Peace signatories bring their expertise to Colombia

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An article from La Prensa Grafica, El Salvador (reprinted without commercial interest – translated by CPNN)

Chile has established a group of experts in El Salvador to “provide visible Latin American support” for the peace process between the Colombian government and the FARC. Personalities who made history in the pursuit and achievement of peace more than two decades ago are sharing their knowledge and experiences to contribute to the negotiation process between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

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The Ambassador of Chile, Maria Inés Ruz, is one of the managers for the formation of the group that will bring its experience to the Colombian peace process.

David Escobar Galindo, Alfredo Cristiani, Nidia Diaz, Fidel Chavez Mena, Ana Guadalupe Martinez, Oscar Santamaría and Salvador Samayoa are some of the personalities who make up the second group Friends for Peace in Colombia, which will be established in our country and start working from Friday 16 October.

Its formation has been initiated by the Government of Chile, which in 2012 established in Santiago the first group of friends and has been present at the Colombia dialogue table.

In recent years, the country, under President Michelle Bachelet, has been a facilitator in various peace processes, including Peru-Ecuador and Haiti.

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Question for this article:

What is happening in Colombia, Is peace possible?

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Now Chile has decided to install a second group of friends in El Salvador, to make “more visible Latin American support to this process.” They have taken into account the peace process in our country in 1992 that ended the grievous armed conflict of the eighties with the signing of the peace accords in Chapultepec, Mexico.

“What better venue than El Salvador, who managed a peace process recognized by the United Nations. From my point of view, even though problems remain and the country has not yet established a definitive process of dialogue and consultation, it is apparent that there are great efforts to promote a culture of peace. In this regard we believe that El Salvador can be very important in this support, “said Maria Ines Ruz, Chilean ambassador in our country.

“Everyone (in the group) with whom I have spoken have considered it a very positive initiative and are willing to contribute. The first official meeting of the group will be on October 16. It is an open initiative, with the idea that the members themselves should identify realistic courses of action, “added the diplomat.

The Friends Group for Peace in Colombia to El Salvador will be include Miguel Saenz Varela, Eduardo Sancho, Francisco Jovel, Hector Dada Irezi Jose Maria Tojeira, Wilfredo Hernandez (Vice President of PARLACEN) and Amparo Marroquín (Ph.D.).

“The contribution of these professionals certainly will be very important to the negotiating table in Colombia. These are highly experienced people with extensive academic ability and great experience. Their knowledge and experiences are going to be very important,” reiterated the Chilean ambassador.

The diplomat Luis Meira and the ex-subsecretary of Aviation Raul Vergara will assist in the establishment of the group, representing Chile at the Colombian negotiating table.

The line of work and contributions to be made by this group will be defined by the members once they have been established. But the ambassador Ruz has a vision about it: “I see them giving lectures in different places here in El Salvador and abroad. I see them systematizing their experience and writing books, as there is much they can write here as a contribution. I also expect them to travel to Colombia and Chile, “said the diplomat.

Groups such as that in Santiago de Chile and in El Salvador will not be the only ones, Ruz added. Others will eventually be implemented in several countries in the region, to which the Chilean embassy would be in a position to contribute.

Firmantes de paz aportarán su experiencia en Colombia

. LIBERTAD DE INFORMACIÓN .

Un artículo de La Prensa Grafica (reimpreso sin fines comerciales)

Chile decidió instalar el grupo en El Salvador para hacer “más visible el apoyo latinoamericano” al proceso de paz entre el Gobierno colombiano y las FARC. Nombres que hicieron historia en la búsqueda y logro de la paz en el país, hace ya más de dos décadas, compartirán sus conocimientos y experiencias para contribuir con el proceso de negociación entre el Gobierno colombiano y las Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC).

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La embajadora de Chile, María Inés Ruz, ha sido una de las gestoras para la conformación del grupo que aportará su experiencia en el proceso de paz colombiano.

