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MOTHER EARTH DEMANDS ITS RIGHTS
An S.O.S. from Tiquipaya
Nidia Diaz
• IT would not be exaggerated to state that
Tiquipaya, a small locality in unredeemed
Cochabamba, is making history. More than 20,000
people, clinging to the final hope of saving the
planet, or Mother Earth, are meeting there.
Five heads of state and two Nobel Peace laureates
are accompanying them on this noble crusade in which
the very existence of today’s world is at stake.
The corporate media have barely given it any
space; with a bit of luck it will be stuck at the
end of some superficial note intentionally
underestimating what has happened there. The leaders
of the rich and developed North have definitely not
asked their advisers to put the issue on their
working agendas; it doesn’t matter to them. The
major transnationals, to a great extent the
aggressors of nature and the environment, probably
haven’t even heard about the meeting. Their head
offices, located in enormous skyscrapers, symbols of
their power and an ill-named modernity, are far away
from Tiquipaya. What is Tiquipaya, anyway? they
might be asking if anyone should comment on it.
Nevertheless, there in to date overlooked and
forgotten Bolivia, a battle has begun that concerns
everyone and, although they choose not to believe it,
even them, those responsible for having brought us
to this point. It is they who have provoked – with
their system of unrestrained waste – global warming,
responsible for the worst natural disaster of the
last few decades, and it is they who are also
responsible for the climate debt that is
asphyxiating the South, where underdevelopment,
backwardness, poverty and the extreme apathy of
neoliberal governments have prevented the building
of an infrastructure that, in times of natural
disaster, can help those most in need and safeguard
collective security.
Halting this future disaster and beginning from
within to respect and care for Mother Earth is the
S.O.S. being sent from Tiquipaya to the planet. It
is not by chance that Bolivia is the scenario of
this decisive battle for life. Nor is it by chance
that its indigenous president, Evo Morales, is its
principal standard-bearer.
In a letter sent to the 1st Conference of the
Peoples on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother
Earth, writer Eduardo Galeano says to the
participants from 129 nations and all five
continents meeting there: "…the whole world should
hear those voices."
He added, "They are teaching us that we little
humans are part of nature, relatives of all those
who have legs, paws, wings or roots… The European
conquest charged with idolatry the indigenous
peoples who lived in that communion, and for
believing in it they were flogged, had their throats
cut or were burned alive."
And it is precisely for having maintained alive
that eternal flame of love for Mother Earth that Evo
Morales and his people have now become symbols of
this struggle. Having sustained the cult to what
they call pachamama gives them the moral
authority to exercise a leadership that demands an
end to the eternal lamentations and to pass, for the
good of all, two indispensable instruments: a
Climate Justice Tribunal to try the predators of
nature, whether these are governments or
corporations, and the creation of a world agency to
defend the rights of the earth, because, without an
organization to follow up on the regulations
established at international summits, there will
never be anything or anyone to oblige industries and
developed countries to comply with them.
Both proposals come from the ethics of Evo, who
has charged the capitalist system with the
accelerated deterioration of the ecosystem provoked
by carbon dioxide emissions into the atmosphere and
global warming.
In his opening address at the 1st Conference of
the Peoples on Climate Change and the Rights of
Mother Earth (CMPCC), Evo stated: "The principal
cause of the destruction of planet Earth is
capitalism and, as people who inhabit it, let us
respect this Mother Earth; we have all the right, we
have the ethics and the morals to say here that the
central enemy of Mother Earth is capitalism.
"The capitalist system seeks to obtain the maximum
possible profits by promoting unlimited growth on a
finite planet. Capitalism is the source of the
asymmetries and imbalances in the world," he
affirmed, condemning the poverty against which half
of the world population is struggling.
He noted that "more than 2.8 billion people are
living on less than two dollars per day. For
capitalism, we human beings are no more than
consumers and a labor force; people are valued for
what they have and not for what they are." In that
context he condemned the fact that the dominant
global economic system is commercializing water,
land and even culture.
"As long as the capitalist system remains unchanged,
the measures that we adopt will be of a limited and
precarious nature, which poses an existential
dilemma: "to continue along the road of capitalism
or death, or to take the road of harmony with nature
and respect for life in order to save humanity," he
finally emphasized.
With these opening arguments, the Earth Summit of
tens of thousands of participants divided into 17
working sessions to discuss a similar number of
issues. These include the structural causes of
climate change, the rights of Mother Earth, a world
referendum on climate change, climate refugees, the
environmental debt, the Kyoto Protocol, and the
transfer of technologies and action strategies.
The Final Declaration and the conclusions of each
and every one of those issues will be presented to
the Climate Change Summit in Mexico, which follows
on from the Copenhagen edition and has been the
subject of more than a little skepticism, given the
resounding failure of the former summit.
As the Bolivian president explained: "It would
not have been necessary to convene the World Summit
of the Peoples in Bolivia, if the Copenhagen Summit
could have achieved agreements that would contribute
to the conservation of nature and dropping
irrational industrialization policies."
At the same time, he stated: "We want to reveal the
imperialist pretensions of the so-called Copenhagen
Agreement, an understanding drawn up by a minority
of countries which are seeking to raise the global
temperature of the planet by more than four degrees
centigrade, a measure that would bring catastrophic
consequences for humanity."
In that context, he recalled that "in Copenhagen
the industrialized nations wanted to impose a
document not to save life, but to feed their
contaminative environmental policy."
With that background and the conviction that only
the force of a people’s struggle can attain respect
for life on the planet and the planet itself, the
working sessions got underway in this summit which,
as anticipated by its organizers, will be ending
with a great mass event in Cochabamba stadium as we
go to press
As was the case 10 years ago, when the so-called
"water war" exploded when the Bolivian people
successfully confronted the power of an untouchable
transnational and a government subjected to the
dictates of the U.S. government, making possible a
few months later the victory of President Evo
Morales in the elections, the days in Tiquipaya in
defense of Mother Earth will culminate in the
triumph of life over a system that is condemned to
death.
The agreements that emerge from this 1st World
Conference of the Peoples on Climate Change and the
Defense of Mother Earth will not be left in oblivion.
They will be monitored by those who are already
deeply involved in saving their home, the habitat of
everyone. Hopefully, as Galeano would say, the deaf
of always will hear them.
Translated by Granma International
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