Cancún Betrayal: UNFCCC Unmasked as WTO of the Sky

Statement by the Indigenous Environmental Network
Cancún Betrayal: UNFCCC Unmasked as WTO of the Sky
Real Solutions to the Climate Crisis Will Come From Grassroots Movements

Cancún, Mexico -- As representatives of Indigenous peoples and communities already suffering the immediate impacts of climate change, we express our outrage and disgust at the agreements that have emerged from the COP16 talks. As was exposed in the Wikileaks climate scandal, the Cancun Agreements are not the result of an informed and open consensus process, but the consequence of an ongoing US diplomatic offensive of backroom deals, arm-twisting and bribery that targeted nations in opposition to the Copenhagen Accord during the months leading up to the COP-16 talks.

We are not fooled by this diplomatic shell game. The Cancun Agreements have no substance. They are yet more hot air. Their only substance is to promote continued talks about climate mitigation strategies motivated by profit. Such strategies have already proved fruitless and have been shown to violate human and Indigenous rights. The agreements implictly promote carbon markets, offsets, unproven technologies, and land grabs—anything but a commitment to real emissions reductions.

The Voices of the People Must be Respected
Indigenous Peoples from North to South cannot afford these unjust and false ‘solutions’, because climate change is killing our peoples, cultures and ecosystems. We need real commitments to reduce emissions at the source and to keep fossil fuels in the ground. Because we are on the front lines of the impacts of climate change, we came to COP-16 with an urgent call to address the root causes of the climate crisis, to demand respect for the Rights of Mother Earth, and to fundamentally redefine industrial society’s relationship with the planet. Instead, the Climate COP has shut the doors on our participation and that of other impacted communities, while welcoming business, industry, and speculators with open arms. The U.S., Industrialized nations, big business and unethical companies like Goldman Sachs will profit handsomely from these agreements while our people die.

Women and youth in our communities are disproportionately burdened by climate impacts and rights violations. Real solutions would strengthen our collective rights and land rights while ensuring the protection of women, youth and vulnerable communities. While the Cancun Agreements do contain some language "noting" rights, it is exclusively in the context of market mechanisms, while failing to guarantee safeguards for the rights of peoples and communities.

The failures of the UN talks in Copenhagen have been compounded in Cancun. From the opening day to the closing moments of the talks, our voices were censored, dissenting opinions silenced and dozens ejected from the conference grounds.  The thousands who rallied outside to reject market mechanisms and demand recognition of human and Indigenous rights were ignored.

The Market Will Not Protect Our Rights
Market-based approaches have failed to stop climate change. They are designed to commodify and profit from the last remaining elements of our Mother Earth and the air. Through its focus on market approaches like carbon trading, the UNFCCC has become the WTO of the Sky.

We are deeply concerned that the Cancun Agreements betray both our future and the rights of peoples, women, youth, and vulnerable populations. While the preamble to the Cancun Agreements note a call for "studies on human rights and climate change," this is in effect an empty reference, with no content and no standards, that will not protect the collective rights of peoples. The market mechanisms that implicitly dominate both the spirit and the letter of the Cancun Agreements will neither avert climate change nor guarantee human rights, much less the Rights of Mother Earth. Approaches based on carbon offsetting, like REDD, will permit polluters to continue poisoning land, water, air, and our bodies, while doing nothing to stop the climate crisis. Indeed, approaches based on the commodification of biodiversity, CO2, forests, water, and other sacred elements will only encourage the buying and selling of our human and environmental rights.

The Cochabamba People's Agreement Points the Way Forward
There is another way forward: the Cochabamba People's Agreement represents the vision of everyday people from all corners of the globe who are creating the solutions to climate change from the ground up, and calling for a global framework that respects human rights and the Rights of Mother Earth.

If any hope emerges from Cancun, it comes from the dramatic demonstrations we saw in the streets and from the deep and powerful alliances that were built among indigenous and social movements. The Indigenous Environmental Network joined thousands of our brothers and sisters to demand real climate solutions based in the rights of Indigenous Peoples, the rights of Mother Earth, and a just transition away from fossil fuels. We will continue to stand with our allies to demand climate justice. The communities on the frontlines of the problem––those who face the daily impacts of the climate crisis––are also on the frontlines of the solutions. Community-based solutions can cool the planet!

