It’s
All the North’s Fault
By Toye Olori
Blame it on the North, environmental activists say. Most of
the natural and man-made ecological disasters currently plaguing
the Earth are a result of their actions, past and present.
''There is growing evidence that weather extremes have become
more frequent. Floods and droughts intensify. The mean global
sea level is rising. Changing climate conditions may turn
150 million people into refugees,'' said a statement released
yesterday by the Ecumenical Development and Relief Agencies
in collaboration with the World Council of Churches Climate
Change Programme.
It noted that the consequences of climate change further accentuate
the deep injustices, which exist between industrialised and
developing countries. ''Developing countries, where the majority
of the world's population live, are more likely to be hit
by weather anomalies and lack the means to protect themselves
against the impacts brought about by climate change''.
The statement noted that the North also owed considerable
ecological debt to the South. The external financial debt
owed by the South to northern creditors is much smaller than
the ecological debt owed by the northern industrial countries
to the developing world because of historical and ongoing
resource plundering, environmental degradation and the disproportionate
appropriation of environmental space to deposit toxic wastes
and greenhouse gases.
The ecological debt, according to the statement, has accumulated
for centuries through the extraction, without the permission
of the peoples most affected, of natural resources, such as
petroleum, minerals, forest, marine and genetic resources
by processes which destroy ecosystems and the bases of sustenance
for Southern peoples.
''In Ecuador, Nigeria and elsewhere, ecological creditors
(indigenous people affected by the activities of multinational
companies) have occupied oil drilling and mining sites to
stop the destruction of ecosystems on which their livelihood
depends,'' the statement said.
The release noted that one of the main problems was that
the decisions affecting the lives of people were being made
by companies and not governments. ''The economic decisions
and actions that shape the lives of most of the people living
on this planet rest increasingly with the private sector.
Governments are increasingly reluctant or incapable even of
considering a challenge to their power.
“Of the 100 largest economies, 51 are now global corporations
and 49 are countries. Ninety percent of these corporations
are based in industrialised countries, accounting for something
like 70 percent of world trade and holding at least 90 percent
of all technology and patent products.''
Global rules have been shaped to turn natural resources and
people into commodities and markets to be exploited, often
with devastating environmental and social consequences, it
continued.
Demba Moussa Dembele, director of the Forum for African Alternatives,
advocates a legally binding international agreement on corporate
accountability. He called on the WSSD to endorse corporate
accountability and a plan of action for a global regulative
framework.
“The U.N. should re-institute under ECOSOC the Commission
on Transnational Corporations to establish regulatory mechanisms
that address the relationship between corporate policies and
practices and international obligations,'' Dembele said yesterday.
He added: ''All U.N. member states should negotiate a legally
binding framework convention for corporate accountability
and liability under the U.N. system, with independent mechanisms
for monitoring, compliance and enforcement, which adhere to
all the principles of sustainable development.''
These, according to him, should include: mandatory compliance
with principles of corporate responsibility and enforceable
codes of conduct; operational transparency, accountability,
mandatory reporting, disclosure and access to information;
financial and legal liability for companies and company directors,
as well as sanctions and full and meaningful stakeholder participation
and respect for indigenous rights. |