Rudd and Clark must act on climate displacement
Media Release
Embargo : 5am Sunday August 17,
2008
Rudd and Clark must act on Pacific climate displacement
Over 100 representatives of non-government organisations from across the Asia-Pacific - including the main Pacific peak bodies and NGOs - have made an urgent call for Australian PM Kevin Rudd and NZ PM Helen Clark to do more to help the Pacific with climate change, in particular increased immigration and resettlement.
The groups, including church, environment, aid, union and community organisations, have released an Open Letter ahead of next Tuesday's Pacific Islands Leadership Forum to be held in Niue. Kevin Rudd and Helen Clark will also meet to discuss climate change on Monday
The organisations warn that
climate change is already hurting the Pacific and that large
scale displacement of Pacific Islanders must be
addressed.
The letter sets out a six point action plan
including assistance for resettlement within the Pacific and
an increase in permanent migration from the Pacific region
to Australia and New Zealand. Australia will announce a
guest worker program with the Pacific at the forum.
"The recently released Draft Report of the Garnaut Review warned that the world will see large numbers of climate change refugees, particularly in the Pacific”, Damien Lawson, Friends of the Earth Australia said.
"Low lying island nations such as Tuvalu and Kiribati are already facing rising seas, storms and king tides that are having a terrible impact. We could see sea level rises of several metres this century. For Tuvalu, which has an average height of less than two metres, that is a disaster."
"Professor Garnaut also said that there is an expectation by the international community and Pacific countries that Australia and New Zealand should provide assistance with this displacement."
"There needs to be substantial resources allocated to assist with resettlement within the Pacific, but central to any solution will also be increased migration to Australia and New Zealand."
"Plans for increased labor mobility such as guest worker programs are not enough. Permanent migration can build stability and resources that will assist with adaption and building resilience in the Pacific."
"The Pacific Island Leadership Forum is an
opportunity to work with Pacific Island countries on a plan
to assist with large scale displacement. Australia and New
Zealand can not sit on its hands and wait for the disaster
to come. Now is the time for action.”
Contact: Damien
Lawson, National Climate Justice Coordinator, Friends of the
Earth Australia: +61 419 253 342
NB:Open letter to
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and New
Zealand-Aotearoa Prime Minister Helen Clark follows
An
Open letter to Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd
and
New Zealand-Aotearoa Prime Minister Helen
Clark
Dear Prime Ministers,
Your action needed on climate change in the Pacific
We represent a range of
communities and non-government organisations in the
Asia-Pacific, Australia and New Zealand-Aotearoa. Without
immediate action, hundreds of thousands of people will be
displaced by climate change in the coming decades. Pacific
Islanders are already affected, with their islands very
vulnerable to sea level rises, storm surge and loss of food
security and water supplies.
The Pacific Islands Forum
next week is an opportunity to define a more concrete
program of action to assist Pacific Islanders.
We welcome
past acknowledgment of the problem the Pacific faces and
expressions of a willingness to help, but now is the time
for action. Therefore we call on the Australian and New
Zealand Governments to recognise the urgency of climate
change and the particular threat it poses to the peoples of
the Pacific.
The Australia and New Zealand governments
must begin a real process of partnership with Pacific Island
countries in finding ways to prepare for and assist with the
resettlement of Pacific Island people who will be displaced
by global warming.
In particular the follow actions must
be taken:
• substantial and urgent mitigation efforts
by Australia and New Zealand;
• strong advocacy
internationally for urgent action by developed countries to
reduce greenhouse pollution and de-carbonise their
economies;
• a commitment of substantial resources, in
addition to existing aid programs, to adaptation projects
and funding for evacuation and resettlement within and
between Pacific Island countries;
• a substantial
increase in permanent migration from Pacific Island
countries to Australia and New Zealand to help build
relationships with Australia and New Zealand and to build
resilience and independent resources in Pacific Island
countries;
• the establishment of a special
humanitarian stream within the immigration program for
climate affected people;
• strong advocacy
internationally for an international legal framework for
assisting people displaced by climate change.
Words are
not enough and waiting for the catastrophic sea level rises
is not acceptable. Australia and New Zealand have the
responsibility and capacity to act now. They should begin to
do so.
Anything less will be seen as a betrayal of the people most affected by climate change but least responsible for it.