The fight for climate justice continues. We are committed to deepening our alliances with indigenous and social movements around the world as we build in our communities and mobilize toward COP-17 in Durban, South Africa. Social movements in South Africa mobilized the world to overthrow Apartheid and create powerful, transformative change. The same mass-based movement building is our only hope to overturn the climate apartheid we now face. We look forward to working with our African brothers and sisters and tribal communities in Durban.

We only have one Mother Earth. As Indigenous Peoples, we will continue our struggle to defend all our Relations and future generations.

***VIDEO INTERVIEWS AND PHOTOS @ http://pitch.pe/109054


Indigenous Environmental Network (IEN) is a network of Indigenous Peoples empowering Indigenous Nations and communities towards sustainable livelihoods, demanding environmental justice and maintaining the Sacred Fire of our traditions. IEN brought 17 indigenous leaders to Cancun as part of the Grassroots Solutions for Climate Justice -- North America Delegation uniting representatives from fossil fuel impacted communities who are on the frontlines of solving the climate crisis. A complete archive of the delegations statements and activities can be found at http://redroadcancun.org and http://grassrootsclimatesolutions.org

You need to be a member of maoliworld to add comments!

Email me when people reply –

Replies

  • My apology Kai Landow,

     

    It was not Goldtooth son that I was listening to--it was Clayton Thomas Muller.

  • Kai Landow,

     

    What we have in Hawaii is the acknowledgement of the people that live in a geographical area of 200,000 acres (DHHL).  Where too many native Hawaiians reside that have no voice. 

     

    Abe Piianaia was the last Hawaiian Studies program director at UH Manoa.  I was there when American Studies tumpled Abe.  He was an easy mark because he only had a BA. 

     

    The battle in Hawaii is the bloodquantum set forth by congress at the request of the native Hawaiian in part.

     

    In part, because they the native Hawaiians wanted both parents to be native Hawaiians, thus, it would constituet a race factor.  Congress, copied their native American program and now we have an additional problem.

     

    It is difficult to stand up as an "Indigenous" as a native Hawaiian on DHHL, academically, or genealogy-that defining moment is difficult.  The 1999 Danner sisters came to Hawaii with their corporate 'ideals' and know how for monies and complicated matters to the far out reaching point--to whereas we don't exist!  The corporate exist without the identity of the people or people per se.  

     

    The battle on Maoliworld are close friends of mines and we get into disagreements all the time is nationals vs bloodquantum.  The Ku'e pagentry at Iolani was started by Dede (DHHL leasee), Mel Kalahiki (DHHL commissioner) and myself (DHHL leasee.), we have been excluded from their minds, but can be used in the process so long as we don't voice our opinions on matters of the 200,000 acres and life with only native Hawaiians in a particular area and signed a contract with the fake state.  An existing program since 1923. 

    I believe Tane will argue along with the rest of the nationals that we have no political status or voice becuase of the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom and that we were all nationals at that time.  Which infact, superceeds the American illegal findings.  In the meantime, we who live together in one geographical area gets stepped on abused, and discarded when ever it becomes an inconvience or convience.  I personally, prefere nationals because it is difficult to live as a native Hawaiian on DHHL. 

     

    So, one tells me how in the world can the 'Indigenous' peoples of the Hawaiian Islands voice their opinion above and beyond Guam and other Pacific Islanders which the Nationals in Hawaii use to voice the Pacific Island voices.  It gets interesting sometimes at these outings with the Nationals. 

     

    From your perspective,  what do you see as a representative of the Pacific Islanders at these conferences?  Leon Siu, academic (that lacks maturity), yourself?

     

    I will be a bag of bones when some parts of the islands will be underwater.  The military will have gained more acreage and in fee simple.  Besides, our islands will be so toxic that no one can really live here.  If they do, in order to live a full quality life they would have to live in a bubble, bunker, or hopper.    No sun, no surf and no beach or outside doors activity.  Children will not be able to live here in Hawaii, like the Micronesians--we will have to exit too!

     

    The Nationals are gaining voice and will superceed anything I say as an Indigenous person, or someone with both genealogy or land in tenancy in common and DHHL and Fee Simple.  I have all three and very difficult to hang on to much interferences from people that don't have residencies on aina and no continuence connection of 2,000 years old. 

