G77+China que agrupa a 131 países en vías de desarrollo, señaló que “mientras avanzamos hacia Durban (donde será la próxima Conferencia de Cambio Climático) el camino debe asegurar un proceso multilateral transparente, abierto, dirigido por los Estados Parte e inclusivo que nos lleve al consenso”… en alusión a que no se debía repetir lo ocurrido en Cancún con la adopción sin consenso de estas dos decisiones.

 

El ALBA en su discurso respaldó las posiciones de Bolivia y señaló que: “Nosotros no consideramos que los resultados de Cancún fuesen un paso hacia adelante en el Grupo de Trabajo de Protocolo de Kioto, sino mas bien un paso hacia atrás.”

 

Por su parte la delegación de Bolivia agradeció el respaldo y dijo que “Si comparamos el calentamiento global con una pradera en llamas que amenaza con arrasar un poblado, diríamos que el proceso de negociación en Cancún fue la culminación de una larga reunión de bomberos que decidió  echarle un solo balde de agua al incendio mientras decían: "un balde de agua es mejor que nada", "lo perfecto es enemigo de lo posible", "este es el primer balde". Y mientras hacían una conferencia de prensa para anunciar que avanzaban  gradualmente y que habían "salvado el proceso de negociación de los bomberos"... las llamas del incendio se acercaban al poblado.” Y el Embajador Pablo Solón a nombre de la delegación de Bolivia concluyó: “Cancún salvo a los bomberos y a los anfitriones, ahora en Durban nos toca salvar al clima y a la humanidad.”

 

Para que Durban sea un éxito se necesitan compromisos de reducción de emisiones de los países desarrollados de un 40% a 50% de manera real y domestica. Solo así se podrá evitar un incremento  catastrófico de 4° C a 5° C en la temperatura en este siglo.

 

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