President John Dramani Mahama |
Alhaji Limuna
Mohammed-Muniru, the Northern Regional Minister, has said the country was able
to reduce 76 per cent of the rate of HIV new infections in children within
three years.
He
said 10,000 babies would be born free of HIV due to the antenatal care for HIV
pregnant women in the country.
Alhaji
Mohammed-Muniru said this during the Northern Regional Celebration of 2014
World AIDS Day held at Damongo.
The
event was on the theme: "Close the Gap towards an HIV free generation
through prevention of mother-to Child transmission (PMTCT), safe sex and stigma
reduction”.
The
celebration was to create awareness, show support to people living with HIV and
AIDS and also to remember those who have died through the disease and to unite
in the fight against HIV and AIDS.
He
said the national adult prevalence rate had dropped to 1.3 per cent from 3.6
per cent within 10 years.
He
said the Northern Region had recorded the lowest antenatal care HIV prevalence
from 2.1 per cent to 0.8 per cent in 2013.
He
urged Ghanaians to avoid sex with multiple partners and called on stakeholders
in the HIV and AIDS advocacy and other development partners to re-strategise to
achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
Dr
Patrick Bampoh, the Northern Regional HIV/AIDS Coordinator of the Ghana Health
Service, said over 240,000 people are living with the HIV/AIDS in the country.
He
said 6,000 new people were infected this year and about 16 people get infected
on daily basis.
He
said, “The national prevalence of HIV in Ghana reduced from 0.9 per cent in
2012 to 0.8 per cent 2013”.
Dr
Bampoh said for the first three quarters of this year, 151 pregnant women were
tested positive out of over 42, 000 who tested.
He
added that 123 of them have started taking the Anti-Retroviral Drugs and to
prevent their unborn babies from contracting the disease.
He
appealed to all pregnant women in the country to take advantage and get tested
to prevent their unborn children from contracting the disease.
Alihaji
Bakari Kassim, District Chief Executive of West Gonja, called on other
stakeholders including the private sector, religious leaders, and general
public to collaborate with the government to educate Ghanaians on preventive
measures and the patronage of Anti-Retroviral drugs.
Editorial
8th
Pan African Congress
There is no doubt in the circles of
historians that the fifth Pan African Congress provided the impetus for the
accelerated liberation of Africa from the colonial yoke.
Indeed, many of those who led many
African countries to independence, including Osagyefo Dr Kwame Nkrumah, Nnamdi
Azikiwe, Jomo Kenyatta and Julius Nyerere were participants in the historic
Manchester congress.
There were also the genius of
African liberation and unification like W.E.B Du Bois, Makonney and George
Padmore who led the charge for the liberation of Africa from the clutches of
classical colonialism and all forms of imperialism.
It is important to note that even
though the immediate objectives of national liberation have largely been
achieved, Africa is still in the gambling house of imperialism.
African resources are today
exploited only for the purpose of fattening the pockets of those who sit in the
boardrooms of the giant corporations of the West.
This has to change and African
resources need to be exploited for the benefit of the African people and it is
for this reason that “The Insight welcomes the 8th Pan Congress
scheduled to be held in Accra in March next year.
The 8th Pan African
Congress offers a platform to all Africans wherever they may be to join the
discussion of African problems and to look for solutions to them.
The Insight call on all progressive
forces in Ghana and indeed throughout the world to contribute significantly to
the success of the 8th Pan African Congress.
Capsid Disease
Government
is assisting cocoa farmers in the country to combat the Capsid and the Black
Pod disease, through a programme aimed at training them on the cultural and
chemical methods of pests and diseases control.
The
government through Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD), initiated a National Cocoa
Disease and Pest Control (CODAPEC) programme, popularly called “Mass Spraying,”
as part of efforts to arrest the decline in cocoa production in the country.
Mr.
Michael Gyasi, Suhum Municipal Officer in-charge of the Cocoa Health and
Extension Division, made these disclosures in an interview with the Ghana News
Agency (GNA) at Suhum.
“The
programme also educates and trains local sprayers on safe pesticides usage,
while it helps put more money in the pockets of farmers, and creates jobs for
the unemployed youth in the rural communities,” he said.
Mr.
Gyasi explained that “Model Farm” was Fertilizer Distribution, CODAPEC or Mass
Spraying Exercise and Treatment of Swollen Shoot Trees.
He
pointed out that registered farms were entitled to free fertilizers.