    • Aloha Kaohi,

       

      What I see is pure frustration on the part of the Kuaina kind of Pacific islanders.  We get shut down by the process.  Only the academics harvest jobs and status from these events.  to be effective is to be banned.  My job consists of blocking the Hawaiian studies people from diminishing Hawaiian rights.  They seem to want to describe Hawaiians as a pre-contact   lovable needy ward of the world or just ripe for the US picking.

       

      Leon and myself are not Academics and perhaps other would be better qualified to do this work, but a larger delegation would not hurt.  A the moment the Australians have the largest group and tend to dominate the process.

       

      Kai

      • Kai Landow,

        Thanks for writing back!

         

        The issue of Hawaiians are so sensitive right now.   About the role of the indigenous people's and because of the US defining of who we are?  To be an indigeous-- that runs counter to the Hawaiian Nationals.  I have no choice but to pa'a on all three different aina geographic boundaries. 

        I got the banning part--for some it's more like stone'ing. 

         

        I was thinking about the global role for indigenous movements all day.  Especially when I listened to HPR, I did not hear much of the COP 16, until this past two days.  A lot of indeginous voices were being voiced on HPR!

         

        As for Hawaiian rights, I'm curious is it targeting a particular group of people or all Pacific Islanders in Hawaii?

         

        And yes, a larger delegation would not hurt either which is why I keep trying to become part of and share what I have-know with anyone that is open to hearing or seeing the aina from my perspective for the purpose of conjoining.  But, that is neither here or there when I am slammed with education and Kalo --there is an immediate disconnect.  And a disconnect from the water.  And a disconnect from the fishing.  And a disconnect from navigation.  And a disconnect from our burials.  And a disconnect from our rituals.  And a disconnect from our first language.  And a disconnect from each other those that are frontline activist.  And a continuum of disconnect...  that is so sad.

         

        One thing I don't do is to disconnect from Maoliworld and play on other sites.  Why?  Too simplistic and can turn into a babble very quickly instead of a check and balance like a forum does. 

         

        I've known Aboriginals from Australia to be so earthy and some that are capitalistic from assimulion.  I do like the sharing with the strong Aboriginals that are earthy.   I did hear the son of Goldtooth speak, brilliant person as far as indigenous thinking. 

         

        There is a gentlemen's agreement between the Nationals and the Akaka People--no bloodquantum!  if the Akaka Bill passes, those of us on DHHL will be impacted immediately.  We won't survive, at least it will be swift and fast, the military connections are too strong with the Na Kanaka on DHHL.  We will be forced to except the military.   We will be runned over should the Akaka Bill pass.  I'm already starting to feel the Stryker Brigade tactical patriotic scams.  This has happened before when Ray Soon was the director of DHHL.  Construction workers turned on their vicious monkey kill mode behavior without any concern for reason of the truth and facts of the matter.  Too many elderly died becaue of the lack of inaction on their part and the weakness of their bones.  So very very sad.

         

        Thanks for the talk!



  • Cancun COP16

    Advancing REDD+: New Pathways and Partnerships

    Wednesday, Dec. 8, 2010
    Innovative International REDD+ Partnerships

    • His Excellency Jens Stoltenberg - Prime Minister of Norway
    • His Excellency Bharrat Jagdeo - President of Guyana
    • Kuntoro Mangkusubroto - Head of Indonesian President's Delivery Unit for REDD
    • George Soros - Founder, Open Society Foundations
    • Jonathan Pershing - U.S. Deputy Special Envoy for Climate Change


    Final Day of COP16: Youth Delegates Ejected from COP16 for Counting...

    December 10, 2010
    Cancun, Mexico

    As the final negotiating sessions unfolded, youth from around the world lined the front of the Moon Palace conference center in a final appeal for a science-based target of limiting global temperature rise to 1.5°C in any agreements coming out the Cancun negotiations.

    In front of a banner displaying ‘Climate Justice Delayed is Justice Denied’, they tried to count to 21,000, which according to Oxfam, represents the deaths resulting from climate-related disasters in the first nine months of 2010.  

    ‘Climate justice means ensuring a sustainable future for communities and the ecosystem around the world,’ said Carra Cheslin a youth climate activist from the U.S. ‘It is imperative to protect vulnerable and underrepresented peoples who suffer from the harshest consequence of our climate crisis.’

