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Humanity’s Right to Life
Climate change is already causing enormous
damage and hundreds of millions of poor people are enduring
the consequences.
The most advanced research centers have
claimed that there is little time to avoid an irreversible
catastrophe. James Hansen, from the NASA Goddard Institute,
has said that a proportion of 350 parts of carbon dioxide by
million is still tolerable; however, the figure today is 390
and growing at a pace of 2 parts by million every year
exceeding the levels of 600 thousand years ago. Each one of
the past two decades has been the warmest since the first
records were taken while carbon dioxide increased 80 parts
by million in the past 150 years.
The meltdown of ice in the Artic Sea and of
the huge two-kilometer thick icecap covering Greenland; of
the South American glaciers feeding its main fresh water
sources and the enormous volume covering the Antarctic; of
the remaining icecap on the Kilimanjaro, the ice on the
Himalayan and the large frozen area of Siberia are visible.
Outstanding scientists fear abrupt quantitative changes in
these natural phenomena that bring about the change.
Humanity entertained high hopes in the
Copenhagen Summit after the Kyoto Protocol signed in 1997
entered into force in 2005. The resounding failure of the
Summit
gave rise to shameful episodes that call for due
clarification.
The
United States, with less
than 5% of the world population releases 25% of the carbon
dioxide. The new
US President had promised
to cooperate with the international effort to tackle a new
problem that afflicts that country as much as the rest of
the world. In the meetings leading to the
Summit, it became clear that the
leaders of that nation and of the wealthiest countries were
maneuvering to place the burden of sacrifices on the
emergent and poor countries.
A great number of leaders and thousands of
representatives of social movements and scientific
institutions, determined to fight for the preservation of
humanity from the greatest risk in history, converged in
Copenhagen on the invitation of the organizers of
the Summit.
I’d rather avoid reference to details of the brutality of
the Danish police force against thousands of protesters and
invitees from social and scientific movements who traveled
to the Danish capital. I’ll focus on the political features
of the Summit.
Actually, chaos prevailed in
Copenhagen where incredible things
happened. The social movements and scientific institutions
were not allowed to attend the debates. There were heads of
State and Government who could not even express their views
on crucial issues. Obama and the leaders of the wealthiest
nations took over the conference, with the complicity of the
Danish government. The United Nations agencies were pushed
to the background.
Barack Obama, the last to arrive on the day
of the Summit
for a 12-hours stay, met with two groups of invitees
carefully chosen by him and his staff, and in the company of
one of them met at the plenary hall with the rest of the
high-level delegations. He made his remarks and left right
away trough the back door. Except for the small group chosen
by him, the other representatives of countries were
prevented from taking the floor during that plenary session.
The presidents of Bolivia
and the Bolivarian
Republic
of Venezuela
were allowed to speak because the Chairman of the
Summit
had no choice but to give them the floor in light of the
strong pressures of those present.
In an adjacent room, Obama brought together
the leaders of the wealthiest nations, some of the most
important emerging States and two very poor countries. He
then introduced a document, negotiated with two or three of
the most important countries, ignored the UN General
Assembly, gave a press conference and left like Julius
Caesar after one of his victorious wars in Asia Minor that
led him to say: “I came, I saw, I conquered.”
Even Gordon Brown, Prime Minister of the
United Kingdom, had said on
October 19: “If
we do not reach a deal over the next few months, let us be
in no doubt, since once the damage from unchecked emissions
growth is done, no
retrospective global agreement in some future period can
undo that choice. By then it will be irretrievably
too late...”
Brown concluded his speech with these
dramatic words: “We cannot afford to fail. If we fail now we
will pay a heavy price. If we act
now, if we act together, if we act with vision and resolve,
success at
Copenhagen
is still within our reach, but, if we falter, the Earth will
itself be
at risk and, for the planet, there is no Plan
B.”
But later he arrogantly said that the United
Nations could not be taken hostage by a group of countries
like Cuba,
Venezuela,
Bolivia,
Nicaragua and
Tuvalu. At the same time,
he accused China,
India,
Brazil,
South Africa and other
emerging countries of being lured by the
United States into signing a document
that throws the Kyoto Protocol in the wastebasket without a
binding agreement involving the
United States
and its wealthy allies.
I find it necessary to recall that the United
Nations Organization was born hardly six decades ago, after
the last World War, when there were no more than fifty
independent countries. Today, after the hateful colonial
system ceased to exist thanks to the resolute struggle of
the peoples, it has a membership of over 190 independent
nations. For many years, even the People’s Republic of
China was denied admission
to the UN while a puppet regime was its representative in
that institution and in the privileged Security Council.
The tenacious support of the growing number
of Third World nations would prove indispensable to
China’s international recognition and
become an extremely significant element for the acceptance
of that country’s rights at the UN by the
United States
and its NATO allies.
It was the Soviet Union
that made the greatest contribution to the heroic fight
against fascism. More than 25 million of its people perished
while the country was terribly devastated. It was from that
struggle that it emerged as a superpower with the capacity
to partly balance the absolute domination of the
US imperial system and the former
colonial powers to plunder the Third
World countries unrestrictedly. Following the
demise of the USSR,
the United States
extended its political and military power to the East, --up
to Russia’s
heart-- and enhanced its influence on the rest of
Europe. Therefore, what happened in
Copenhagen came as no surprise.