Yours Sincerely
Signatories follow
Australia
Damien Lawson, National Climate
Justice Coordinator, Friends of the Earth Australia
Rev
Jason Kioa, Moderator, Synod of Victoria and Tasmania,
Uniting Church in Australia
Andrew Hewett, Executive
Director, Oxfam Australia
Cate Faehrmann, Executive
Director, Nature Conservation Council of NSW
Mark
Wakeham, Campaigns Director, Environment Victoria
Stephen
Campbell, Head of Campaigns, Greenpeace Australia
Pacific
Thea Ormerod, Chair, Australian Religious
Response to Climate Change
Jill Finnane Coordinator,
Pacific Calling Partnership
Phil Glendenning, Director,
Edmund Rice Centre
Fikau Teponga, Kaiga Tuvalu Victoria
Inc
Fatima Hakaoro, Chairperson, Queensland Tuvalu
Community
Adele Webb, National Coordinator, Jubilee
Australia
Jeff Angel, Executive Director, Total
Environment Centre, Australia
Nic Maclellan, Nuclear Free
and Independent Pacific, Australia
Flint Duxfield,
Director, AID/WATCH, Australia
Jacquie Svenson, Climate
Action Coogee, Australia
Hammy Goonan, Australian Centre
for Democracy and Justice, Australia
Judith Pembleton,
Secretary, Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in
Australia
Jack Smitt, Project SafeCom
Frank Ondrus,
Coordinator, HOPE Australia
Steve Phillips, Rising Tide
Australia
Janet Cavanaugh, Clarence Branch Secretary,
Climate Change Australia
Jenny Curtis, Climate Change
Balmain-Rozelle
Deborah Hart, Coordinator, LIVE (Locals
Into Victoria’s Environment)
Gaetano Greco Chairperson,
Darebin Ethnic Communities' Council
Pacific
Rajeshwar
Singh, Chairman, South Pacific and Oceanic Council of Trade
Unions (SPOCTU)
Annie Homasi, Co-ordinator, Tuvalu
Association of Non-Government Organisations, (TANGO),
Tuvalu
Celine Hoiore, General Secretary, Eglise
Protestante Maohi, Tahiti, French Polynesia (Deputy
Moderator, Pacific Conference of Churches)
Roko Timeon,
Executive Director, Kiribati Association of Non Government
Organisations (KANGO), Kiribati
Drew Havea, Chair, Pacific
Islands Association of Non-Government Organisations
(PIANGO), Tonga
Rex Horoi, Executive Director, Foundation
of the People of the South Pacific International (FSPI),
Fiji
Fiu Elisara, Executive Director, O Le Siosiomaga
Society (OLSSI), Samoa
Tina Takashy, CEO, FSM Association
of Non Government Organisations (FANGO), Federated States of
Micronesia
Moale Vagi, Chair, Melanesian NGO Centre for
Leadership (MNCL), Papua New Guinea
Margaret Sete,
Executive Director, Melanesian NGO Centre for Leadership,
(MNCL) Papua New Guinea
Sione Faka’osi, Director, Tonga
Community Development Trust (TCDT), Kingdom of
Tonga
Liliu Mailo, American Samoa Association of
Non-Government Organisations (ASANGO), American
Samoa.