He
said those qualified for free fertilizers were disease-free farms, saying,
every farm holdings of one acre receives three bags of fertilizers.
According
to the Municipal Officer, about 960 cocoa farmers from 20 communities in the
Suhum Municipality and Ayensuano District of the Eastern Region, attended
farmers rally on “Model Farm”, to help prepare them for the 2014/15 cocoa
season which opened in October.
At
those rallies, Mr. Gyasi said, he
briefed participants on the need to cut down all diseased cocoa trees for
replanting and rehabilitation of farms which were over 30 years and above,
And
that: “Free ammonia, seedlings, shade trees and plantain suckers shall be
supplied to farmers with farm holdings of 0.50 hectares (1.25 acres and
above)”.
He
advised cocoa farmers in the country to follow directives given them by cocoa
extension officers in their areas, on the use of cocoa fertilizers, to help
them increase productivity.
GNA
Economy Revisited. Will
Green be the Colour of Money or Life?
Dr Vandana Shiva |
Economy and ecology are both derived from
oikos, which is the Greek word for “home” or “household.” Ecology is the
science of the household, both local and at the level of Gaia, our planetary
home. Economy is supposed to be the management of the household. Aristotle
referred to oikonomia as the art of living. He differentiated it from
Chrematistics, the art of money making.
Today, economy has been reduced to the
art of money making through the domination of a single indicator called
“growth,” measured as a single number GDP or Gross Domestic Product, also
referred to as Gross Domestic Problem, in the context of the multiple crises it
has engendered.
Ordinary households are being robbed of
their homes, lives, and livelihoods under the rule of money and money making.
Our planetary household is being plundered and eroded.
And now the economy that has been reduced to
money making, would like to make more money for big economic interests by
commodifying all of nature in the name of the “green economy.”
In 1992, the citizens and governments of the
world gathered in Rio for the Earth Summit. In 2012, the world community
gathered again in Rio. On 24 December 2009, the General Assembly of the United
Nations adopted a resolution (A/RES/64/236) to hold a conference twenty years
after the Earth Summit. Member States agreed that the Rio+20 Summit would focus
on “Green Economy within the context of sustainable development and poverty”
and “Institutional framework for sustainable development.”
But what is the “green economy” and what is the
“institutional framework for sustainable development”? If one stays with the
answers offered in the old paradigm of market driven solutions, which have
failed to protect the Earth, “green economy” will mean more of the same. It
will mean more carbon trading which has failed to reduce emissions. It will
mean more commodification of food and water, land and biodiversity, which has
failed to reduce hunger and thirst, poverty and ecological degradation, and has
instead increased them.
If the “institutional framework” creates a World
Environment Organization like a World Trade Organization, based on
commodification and trade in nature’s gifts, and trade wars as global
environment management, we will further impoverish the Earth and local
communities, and further destroy democracy.
On the other hand, if the answers offered are in
the context of the emerging paradigm of harmony with nature and the rights of
Mother Earth, then the green economy is Gaia’s economy, and the institutional
framework is Earth democracy—democracy from the bottom up, democracy rooted in
the Earth. The world order built on the economic fundamentalism of greed,
commodification of all life, and limitless growth, and the technological
fundamentalist belief that there is a technological fix for every social and
environmental ill are clearly collapsing.
The collapse of Wall Street in September 2008
and the continuing financial crisis signal the end of the paradigm that puts
fictitious finance above real wealth created by nature and humans, and puts
profits above people and corporations above citizens. This paradigm can only be
kept afloat with limitless bailouts that direct public wealth to private rescue
instead of using it to rejuvenate nature and economic livelihoods for people.
It can only be kept afloat with increasing violence to the Earth and people. It
can only be kept alive as an economic dictatorship. This is clear in India’s
heartland, as the limitless appetite for steel and aluminum for the global
consumer economy, and the limitless appetite for profits for the steel and
aluminum corporations are clashing head on with the rights of the tribals to
their land and homes, their forests and rivers, their cultures and ways of
life. The tribals are saying a loud and clear “no” to their forced uprooting.
The only way to get to the minerals and coal that feed the “limitless growth”
model in the face of democratic resistance is the use of militarized violence
against the tribals—operation “Green Hunt” has been launched in the tribal
areas of India with precisely this purpose, even though the proclaimed
objective is to clear out the “Maoists.” Under operation Green Hunt, more than
40,000 armed paramilitary forces have been placed in the tribal areas, which
are rich in minerals and where tribal unrest is growing. Operation Green Hunt
shows clearly that the current economic paradigm can only unfold through
increased militarization and the undermining of democratic and human rights.