  • I am watching Cancun young people on the steps of this stupid conference on "climate change".  For two weeks all that they talked about in this conference was corporate economic gain.

     

    I am watching these young people being arrested and escorted to a bus--to bus them out to where is the question that is on my mind.

     

    What's being negotiated is the in-the-conference-to play in the box as what Pono Kealoha usually say's alot nowadays. 

     

    How in the word Walmart was the Chairman of the Board?

     

    When I went to Encenada Mexico, I nearly shit in my pants seeing all the roadblocks with Federalies with machine guns.

     

    I came home and envisioned the same fricken thing all along Waianae Coast!  Ugh!

  • Kai Landow,

     

    I totally agree with Amelia on communication, it's imperative that we communicate on such issues.  However, if this was just a light matter, that's cool too that you posted this on Maoliworld Forum.

     

    I heard about this on Public Radio on Hawaii station.  But, I was only able to hear from a Canadian spokes person, she characterized herself as first time, and young students.  I came home and flew through lots of information coming out of this conference.  A bit disappointed because nothing was 'close to mother earth' just a whole bunch of scientist unbiased reports. 

     

    As I am typing I am listening to Tom Goldtooth.

     

    I am not new to this sustainable 2050.  At UH Manoa in the 80s we had many meetings at East West Center.  It was a sad experience because the academic community pulled the 'mother earth' talk from the sustainable climate changes back in the 80s.

     

    Academic community cannot have biases and unfortunately the 'gia' community had to take their concerns to the streets.  The voices of the people that will be impacted directly by climate changes will have to go forward with the passing of the torches. 

     

    Last night I saw myself on t.v. olelo--It was truly sad because the winning panel, matt my friend was a great statistician he told me that night that he married a kanaka wahine.  But, it was the white women that were seeking out national security in case of disaster.  They wanted dibs on the warehouse food should there be a disaster.  Why?  Because they live in a condominimum and only have certain light, and space to grow food on their balcony.  They are claiming that they can but not sufficient enough to sustain a human persons with the right amount of calories and perday.  So, I said as I have always say'ed we need an exit plan.  Little did the white woman know that I meant that we need an exit plan for her and her friends.  I explained to a few people in Nanakuli what I meant as far as an exit plan for Hawaii.  That is what National Security agency should be working on. 

     

    Unlike the Microneasians I don't want to leave my Islands! Approximately 100,000 are exiting since 1998.  Akaka's plan for Pacific Islanders in Micronesia as a solution for military in the Pacific and Climate changes.

     

     

    • Shoots I wish I was there, but Tom Goldtooth represented.  We dont have the money the Hawaiian studies guys get to follow up on this stuff.  We try to communicate what Hawaiians know their rights to be and how they are related to climate change.

       

      I suggest that you and or Amelia go to these conferences, you can effect directly the caucus, more the better.

       

      As for indigenous it is what it is, sorry I do get obnoxious and what I say is to improve our chances to improve Hawaiian and all original nations peoples lives.  I have spent a long time on this with many experts.  I encourage definitive answers to what rights these people have before we try to assert them.

       

      I do not know who Keoni Paaloa is, can you expand, amelia

  • aloha kakou,

     

    What we have here is a failure to communicate!

     

     

    The construction of "Indigenous" was created by the United Nations and designed to serve the security counsels interests.  It has not been defined and so they use Original nations people to create a fig leaf over the criminal destruction of our planet.


    The ground zero for the pollution and rape of the land is not in their cities or beach resorts, but in our neighborhoods.  

     

    Kai

    • hi Kai,

       

      Failure to communicate is definitely correct............

       

      your failure, Spinney's et. als. failure to communicate with KEONI PAALOA and others in regards to the terminologies utilized by the United Nations appears to be a failure alright.........

       

      Spinney et. als. knows how to get in contact with them...

       

      KEONI after all was his teacher................find out from the teacher by asking him what the representative of the INDIGENOUS group from the UN told them.....................

       

      maybe at least some of the governments/groups will move together................

       

      aloha.

       

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DzkSmeKwBno

       

      2:26 3 years ago 112,805 views

This reply was deleted.