David Escobar Galindo, Alfredo Cristiani, Nidia Díaz, Fidel Chávez Mena, Ana Guadalupe Martínez, Óscar Santamaría y Salvador Samayoa son algunas de las personalidades que conformarán el segundo Grupo Amigos por la Paz de Colombia, que será instaurado en nuestro país y comenzará a funcionar a partir del viernes 16 de octubre.

Su conformación es a iniciativa del Gobierno de Chile, que en 2012 instauró en Santiago el primer grupo de amigos y que ha estado presente en calidad de acompañante en la mesa de diálogo colombiana.

En los últimos años, este país que preside Michelle Bachelet ha sido facilitador en procesos de paz como el de Perú-Ecuador y en Haití.

Por eso Chile ha decidido instalar el segundo grupo de amigos en El Salvador, para hacer “más visible el apoyo latinoamericano a este proceso”. Además, se tomó en cuenta a nuestro país por el proceso de paz que puso fin al conflicto armado que se encrudeció en la década de los ochenta y concluyó en 1992 con la Firma de los Acuerdos de Paz en Chapultepec, México.

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Question related to this article:

What is happening in Colombia, Is peace possible?

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“Qué mejor que El Salvador, que vivió un importante proceso de paz, así lo ha considerado Naciones Unidas. Desde mi punto de vista, a pesar de que hay problemas y que es un país donde todavía no se ha consolidado definitivamente un proceso de diálogo y concertación, sí es evidente que hay grandes esfuerzos por promover una cultura de paz. En ese sentido consideramos que El Salvador puede ser muy importante en este acompañamiento”, explicó María Inés Ruz, embajadora de Chile en nuestro país.

“Todas las personas (del grupo) con las que he conversado han considerado que es una iniciativa muy positiva y están dispuestos a contribuir. La primera reunión oficial del grupo será a partir de ese mismo día (16 de octubre ) y es una iniciativa abierta, es decir que la idea es que los propios integrantes identifiquen líneas de acción que sean muy realistas”, agregó la diplomática.

El Grupo Amigos por la Paz de Colombia de El Salvador estará integrado también por Miguel Sáenz Varela, Eduardo Sancho, Francisco Jovel, Héctor Dada Irezi, José María Tojeira, Wilfredo Hernández (vicepresidente del PARLACEN) y Amparo Marroquín (Doctora en Filosofía).

“El aporte de todos estos profesionales sin duda alguna va a ser muy importante para la mesa de negociación de Colombia. Es una gente de amplia experiencia, con una amplia capacidad académica y con una tremenda trayectoria. Sus conocimientos y vivencias van a ser de mucha importancia”, reiteró la embajadora chilena.

Para la instauración del grupo asistirán el diplomático Luis Meira y el exsubsecretario de Aviación Raúl Vergara, representantes de Chile en la mesa de negociación colombiana.

La línea de trabajo o los aportes a realizar por este grupo serán definidos por los mismos integrantes una vez que se hayan instaurado. Pero la embajadora Ruz tiene una visión al respecto.

“Yo los veo dando conferencias en distintos lugares aquí en El Salvador y en el extranjero. Yo los veo también sistematizando su experiencia y escribiendo libros, hay mucho que escribir aquí y eso puede ser un aporte. Los veo también viajando a Colombia y a Chile”, aseguró la diplomática.

Grupos como el de Santiago de Chile y el de El Salvador no serían los únicos, complementó Ruz. Otros serán instaurados eventualmente en varios países de la región, para lo cual la embajada chilena estaría en la disposición de contribuir en la organización de otras instancias.

Cuba Declares Itself to be in Favor of a Culture for Peace

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An article from Prensa Latina

Cuba defended at the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (Unesco) a culture for peace in a world hit by terrible wars and terrorist actions.

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Juan Antonio Fernandez speaking at UNESCO

Our rich diversity is being undermined by the fanatical extremism of those who consider that their options are unique, said Juan Antonio Fernandez, representative of the Caribbean nation to the Executive Council of that institution.