The technological fundamentalism that has
externalized costs, both ecological and social, and blinded us to ecological
destruction has also reached a dead end. Climate chaos, the externality of
technologies based on the use of fossil fuels, is a wakeup call that we cannot
continue on the fossil fuel path. The high costs of industrial farming are running
up against limits, both in terms of the ecological destruction of the natural
capital of soil, water, biodiversity, and air, and in terms of the creation of
malnutrition, with a billion people denied food and another two billion denied
health because of obesity, diabetes, and other food related diseases.
The green economy agenda for Rio+20 will either
deepen the privatization of the Earth, and with it the crisis of ecology and
poverty, or it can be used to re-embed economies in the ecology of the Earth.
Green economics needs to be an authentic green.
It cannot be the brown of desertification and deforestation. It cannot be the
red of violence against nature and people, or the unnecessary conflicts over
natural resources—the land and water, seeds and food. As Gandhi said, “the
Earth has enough for everyone’s needs, but not for some people’s greed.”
To be Green, economics needs to return to its
home, to oikos.
Both ecology and economics are derived from “Oikos” which means “home”. Ecology is the science
of the household, economics is supposed to be the management of the household.
When economics works against the science of ecology, it results in the
mismanagement of the Earth, our home. The climate crisis, the water crisis, the
biodiversity crisis, the food crisis are different symptoms of this crisis of
mismanagement of the Earth and her resources.
We mismanage the Earth when we do not recognize
nature’s capital as the real capital and everything else as derived. If we have
no land, we have no economy. When we contribute to growth of nature’s capital,
we build green economies. And the richer nature’s capital is, the richer human
society is.
A nature, women centered perspective take us
down a road which is sustainable and equitable. The Earth Summit in 1992
produced two legally binding treaties—the Convention on Biological Diversity
and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate change. A Women’s Action
Agenda 21 through WEDO (Women’s Environment and Development Organization),
which I co-founded with Bella Abzug and Marilyn Waring, was also produced.
The multidimensional ecological crises are the
consequences of the war against the Earth. To address the ecological crisis, we
must stop this war, not take it to deeper levels through further commodification
of nature and her services as is being proposed in some versions of the green
economy. According to UNEP (United Nations Environment Program), “in a green
economy, growth in income and employment should be driven by private and public
investments that reduce carbon emission and pollution, enhance energy and
resource efficiency, and prevent the loss of biodiversity and ecosystem
services.” This is the old paradigm in green clothes. It has no place for
people, no place for Gaia’s laws. It is still driven by the flawed laws of
financial markets.
Will green be the color of money or life? Will
green be shaped by women’s skills, knowledge, values, or by the continued greed
of capitalist patriarchy? Will we in Asia be able to tap into the roots of
ecological civilization that lie buried under the garbage of greed, violence,
and pollution? This is our task, to create a livable future for ourselves and
the planet.
We need to go beyond growth towards economies of
care, well-being, and happiness. Growth in incomes and employment should be
based on conservation of natural resources and equitable sharing of our natural
wealth for sustainable livelihoods that reduce carbon emissions and pollution,
enhance energy and resource efficiency, and prevent the loss of biodiversity
and ecosystem services.
There are two different paradigms for and
approaches to the green economy. One is the corporate centered green economy.
For corporations which are now integrating access sectors, the green economy
means:
(a) Greenwashing—one
just has to look at the achievements of Shell and Chevron on how they are
“green.”
(b) Bringing nature into
markets and the world of commodification. This includes privatization of the
Earth’s resources, e.g., patents and seeds, biodiversity and life forms,
privatization and commodification of nature. It also includes trade in
ecological services, e.g., trade in carbon emissions which is in effect trade
in the atmosphere’s capacity to recycle carbon. The corporate centered green
economy is based on maximization of profits and centered over natural
resources. It is based on concentration of wealth and concentration of control
over the Earth’s resources.
The UNEP initiative on The Economics of
Eco-systems and Biodiversity (TEEB) can serve as a caution to stop ecological
and ecosystem degradation and destruction. For example, according to TEEB, the
loss of ecological services from the degradation of forests alone comes to
between $2 – 4.5 trillion a year (TEEB quoted in David Hallowes, Toxic Futures [Scottsville:
University of KwaZulu-Natal Press, 2011], p. 40).