I want to insist on how unfair and outrageous
were the remarks of the Prime Minister of the
UK and the Yankee attempt
to impose as the Summit Accord a document that was at no
time discussed with the attending countries.
During his press conference of December 21,
Cuba’s Foreign Minister
Bruno Rodriguez made a statement that cannot be disproved. I
will quote from some of its paragraphs: “I would like to
emphasize that no agreement of the Conference of the Parties
was reached in
Copenhagen, that no decision was made
as to binding or nonbinding commitments or pertaining to
International Law; that simply did not happen. There was no
agreement in
Copenhagen.”
“The
Summit
was a failure and a deception for the world […] the lack of
political will was left in the open…”
“…it was a step backward in the actions of
the international community to prevent or mitigate the
effects of climate change…”
“…the average world temperature could rise by
5 degrees…”
Right then our Foreign Minister adds other
interesting data on the likely consequences of climate
change according to the latest scientific research.
“…from the Kyoto Protocol until today the
developed countries’ emissions rose by 12.8%... and 55% of
that volume corresponds to the United States.”
“The average annual oil consumption is 25
barrels for an American, 11 barrels for a European, less
than 2 barrels for a Chinese and less than 1 barrel for a
Latin American or Caribbean
citizen.”
“Thirty countries, including those of the
European Union, are consuming 80% of the fuel produced.”
The fact is that the developed countries
signatories of the Kyoto Protocol increased their emissions
dramatically. Now, they want to replace the adopted bases of
the emissions from 1990 with those of 2005. This means that
the
United States, which is the
main source of emissions, would be reducing its emissions of
25 years ago in only 3%. It is a shameful mockery of the
world public opinion.
The Cuban foreign minister, speaking on
behalf of a group of ALBA member countries, defended
China,
India,
Brazil,
South Africa and other
important emerging-economies states. He stressed the concept
adopted in Kyoto
that “common but differentiated responsibilities mean that
the responsibility of the historical accumulators and the
developed countries, who are the culprits of this
catastrophe, differs from that of the small island states
and the South countries, above all the least developed…”
“Responsibility means financing;
responsibility means technology transfer on adequate terms.
But, at this point, Obama resorts to a game of words and
instead of talking of common but differentiated
responsibilities, he speaks of ‘common but differentiated
responses.’”
“…he then leaves the plenary hall without
taking the trouble of listening to anybody; he had neither
listened to anybody before taking the floor.”
In a subsequent press conference, before
departing from the Danish capital, Obama had said: “There
has been a meaningful and unprecedented breakthrough here in
Copenhagen. For the first time in
history, the largest economies have come to jointly accept
responsibilities.”
In his clear and irrefutable presentation,
our Foreign Minister said: “What does it mean that ‘the
largest economies have come to jointly accept
responsibilities’? It means that they are placing a large
part of the burden of financing the relief and adaptation of
countries, mostly the South countries, to climate change on
China,
Brazil,
India and
South Africa. Because it
must be said that in Copenhagen
we witnessed an assault, a holdup against
China,
Brazil,
India
and South
Africa, and against every
other euphemistically called developing country.”
These were the resounding and undeniable
words used by our Foreign Minister to describe what happened
in Copenhagen.
I must add that, when at 10:00 a.m. on
December 19 our Vicepresident Esteban Lazo and the Cuban
Foreign Minister had already left, a belated attempt was
made to resurrect the
Copenhagen cadaver as a Summit
Accord. At that moment, practically every head of State had
left and there was hardly any minister around. Again, the
denunciation by the remaining members of the delegations
from Cuba,
Venezuela,
Bolivia,
Nicaragua
and other countries could defeat the maneuver. That was the
end of the inglorious
Summit.
Another fact that should not be overlooked is
that at the most critical moment of that day, in the wee
small hours, the Cuban Foreign Minister, together with the
delegations waging the honorable battle, offered UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon their cooperation in the ever
harder struggle being fought as well as in future efforts
necessary to preserve the life of our species.
The environmental group Wild World Fund has
warned that if emissions are not drastically reduced climate
change will go unchecked in the next 5 to 10 years.
But there is no need to prove the substance
of what is said here that Obama did.
The US
President stated on Wednesday, December 23, that people are
justified in being disappointed about the outcome of the
Summit
on Climate Change. In an interview with the CBS television
network, the President said that “instead of a total
collapse if nothing had been done, which would have been a
huge step backward; at least we could remain more or less
where we were…”
According to the press dispatch, Obama is the
target of most criticism from the countries that nearly
unanimously feel that the result of the
Summit
was disastrous.
Now, the UN is in a quandary since many
countries would find it humiliating to ask others to adhere
to the arrogant and antidemocratic accord.
To carry on with the battle and to claim in
every meeting, particularly in those of
Bonn and
Mexico,
humanity’s right to life, with the morale and the strength
that truth provides, is in my opinion the only way to
proceed.

Fidel Castro Ruz
December 26, 2009
8:15 p.m. |