They pretends to impose a monotonous and unacceptable uniformity, including through the deliberate destruction of the World Heritage sites, he said.

Fernandez stressed that the accelerating climate change, a consequence among other factors, of irrational patterns of production and consumption of the first world, threaten the survival of the human species.

He stated that Unesco makes an even greater contribution to the search for peace and the promotion of sustainable development, while reiterated the need of carrying out a holistic and comprehensive reform of that organization and its governance.

The Proclamation of Latin America and the Caribbean as a Peace Zone in the Second Summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States held in Havana, establishes the respect for the principles and norms of the International Law and a peace culture in this effort, he said.

The official said education is essential to overcome ignorance. Science is the best antidote against obscurantism and the fight of viruses and pandemics.

Culture is the key to understanding the richness of diversity and appreciate the irreplaceable wonders of world universal heritage. The information and communication facilitate the mutual understanding and debate of ideas, he stressed. According to Cuba, there is no more urgent and necessary task that to concentrate all our energies and efforts in the implementation of the Post 2015 Development Agenda, which our Heads of State and Government recently adopted at the UN General Assembly, he added.

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Aboga Cuba en la Unesco por cultura de paz

. LIBERTAD DE INFORMACIÓN .

Un artículo de La Agencia Cubana de Noticias

Cuba se pronunció hoy [13 oct] ante la Organización de las Naciones Unidas para la Educación, la Ciencia y la Cultura (Unesco) por una cultura de paz en un mundo golpeado por guerras atroces y actos terroristas.

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Juan Antonio Fernández habla ante la UNESCO

Informa la agencia Prensa Latina, que en su intervención el representante de la nación caribeña ante el Consejo Ejecutivo de esa institución, Juan Antonio Fernández, consideró que “nuestra rica diversidad está siendo socavada por el extremismo fanático de quienes consideran que sus opciones son las únicas”.

“Pretenden imponer una monótona e inaceptable uniformidad, incluso mediante la destrucción deliberada de sitios del Patrimonio Mundial”, apuntó Fernández.

Remarcó que el acelerado cambio climático, consecuencia entre otros factores, de los irracionales modelos de producción y consumo del primer mundo, pone en peligro la supervivencia misma de la especie humana.

Llamó a que la Unesco realice una contribución aún mayor en la búsqueda de la paz y la promoción del desarrollo sostenible, al tiempo que reiteró la necesidad de efectuar una reforma holística e integral de ese organismo y su gobernanza.

La Proclama de América Latina y el Caribe como Zona de Paz en la II Cumbre de la Comunidad de Estados Latinoamericanos y Caribeños en La Habana, consagra el respeto de los principios y normas del Derecho Internacional y una cultura de paz en este empeño, enfatizó.

El funcionario apuntó que la educación es esencial para vencer la ignorancia. La ciencia resulta el mejor antídoto frente al oscurantismo y el combate de los virus y las pandemias, dijo.

La cultura constituye la clave para comprender la riqueza de la diversidad y apreciar las insustituibles maravillas del patrimonio universal de la humanidad. La información y las comunicaciones facilitan el conocimiento mutuo y el debate de las ideas, resaltó.

Asimismo, llamó a dejar a un lado los egoísmos e intereses estrechos, a escoger el camino de la inclusión y el diálogo participativo, y a que se reafirme el compromiso de una Organización al servicio de todos y con todos.

A juicio de Cuba, no hay tarea más urgente y necesaria que concentrar todas nuestras energías y esfuerzos en la implementación de la Agenda para el Desarrollo Post 2015, que recién acaban de adoptar nuestros Jefes de Estado y de Gobierno en la Asamblea General de las Naciones Unidas, añadió.

En tal sentido, agregó, necesitamos una Organización fuerte y dotada de los recursos humanos y financieros imprescindibles con el fin de desempeñar su labor con mayor eficacia y eficiencia, para contribuir desde su mandato y sin descanso al cumplimiento de los objetivos del desarrollo.

