Rio treaty ‘written for billionaires’..283 paragraphs of fluff.

How “Sustainability” Became “Sustained Growth”

The draft and probably final declaration is 283 paragraphs of fluff. It suggests that the 190 governments due to approve it have, in effect, given up on multilateralism, given up on the world and given up on us.

see also update  http://thefreeonlin ..governments-have-given-up-on-the-planet/

The Rio Declaration rips up the basic principles of environmental action.   In 1992 world leaders signed up to something called “sustainability”. Few of them were clear about what it meant; I suspect that many of them had no idea. Perhaps as a result, it did not take long for this concept to mutate into something subtly different: “sustainable development”. Then it made a short jump to another term: “sustainable growth”. And now, in the 2012 Earth Summit text that world leaders are about to adopt, it has subtly mutated once more: into “sustained growth”…. Continue reading “Rio treaty ‘written for billionaires’..283 paragraphs of fluff.”

Save the Ngabe people..Stop the Dam!

Tear Gas and Guns Fired at Ngabe Indigenous People for Protesting the Barro Blanco Hydroelectric Project

by locaonga

On Friday, May 18th a group of Ngabes and solidarists hiked to the construction site of the Barro Blanco dam on the Tabasara River.  They were met with tear gas, bombs and live fire.  The indigenous group was unarmed and outnumbered, 300 to 50.  One man was wounded from a nearby explosion.

“Yesterday was war. [Martinelli] is massacring our people.  He killed one, he killed another and yesterday he nearly killed again.  If we killed one of theirs we would be in trouble, but they kill one of ours and deny it,” Rogelio Rodriquez, a prominent Ngabe community member said.

A group Ngabe men blockading a construction bridge that
crosses the Tabasara River in the Veraguas Province, Panama Continue reading “Save the Ngabe people..Stop the Dam!”

Indigenas rechazan presencia de Repsol

Jueves, 10 de mayo de 2012 | 4:30 am
Protesta. Los nativos piden que una comisión del Ejecutivo constate su rechazo a Repsol.
Protesta. Los nativos piden que una comisión del Ejecutivo constate su rechazo a Repsol.
Pobladores exigen que se aplique la Ley de Consulta Previa y advierten que no dejarán pasar embarcaciones de petrolera.

Liliana Rojas.

Cientos de nativos de las etnias shawi y awajún de la com

indigenas peruanas luchan para salvar su territoriounidad de Santa María de Cahuapanas, en la provincia de Datem del Marañón, en Loreto, se han

declarado en pie de lucha contra la petrolera Repsol-YPF, a la que acusan de ingresar a su territorio sin su permiso.

Desde hoy, piquetes de nativos impedirán el paso por el río Cahuapanas de embarcaciones al servicio de la empresa española que realiza exploraciones en el lote 109, reveló el Apu Esteban Curimusu Iluma. Continue reading “Indigenas rechazan presencia de Repsol”

5th May..Climate impact day..Connecting the dots..

inShare1 print

Freak weather is not climate change… up to a point..when it suddenly becomes clear fromn all the evidnce, that runaway climate change is happening.

Finally we can join up the dots.

Thousands worldwide to “connect the dots” between climate change and extreme weather this weekend Anyone and everyone can participate in this day.

Many of us do not live in Texas, the Philippines, or Ethiopia — places deeply affected by climate impacts. For those communities, there are countless ways to stand in solidarity with those on the front-lines of the climate crisis: some people will giving presentations in their communities about how to connect the dots.

Others will do projects to demonstrate what sorts of climate impacts we can expect if the crisis is left unchecked. And still others of us will express our indignation to local media and politicians for failing to connect the dots in their coverage of “natural disasters.”

Jeremy Hance mongabay.com May 03, 2012 Continue reading “5th May..Climate impact day..Connecting the dots..”

FBI seizes Riseup.net server…

From Riseup.net:https://riseup.net/

On Wednesday, April 18, at approximately 16:00 Eastern Time, U.S. Federal authorities removed a server from a colocation facility shared by Riseup Networks and May First/People Link in New York City. The seized server was operated by the European Counter Network (“ECN”), the oldest independent internet service provider in Europe, who, among many other things, provided an anonymous remailer service, Mixmaster, that was the target of an FBI investigation into the bomb threats against the University of Pittsburgh.

“The company running the facility has confirmed that the server was removed in conjunction with a search warrant issued by the FBI,” said May First/People Link director Jamie McClelland. “The server seizure is not only an attack against us, but an attack against all users of the Internet who depend on anonymous communication.”

Continue reading “FBI seizes Riseup.net server…”

LAND and LIBERTY..Honduras Occupations

Honduras farm workers stage mass land occupations

Thousands of rural workers in Honduras have occupied land as part of a dispute with large landowners and the government.
The coordinated invasions took place in several locations across the country, activists and officials say.
Farmers groups say the areas taken over are public lands where poor farmers have the right to grow food under Honduran law.

The government said the seizures were illegal and targeted private holdings.

The director of the National Agrarian Institute, Pedro Ham, said the coordinated occupations were politically motivated and aimed at destabilising the government of President Porfirio Lobo.

Violent disputes over farmland are common in Honduras, with dozens of rural workers killed in recent years.Organisations representing rural workers say successive governments have failed to fulfil promises to distribute farmland using agrarian reform legislation.

They also accuse the authorities of acting in the interests of large landowners.Thousands of Honduran farm workers Wednesday launched a coordinated land occupation, squatting on 12,000 hectares nationwide and fueling new tensions over land rights, authorities said.More than 3,500 families started squatting on 29,652 acres of farmland in the departments of Yoro, Cortes, Santa Barbara, Intibuca, Comayagua, Francisco Morazan, El Paraiso and Choluteca on Tuesday — the International Peasant Day of Struggle.

Leaders of the farmers in the impoverished Central American nation say they are worried authorities will violently kick them off the land they are occupying.National Agrarian Institute chief Cesar Ham blamed leftist lawmaker Juan Barahona at least in part for the land use tensions.
Thursday, April 14, 2011

Embattled Honduran Radio Station Reaches First Birthday

Continue reading “LAND and LIBERTY..Honduras Occupations”

Stop ecocide/genocide in Panama! (video)

Away from its busy capital city and famous canal, Panama is one of the world’s most ecologically diverse nations.

Yet huge new hydroelectric dam projects now underway are seeing pristine rivers damned and virgin rainforest flooded.
The government says it is vital for economic growth, big business is cashing in and even the UN has awarded carbon credits on the basis that the resultant energy will be ‘sustainably’ produced.

But for the indigenous Ngabe people – whose homes are vanishing under water – it is a catastrophe. So they have been fighting back. Filmmaker Glenn Elis went to Panama for People & Power to find out more.

Continue reading “Stop ecocide/genocide in Panama! (video)”