As David Hallowes says, “In the act of costing
the loss, however, ecological systems are framed within the market. Ecoservices
are monetized, so making them available for sale” (Toxic Futures, p. 40). An example is a private
equity firm that bought the rights to the environmental services generated by a
370,000 ha rainforest reserve in Guyana recognizing that such services—water
storage, biodiversity maintenance, and rainfall regulation—will eventually be
worth something in international markets (TEEB, 2008, p. 11).
The commodification and tradability of natural
resources and ecological services has been deepening progressively over the
last few decades. The trade metaphor promoting commodification is also guiding
much of the work of environmental economics, making it indifferent to women’s
sustenance economy and nature’s economy. For example, the World Bank policy
paper on trade liberalization for India’s agricultural sector recommends the creation
of “markets in tradable water rights,” and argues “if rights to the delivery of
water can be freely bought and sold, farmers with new crops or in new areas
will be able to obtain water provided they are willing to pay more than its
value to existing users, and established users will take account of its sale
value in deciding on what and how much to produce.”
The institution of tradable water rights will
guarantee the diversion of water from small farmers to large corporate “super
farms.” Tradable water rights will lead to water monopolies. In the logic of
the market, tradable rights have a tendency to be sold to the highest bidder.
Hence the wealthier one is the more power one will have over one’s access to
water. It will also lead to over-exploitation and misuse of water – since those
who deplete water resources do not have to suffer the consequences of water
scarcity as they can always buy water rights from other farmers and other
regions.
Besides aggravating the already severe
ecological crisis in water resources, tradable water rights will destroy the
social fabric of rural communities, creating discord, and disintegration. The
social breakdown in Somalia can be traced, in part, to the privatization of
water rights according to the World Bank policy. Tradable water rights are
based on the assumption that no ecological or social limits should be placed on
water use. Such limitless use will lead to abuse. The World Bank proposals on
tradable water rights are in fact a prescription for social and ecological
disaster.
The introduction of tradable land and water
rights is often justified on environmental grounds. For example, a World Bank
study by Pearce and Warford argues “in the absence of rights to sell or
transfer land, the land owner may be unable to realize the value of any
improvements and thus has little incentive to invest in long term measures such
as soil conservation.” This assumption is evidently false, since the best
examples of soil conservation—the hill terraces of the Himalayas—are based on
precisely the opposite reasons. Communities not threatened with the possibility
of losing their resources and benefits have a long term interest in conserving
resources.
In 2004 we stopped the World Bank driven
privatization of water. However, privatization is back on the agenda. The
commodification and privatization of land and water resources are based and
promoted on the flawed belief that price equals value. However, all those
working for justice in land and water rights, and working to prevent the ecological
abuse of land and water, are asking for the opposite—the inalienable rights to
resources—and where the resource is a common property resource, like water, the
inalienability of common rights.
Commodification contributes to economic growth,
but it undermines the rights of local communities. It undermines local
economies. It erodes local cultures. And it undermines ecosystems in their
diversity and integrity. As forests become valued only for carbon
sequestration, or only for biomass production, rich diverse forest ecosystems
are replaced with commercial monocultures.
The second paradigm of the green economy is
Earth centered and people centered. The Earth centered green economy begins
with the recognition of the rights of Mother Earth and with this the rights of
all species of the Earth, including the human species. The green economy
recognizes nature’s economy as its foundation. The green economy recognizes the
sustenance economy through which human needs—material, emotional,
psychological, cultural, and spiritual—are provided for. The corporate centered
green economy ignores both nature’s economy and people’s sustenance economy,
and thus undermines both creating the ecological crisis and the crisis of
dispossession and poverty.
In the Earth centered green economy the
resources of the Earth vital to life—biodiversity, water, air—are commons for
the common good for all. While the corporate green economy is based on
privatization and commodification of the Earth’s resources, the Earth centered
green economy is based on recovery of the commons and the intrinsic value of
the Earth and all her species. Whereas the corporate green economy caters to
corporate profits, it fails in providing for people’s needs and defending their
rights. It is based on resource intensive, pollution intensive production and
consumption with low human benefits.