Lorine Tevi, Fiji Council of Social Services
(FCOSS), Fiji
Vereara Maeva Taripo, President, Cook
Islands Association of NGOs (CIANGO), Cook Islands
Nooroa
Rangi, Cook Islands Association of NGOs (CIANGO), Cook
Islands
Fulai Nainoca, Program Co-ordinator, Partners in
Community Development, Fiji
Kesaia Tabunakawai,
Representative, WWF South Pacific, Fiji
Louise Heaps,
Conservation Director, WWF South Pacific, Fiji
Rev. Tafua M Lusama, Chairman, Tuvalu Climate Action Network
Damien
Ase, Executive Director, Centre for Environmental Law and
Community Rights, Papua New Guinea
Kenn Mondiai,
Executive Director, Partners with Melanesians Inc, Papua New
Guinea
Jacob Ramoi, Project Director, Managalas Development Foundation Inc, Papua New Guinea
Danny Kana, Board Chairman, Ona Keto Peoples Foundation Inc, Papua New Guinea
John Chitoa, Coordinator, Bismarck Ramu Group, Papua New Guinea
Ricardo Navarro, CESTA - Amigos de la Tierra, El Salvador
Isaac Rojas, Comunidades Ecologistas
la Ceiba, Costa Rica
Thomas Parker, Executive Director,
PNG Eco-forestry Forum , Papua New Guinea
Elizabeth
Tonge, Executive Director, Widebay Conservation Association,
Papua New Guinea
Arnold Tavatuna, Executive Director of
East New Britain Social Ekson Inc, Papua New Guinea
John
Ericho, Interim National Coordinator, Conservation Forum of
Papua New Guinea
Ahohiva Levi, President, Niue Association
of Non-Government Organisations (NIUANGO), Niue
Mike
Ingpen, Secretary, South Pacific and Oceanic Council of
Trade Unions (SPOCTU)
Tevita Koroi, President, Council of
Pacific Education (COPE), Fiji
Alisi Dauvewa, Executive
Director, Partners in Community Development, Fiji
Claire
Cronin, Project Officer, Commonwealth Human Rights
Initiative
Papiloa Bloomfield Foliaki, Vice Chair, Tonga
Community Development Trust, Kingdom of Tonga
Emeli Esau,
Project Co-ordinator, Tonga Community Development Trust,
Kingdom of Tonga
Sereana Cokanasiga, Program Support
Services Manager, FSPI, Fiji
Feofanaki Pocock, Matakau
Vagahau, Niue
Victoria Gonchaova, Director, Marshall
Islands Council of NGOs, Marshall Islands
Roina Vavatau,
Chief Executive Officer, Samoa Umbrella of NGOs (SUNGO),
Samoa
Gerida Tapati, Hiti Tau, Tahiti, French
Polynesia
Edwina Kotoisuva, Deputy Director, Fiji
Women’s Crisis Centre (FWCC), Fiji
Emeline Siale
Ilolahia, Executive Director, Civil Society Forum of Tonga
(CSFT), Kingdom of Tonga
Finau Tutone, Board Member,
Civil Society Forum of Tonga (CSFT), Kingdom of
Tonga
Seni Nobou, Pacific Political Advisor, Greenpeace
Pacific, Fiji
George L. Salas, Board member, Payuta,
Guam
Aotearoa / New Zealand
Barry Coates, Executive Director, Oxfam New Zealand
Carmen Gravatt, Head of
Campaigns, Greenpeace Aotearoa New Zealand
Justin Kemp,
Program Officer, Council for International Development (CID)
Aotearoa / New Zealand
Pacific Indigenous Peoples
Environment Coalition, Aotearoa / New Zealand
Betsan
Martin, Director, Response, Aotearoa/New Zealand
Lo
Aleke, President, Aupisa, Aotearoa / New Zealand
Maire
Leadbetter, Spokesperson, Indonesia Human Rights Committee,
Aotearoa / New Zealand
Edwina Hughes, Co-ordinator, Peace
Movement Aotearoa
Joan Macdonald, Co-ordinator, Women’s
International League for Peace and Freedom, Aotearoa / New
Zealand
Kevin McBride, Co-ordinator, Pax Christi,
Aotearoa / New Zealand
Asia
Clemente Bautista, National Coordinator, Kalikasan-People's Network for the Environment, Philippines
Choony Kim, Korean Federation for
Environmental Movement, South Korea
Maudesco/FoE
Mauritius
Meenakshi Rameen, FOE-Malaysia
Geetha
Lakmini Secretary, National Fisheries Solidarity Sri
Lanka
Julia Schonharl,Ecumenical Coalition on Tourism,
Thailand
Alternate Forum for Research in Mindanao , Philippines
Max Tahu, La'o Hamutuk - Timor-Leste Institute for Development Monitoring and Analysis, Timor Leste
Ramananda Wangkheirakpam, North East Peoples
Alliance on Trade Finance and Development, India
Campaign
for Alternative Industry Network (CAIN),
Thailand
Souparna Lahiri, National forum of Forest People
& Forest Workers, India
Parshuram Tamang, International
Centre for Indigenous Nationalities' Development,
Nepal
Pakistan Fisherfolk Forum
Vince Cinches,
Executive Director, FIDEC - Central Visayas Fisherfolk
Development Center Inc, Philippines
Pakistan Fisherfolk
Forum
Additional Supporters
Gail Woon, EarthCare, The
Bahamas
Carolina Herrmann, Friends of the Earth Brazil
ends