Fernández reiteró el compromiso de la nación caribeña con la Unesco y los valores que ésta representa.

Cuba, que ha sembrado tanta solidaridad, espera el próximo 27 de octubre, un apoyo abrumador de la comunidad internacional en ocasión de la votación en la Asamblea General de las Naciones Unidas que demandará, una vez más, poner fin a la larga e injusta política de bloqueo que le impone Estados Unidos, concluyó.

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Preventing conflict – Transforming justice – Securing the Peace

. . WOMEN’S EQUALITY . .

From a study by UN Women

Foreward by Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, UN Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of UN Women

Resolution 1325 was one of the crowning achievements of the global women’s movement and one of the most inspired decisions of the United Nations Security Council. The recognition that peace is inextricably linked with gender equality and women’s leadership was a radical step for the highest body tasked with the maintenance of international peace and security. Turning the Security Council’s words into actions and real change has been a central pillar of UN Women’s work since the entity was created, and the driving passion of many other actors since the resolution was adopted as a global norm in 2000.

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And yet there remains a crippling gap between the ambition of our commitments and actual political and financial support. We struggle to bridge the declared intent of international policymaking and the reality of domestic action in the many corners of the world where resolution 1325 is most needed.

UN Women was privileged to be tasked by the Secretary- General with helping to prepare this Global Study. We are grateful to its independent lead author, Ms. Radhika Coomaraswamy, her advisory board, and all the member States, academics, non-governmental organizations, and UN bodies that supported this effort. The preparation process involved consultations all over the world, the provision of ideas as well as technical inputs and information, and commentary on and review of drafts. We hope that this Study will stimulate discussion and be followed by concrete commitments, resources, political will, policy shifts, and accountability at all levels.

This Study reinforces the Security Council’s original crucial recognition of the power of engaging women in peace with compelling proof. It shows that women’s participation and inclusion makes humanitarian assistance more effective, strengthens the protection efforts of our peacekeepers, contributes to the conclusion of peace talks and the achievement of sustainable peace, accelerates economic recovery, and helps counter violent extremism. This Study, and a growing evidence base, make the implementation of resolution 1325 even more urgent and needed.

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Question related to this article:

UN Resolution 1325, does it make a difference?

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The Study adds two more important elements that will help us push this agenda forward. It compiles multiple examples of good practice that should become the standard requirement for all. In addition, it takes a hard look at implementation and enforcement, and the missing incentives and accountability measures that should nudge all actors into complying with these norms and living up to their promises. What emerges from these ideas is an explicit and ambitious roadmap for the way forward on women, peace and security. We have an enormous responsibility to ensure that the normative framework spurred by resolution 1325 is not just given periodic visibility and attention, but that it lies at the heart of the UN’s work on peace and security.

This year, we celebrate 15 years of resolution 1325 and 20 years since the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing. We have a new momentum towards the recognition of gender equality and women’s empowerment at the heart of sustainable progress for all, with the adoption of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Many actors are coming to the table with new energy, new ideas, and new commitments, and we have seen other policy reviews, from our development goals to our peace operations and our peacebuilding architecture, emphasize the centrality of gender equality. This is an important opportunity to shape the way in which we address our global challenges in the next decades. Let us make the most of it.

(Thank you to Janet Hudgins, the CPNN reporter for this article.)

UNHCR names Afghan refugee teacher Aqeela Asifi its 2015 Nansen Refugee Award winner

. . WOMEN’S EQUALITY . .

An article by UNHCR. The UN Refugee Agency

Afghan refugee teacher Aqeela Asifi, who has dedicated her life to bringing education to refugee girls in Pakistan, has won the 2015 UNHCR Nansen Refugee Award. Aqeela Asifi, 49, is being recognised for her brave and tireless dedication to education for Afghan refugee girls in the Kot Chandana refugee village in Mianwali, Pakistan – while herself overcoming the struggles of life in exile. Despite minimal resources and significant cultural challenges, Asifi has guided a thousand refugee girls through their primary education.