The Earth centered economy is based on treading
lightly on the Earth while maximizing well-being and welfare for all. This is
increasingly evident in the way we meet our most basic need—food. The
industrial-corporate system of food production uses ten times more units of
energy as inputs than it produces as food. It wastes fifty percent of the food
produced. It contributes to the structural problem of hunger of one billion and
food related diseases of obesity, diabetes, etc. of two billion. It uses and
pollutes 70% of water on the planet. It has destroyed 75% of the biodiversity
in agriculture. And it contributes 40% of the greenhouse gases that are
destabilizing the climate and further threatening food security. Earth centered
agriculture, on the other hand, produces two times more food than the inputs it
uses. It produces healthy and nutritious food. It conserves biodiversity,
water, and soil. It mitigates and adapts to climate change. It protects the
earth, farmers, and public health.
An Earth centered, people centered green economy
would put nature’s ecological cycles as the drivers and shapers of the economy,
it would put people first, not investors. It would build on women’s core
contributions to create economies of sustenance and care that enhance the
well-being of all.
Karl Polanyi warns us against commodification
and reduction of nature and society to the market: “A market economy must
comprise all elements of industry, including labor, land, and money. But labor
and land are no other than the human beings themselves of which every society
consists and the natural surroundings in which they are and exist. To include
them in the market mechanism means to subordinate the substance of society
itself to the laws of the market” (The
Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Times
[Boston: Beacon Press, 2001], p. 75).
To this we would add “to include nature and
nature’s resources and processes in the market mechanism means to subordinate
the substance of the Earth’s living processes to the laws of the market.”
The laws of Gaia are the basis of life of Earth.
They precede production, they precede exchange, and they precede the market.
The market depends on Gaia; Gaia does not depend on the market. Both the Earth
and society come first. They are sovereign and autonomous. They cannot be
commodified and reduced to the market.
Nature has been subjugated to the market as a
mere supplier of industrial raw material and dumping ground for waste and
pollution.
It is falsely claimed that exploiting the Earth
creates economic value and economic growth, and this improves human welfare.
While human welfare is invoked to separate humans from the Earth and justify her
limitless exploitation, all of humanity does not benefit. In fact most lose.
Pitting humans against nature is not merely anthropocentric, it is
corporatocentric. The Earth community has been reduced to humans, and humans
have been further reduced to corporations as legal persons. Corporations then
reshape part of humanity as consumers of their products and part of humanity as
disposable. Consumers lose their identity as Earth citizens, as co-creators and
co-producers with nature. Those rendered disposable lose their very lives and
livelihoods.
Corporations as the dominant institution shaped
by capitalist patriarchy thrive on eco-apartheid. They thrive on the Cartesian
legacy of dualism which puts nature against humans. It defines nature as female
and passively subjugated.
Corporatocentrism is thus also androcentric—a
patriarchal construction.
The false universalism of man as conqueror and
owner of the Earth has led to the technological hubris of geo-engineering,
genetic engineering, and nuclear energy. It has led to the ethical outrage of
owning life forms through patents, water through privatization, the air through
carbon trading. It is leading to appropriation of the biodiversity that serves
the poor. And now alienated man and corporations he has created would like to
“own” and trade in nature’s services through the green economy. The Chipko
Movement saved Himalayan forests by putting the life of the forest above human
life. Today the ecological services of the forests are a tradable commodity. As
Pablo Salon, the Bolivian Ambassador to the UN stated at the General Assembly
session on Harmony with Nature (20 April 2011): “The green economy considers it
necessary, in the struggle to preserve biodiversity, to put a price on the free
services that plants, animals and ecosystems offer humanity, the purification
of water, the pollination of plants by bees, the protection of coral reefs and
climate regulation. According to the green economy, we have to identify the
specific functions of ecosystem and biodiversity that can be made subject to a
monetary value, evaluate their current state, define the limits of those
services, and set out in economic terms the cost of their conservation to
develop a market for environmental services… in other words, the transfusion of
the rules of the market will save nature.”
The climate crisis is a result of putting
pollutants into the atmosphere beyond the recycling capacity of the planet. To
continue to add pollutants, while letting polluters make money through carbon
trading is a deepening of the war against the atmospheric commons. The crisis
of species extinction is a result of destruction of the habitat of species and
a direct attack on them through the arsenal of toxic chemicals. As Michael
Huesemann and Joyce Huesemann report, “the present rate of species extinction
is alarming according to various estimates, ranging from best to worst-case
scenarios between 1,000 to 100,000 plant and animal species disappear each
year, which translates into 2.7 to 270 irreversible extinctions everyday” (Techno-Fix: Why Technology Won’t Save Us
or the Environment [New Society Publishers, 2011])
According to the UN, species are disappearing at
a thousand times the natural rate of wildlife loss. More than one-fifth of the
world’s plant species are threatened with extinction.
The UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon cautioned
that “we are bankrupting our natural economy. Maintaining and restoring our
natural infrastructure can provide economic growth worth trillions of dollars
each year. Allowing it to decline is like throwing money out of the window” (http://www.un.org/News/Press/
docs/2010/sgsm13127.doc.htm).
However, biodiversity is conserved when we love
it, we revere it, and we recognize its vital role in maintaining life.
Protecting biodiversity is an imperative not just because it helps make money.
It is important because it makes life.
The UNEP report “Dead Planet, Living Planet:
Biodiversity and Ecosystem Restoration for Sustainable Development” (http://www.unep.org/pdf/
RRAecosystems_screen.pdf) shows how nature is far more efficient than
humanmade systems. For example, forested wastelands treat more waste water per
unit of energy and have a 6-22 fold higher benefit cost ratio than traditional
sand filtration in treatment plants. In New York, a filtration plant would have
cost US $ 6-8 billion plus US $ 300-500 million per year as operating costs. Conserving
the Catskills watershed at a cost of US $ 1-1.5 was a far more effective way to
provide clean water.
Conserving biodiversity produces more food than
chemical monocultures. Working with nature is also good for human welfare. If
we destroy biodiversity and soil fertility with industrial monocultures in
agriculture we have less food, not more. We might have more commodities, but
not more food. Commodities are non-food, in fact anti-food. I have analyzed how
the industrialized globalized system of food production creates hunger and how
redesigning the food system in nature’s ways is vital for food security and
food sovereignty.
The illusion of progress and growth measures the
increased production and trade in commodities as growth, but fails to measure
the death, destruction, and decay of our rivers and aquifers, our land and
soil, our atmosphere and climate maintaining process, our forests and
biodiversity. Since it is the poor, the marginal, the disenfranchised who bear
the highest costs of ecological destruction and resource grab, but their
deprivation does not count in the calculus of economic growth, poverty grows
hand in hand with the ecological crisis.
Ignoring the Earth’s living and life-giving
processes is at the heart of both non-sustainability and poverty.
Non-sustainability is a result of disharmony with nature; it is a result of
market laws having not just diverged dangerously from Gaia’s laws and nature’s
laws, but actually becoming antagonistic to them. Nature has limits. The
illusion of limitless growth based on limitless resource exploitation ignores
ecological limits, and by ignoring limits creates scarcity.
Mathis Wackernagel calculates the ecological
footprint of human production and consumption. The ecological footprint of an
individual is a measure of the amount of land required to provide for all their
resource requirements plus the amount of vegetated land to absorb all their
carbondioxide emissions. In 1961, the human demand for resources was 70% of the
Earth’s ability to regenerate. By the 1980’s, it was equal to the annual supply
of resources and since the 1990’s, it has exceeded the Earth’s capacity by 20%.
“It takes the biosphere, therefore, at least a year and three months to renew
what humanity uses in a single year so that humanity is now eating its capital,
Earth’s natural capital” (“Tracking the Ecological Overshoot of the Human
Economy,” Proceedings of the
National Academy of Science, 99, no. 14 [2002]).
The ecological footprint of all humans of course
is not the same. In fact, not only is corporate driven consumerism eating into
the Earth’s capital, it is eating into the share of the poor to the Earth’s
capital for sustenance and survival. This is at the root of resource conflicts
across the Third World. The equitable ecological footprint is 1.7 ha/person.
The average for the United States is 10.3 ha of land to provide for their
consumption and absorb their waste. For the U.K, it is 5.2 ha, for Japan 4.3
ha, for Germany 5.3 ha, for China 1.2 h, for India 0.8 ha. (Mathis Wackernagel,
“Ecological Footprints of Nations: How much nature do they use? How much nature
do they have?” www.ucl.ac.uk/dpu-projects/drivers_urb_change/urb_environment/
pdf_Sustainability/CES_footprint_of_nations.pdf).
When seeds, the source of life, are deliberately
made non-renewable through technological interventions like hybridization or
genetic engineering to create sterile seed, the abundance of life shrinks,
growth is interrupted in evolution and farmers’ fields, but growth of the
profits of corporations like Monsanto increases. I have shown how farmers’
suicides in India are linked to seed-monopolies. This is why in Navdanya we
defend seed sovereignty and farmers’ seed freedom.