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Profile of Aqeela Asifi, 2015 Nansen Refugee Award winner

Afghanistan is the largest, most protracted refugee crisis in the world. Over 2.6 million Afghans currently live in exile and over half of them are children. Access to education is vital for successful repatriation, resettlement or local integration for refugees. Yet globally it’s estimated that only one in every two refugee children are able to go to primary school and only one in four attend secondary school. And for Afghan refugees in Pakistan this falls further, with approximately 80 per cent of children currently out of school.

UN High Commissioner for Refugees, António Guterres paid tribute to the efforts of the winner of the global humanitarian award: “Access to quality and safe education helps children grow into adults who go on to secure jobs, start businesses and help build their communities – and it makes them less vulnerable to exploitation and abuse. Investing in refugee education will allow children to play a part in breaking the cycle of instability and conflict. People like Aqeela Asifi understand that today’s refugee children will determine the future of their countries, and the future of our world.”

UNHCR has released a contextual report Breaking the cycle: Education and the future for Afghan refugees, to coincide with today’s announcement. The report outlines the challenges that children, especially refugee girls, face in accessing education in Pakistan.

Asifi is a former teacher who fled from Kabul with her family in 1992, finding safety in the remote refugee settlement of Kot Chandana. Asifi was dismayed by the lack of schooling for girls there. Before she arrived, strict cultural traditions kept most girls at home. But she was determined to give these girls a chance to learn. Slowly but surely she convinced the community, and began teaching just a handful of pupils in a makeshift school tent. She copied out worksheets for the students by hand on sheets of paper. Today the tent school is a distant memory and over a thousand children are attending permanent schools in the village thanks to her early example.

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Questions related to this article:

Gender equality in education, Is it advancing?

Is peace possible in Afghanistan?

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She believes that instilling a belief in the power of education for girls in this generation will transform the opportunities of the next. “When you have mothers who are educated, you will almost certainly have future generations who are educated,” she said. “So if you educate girls, you educate generations. I wish for the day when people will remember Afghanistan, not for war, but for its standard of education.”

“Access to education is a basic human right. Yet for millions of refugee children it is a lifeline to a better future which they have been heartbreakingly denied,” said UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador, Khaled Hosseini.

“I have met many young refugees who have been torn from everything that makes them feel safe: their homes, their families, their friends and their schools. Investing in their education is an investment in their future, giving them hope and the chance to one day be a part of rebuilding their broken home countries.

“UNHCR is working to give all refugee children the chance to go to school. Aqeela Asifi has shown us all that with courage change can happen. We must continue her fight.”

Since the fall of the Taliban in 2001 5.7 million Afghans have returned home, yet insecurity still remains. UNHCR has embarked on a strategy to assist remaining Afghan refugees to return home and a key element of this is ensuring they can access quality education. A ministerial level meeting in early October in Geneva will seek to advance this strategy with key regional partners.

UNHCR’s Nansen Refugee Award honours extraordinary service to the forcibly displaced, and names Eleanor Roosevelt, Graça Machel and Luciano Pavarotti among its laureates. The 2015 ceremony will be held on 5 October in Geneva, Switzerland. Speakers and performers at the event will include UNHCR Honorary Lifetime Goodwill Ambassador Barbara Hendricks, UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador Ger Duany, Unicef Goodwill Ambassador and singer Angelique Kidjo and visual artist Cedric Cassimo.

(Thank you to the Good News Agency for bring this to our attention.)

Mozambique: Landmine Clearance Success Shows a Mine-Free World is Possible

DISARMAMENT & SECURITY .

An article by The International Campaign to Ban Landmines

Mozambique’s completion of antipersonnel landmine clearance shows that a mine-free world is possible. The International Campaign to Ban Landmines hails this major accomplishment that will allow hundreds of thousands of Mozambicans to cultivate their land, walk to school, and access water safely.