If we dam rivers, and stop their life-giving
flow, we do not have more water, but less. More water goes to cities and
commercial farms, but there is less water for rural communities for drinking
and irrigation, there is less water in rivers for keeping the river alive. This
is why we have been compelled to start the Save the Ganga Movement to stop
large dams and diversions on the Ganges which are killing the river.
Humanity stands at a cross road. One road
continues on the path of eco-apartheid and eco-imperialism, of commodification
of the Earth, her resources, and processes. And this path must intensify
violence against the Earth and against people.
Ecology movements are resisting the expansion of
the market and the commodification of their land, their minerals, their forest,
and biodiversity. That is why the path of eco-apartheid must become a path
based on war against people. We witness this in India, today, which is growing
at 9% but where violence has become the means for resource appropriation and
land grab of forests and biodiversity to fuel that growth. The unjust
conviction with life imprisonment of a friend and colleague, Dr. Binayak Sen,
is an example of how resource greed and resource grab must convert democratic
and peaceful societies into violent police states, even move them towards
fascism.
The second road is the path of making peace with
the earth, beginning with the recognition of the rights of Mother Earth. This
is the path of Earth democracy. It is a path based on living within the Earth’s
ecological limits and sharing her gifts equitably. It is a path based on
deepening and widening democracy to include all life on Earth and include all
humans who are being excluded by the so called “free market democracy” based on
corporate rule and corporate greed. The path of Earth democracy is the path of
caring and sharing. It is the path to freedom.
Source: www.globalresearch.ca
Ferguson exposes US 'human rights' fraud
By Abayomi Azikiwe
With
the refusal of a grand jury in St. Louis County, Missouri to bring any charges
against the white police officer who gunned down unarmed 18-year-old Michael
Brown on Aug. 9, President Barack Obama has revealed his incapacity to address
the African American national question in light of the reigniting of rebellion
and mass demonstrations in Ferguson and other areas around the United States.
In
the aftermath of the announcement of the decision not to prosecute Wilson,
Obama told a White House press conference that people should accept the grand
jury decision. He later suggested that any rebellion in response to this
travesty of justice would be the wrong thing to do.
When
asked by reporters if he would travel to Ferguson, Obama was noncommittal.
Later on Dec. 1 there was an announcement from the White House that the
administration was convening meetings on the situation involving the latest
upsurge in anti-racist demonstrations.
Related
to Obama’s attempt to distance himself from the situation surrounding Ferguson,
a close ally of the president, Gov. Deval Patrick of Massachusetts, told the
NBC Meet the Press program on Nov. 30 that "I think the reason it's a
quandary is because the federal government is investigating right now. And you
don't want to appear to influence that investigation."
Contrasting
the hostility and indifference to the conditions of African Americans facing
state violence by the police, the masses in Ferguson went into the streets and
have remained there to carry out exactly what the administration had repeatedly
refuted. This sense of anger spread immediately throughout the country with
mass demonstrations organized from coast to coast.
A
determined, mass anti-racist movement has engaged in social media campaigns,
civil disobedience and violent unrest across the U.S. in the only rational
response to the blatant killing of African American youth Michael Brown and
other victims of police violence. The Obama administration’s Justice Department
investigation into the killing of Brown has not resulted in one indictment or
lawsuit against Wilson or the local law-enforcement authorities in Missouri
which not only killed Brown and covered up the crime, but has also engaged in
the use of brutal force using militarized tactics to suppress protests.
“Human
Rights Racket” Condemned Around the World
These developments come at a time when Washington has engineered attacks on the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), the Russian Federation, the Republic of Sudan, Syria, Iran and other states accusing them of human rights violations. Yet the administration has initiated no concrete programs to improve the plight of African Americans, particularly youth, who remain trapped in low-wage employment, joblessness, poverty and deadly racial profiling policies carried out by police and the courts leading to the use of lethal force and mass incarceration.
These developments come at a time when Washington has engineered attacks on the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), the Russian Federation, the Republic of Sudan, Syria, Iran and other states accusing them of human rights violations. Yet the administration has initiated no concrete programs to improve the plight of African Americans, particularly youth, who remain trapped in low-wage employment, joblessness, poverty and deadly racial profiling policies carried out by police and the courts leading to the use of lethal force and mass incarceration.
Perhaps
the strongest denunciation of racism in the US came from the DPRK which blasted
Washington in connection to its role in the passage of a United Nations
resolution condemning Pyongyang for alleged rights violations, and then
relating this to the Ferguson rebellion. The DPRK foreign ministry and human
rights commission responded in detail to the role of US imperialism both
domestically and internationally.
The
DPRK foreign ministry in a statement issued on Nov. 28 said “As regards the
incident, U.S. President Obama let loose a spate of irresponsible remarks that
the U.S. is a country built by law and it is necessary to accept the decision
of the judicial authorities only to spark off bitterer resentment among the
protesters. Whenever an opportunity presents itself, the U.S. authorities
bluster that the human rights of all people are guaranteed in the U.S. in a
legal and institutional manner and only individual cases contrary to them occur
sometimes.”
This
same statement went on to note that “such individual human rights abuses are
taking place one after another and have reached a systematic and wide-ranging
and extremely grave phase. The occurrence of nationwide protests at present
goes to prove that the U.S. human rights regime is beset with serious problems.
The U.S. president in his public appearance tried hard to justify the clear
racial discrimination by law, an indication that the U.S. human rights standard
is wrong.”
Criticism
came from additional quarters including the Russian foreign ministry which said
on Nov. 26 that “The authorities’ actions make it clear that they chose to
crack down hard on protests against police brutality and against a crime that
went unpunished despite being evidently racist in its nature. The scope of
public outrage and the disproportionate reaction by law-enforcement bodies
again confirm that this is not a separate incident, but a deep systematic flaw
in U.S. democracy that has failed to overcome a deep racial rift,
discrimination and inequality.”
A
foreign ministry spokeswoman for the People’s Republic of China, Hua Chunying,
was asked during a media briefing on Nov. 25 for a reaction to the situation
involving the unrest surrounding the grand jury decision in Ferguson, said that
“The case you mention is a U.S. internal affair. But I would like to say that
there’s no such thing as perfection when it comes to human rights regardless of
whatever country you’re in. We have to improve the record of human rights and
promote the cause of human rights. We can learn from each other in this area.”
(Wall Street Journal)
From
the perspective of a national liberation movement, the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) wrote in a statement on Ferguson that “This
comes as no surprise the United States’ legal system is historically and at
present a perpetrator of massive violence and imprisonment against Black
people, just as U.S. imperialism is such a perpetrator against people and
nations around the world. As Palestinians, we are familiar with the injustice
of colonial, racist courtrooms, mechanisms of a racist state, which sentences
our people to prison en masse while wrapping the perpetrators of crimes,
murders and genocide against our people in a cloak of ‘legality.’”
In
one leading newspaper in South Africa, the Daily Maverick, writer Richard
Poplak observed that videos of officers attacking protester represented
"an American city aping South African archival footage. It's a reminder
that in divided countries, with histories of institutionalized racism,
reconciliation without actually reconciling... justice is not just impossible,
but a massive cover-up, a ruse used by power.” (Nov. 26)
An
Egyptian newspaper, Al-Wafd, featured a headline in the aftermath of the grand
jury decision which read "An uprising against racism in the USA".
Even
close European allies of the US such as France criticized the atmosphere
prevailing inside the country. French Justice Minister Christiane Taubira
posted a message on her twitter account Nov. 26, writing: “Racial profiling,
social exclusion, territorial segregation, cultural marginalization, firearms,
fear, (is a) fatal cocktail. Kill them before they grow,” she said, referencing
a book published on the plight of African Americans in the educational system.
In
a later interview over French Radio, Ms. Taubira continued saying: “I can’t
make value judgments on the institutions of the United States. And yet it’s
clear when the sense of frustration is that strong, that deep, that
long-lasting and that huge, there is reason to question whether people trust
these institutions.” (Nov. 27)
The
Struggle Against National Oppression is Pivotal in the US
Until
racism and national oppression is uprooted in the US there can be no peace or
security, let alone democracy. The slogan “no justice, no peace” is a poignant
one which arose during the Rodney King rebellions of 1992 in Los Angeles and
beyond and maintains its relevance to the present upsurge.
The
capitalist system still requires the super-exploitation of oppressed peoples.
As a result successive US administrations have failed repeatedly over the last
five decades to placate the African American people through legislation,
executive orders, token politicians and verbal platitudes.
What
the rebellion in Ferguson indicates along with the nationwide anti-racist
demonstrations that have shutdown shopping malls, downtown streets, highways,
etc., is that African Americans remain in the forefront of the struggle for the
genuine transformation of the US into a non-racist society. Until that change
is brought into existence there will be ongoing unrest that will reach even
higher levels of participation and seriousness.
Source:
www.presstv.com
No comments:
Post a Comment