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“What might have been considered an insurmountable task just 20 years ago has been done in Mozambique, thanks to political will and the use of adequate methodology,” said Megan Burke, Director of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines. “This is an impressive achievement. It also shows that if the right resources are employed in the right way, the majority of contaminated states can complete mine clearance within the next ten years.”

During a public event on 17 September 2015, the Instituto Nacional de Desminagem (National Demining Institute) announced the completion of antipersonnel landmine clearance throughout the country. Mozambique is still contaminated by other unexploded ordnance.

The number of landmine casualties in Mozambique is unknown, but the government estimated recently that as many as 10,900 persons throughout the country had been killed or injured by the weapon over time. While donor states have been very supportive of mine clearance in Mozambique, the country struggles to raise funds for assistance to landmine victims and for disability-inclusive development activities.

“After demining is finished, survivors continue to feel the pernicious impact of these weapons for their entire lives,” said Luis Silvestre Wamusse, head of the Rede para Assistência às Vítimas de Minas (Network for Assistance to Mine Victims).

Other sub-Saharan African states with antipersonnel landmine contamination include Angola, Chad, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan and Zimbabwe. Mine clearance programmes in all of these countries — except DR Congo, Mauritania and Zimbabwe — have been rated as performing “poorly” or “very poorly” by Landmine Monitor, the research arm of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines.

“We hope Mozambique’s success might provide an example and impetus for these countries to dedicate the necessary political support, improve their programmes, and release safe land to communities more efficiently,” said Megan Burke.

The International Campaign to Ban Landmines is a network of non-governmental organizations in some 100 countries, working to end the suffering caused by antipersonnel mines, through the universalization and full implementation of the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty. The Campaign received the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize.

(Thank you to the Good News Agency for calling this to our attention.)

Question for this article:

Distrust over EU GM crop approvals grows as 17 countries move towards national bans

. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT .

An article by Greenpeace

In the latest blow to the European Commission’s laissez-faire approach to GM crops, 17 EU countries and four regions (in two other countries) are in the process of banning the cultivation of GM crops on their territories. On 5 October, 17 EU countries (Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland and Slovenia) and four regional administrations (Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in the UK, and Wallonia in Belgium) had notified the Commission of their intention to ban GM crop cultivation under new EU rules [1].


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This brings the total number of countries who have already declared their intention to put in place GM crop bans to 17 – plus four regions – representing over 65 per cent of the EU’s population and 65 per cent of its arable land (for detailed figures please see this table: bit.ly/1OhTApm).

The bans currently notified apply to the only GM crop currently approved for cultivation in Europe – Monsanto’s pesticide-producing GM maize, known as MON810 – but also to the seven GM crops awaiting approval by the Commission [2]. These are all GM maizes [3].

Nine EU countries (Austria, Bulgaria, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Luxembourg and Poland) had previously banned cultivation of MON810 under so-called safeguard clauses.

Greenpeace EU food policy director Franziska Achterberg said: “A clear majority of the EU’s governments are rejecting the Commission’s drive for GM crop approvals. They don’t trust EU safety assessments and are rightly taking action to protect their agriculture and food. The only way to restore trust in the EU system now is for the Commission to hit the pause button on GM crop approvals and to urgently reform safety testing and the approval system.”

In July 2014, Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker said that the Commission should not be able to force through GM crops against a majority of EU countries [4]. The Commission is yet to deliver a legislative proposal that can achieve this. A revised EU risk assessment scheme, called for by EU environment ministers in 2008, has similarly not been implemented. Current risk assessments by the EU’s food safety authority also ignore EU rules in place since 2001 (Directive 2001/18) for more in-depth and independent testing of GM crops.

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Question for this article:

What is the relation between the environment and peace?

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Notes:

[1] Under EU Directive 2015/412, governments can ask biotech companies whose GM crops have already been authorised for cultivation in the EU, or are pending approval, not to market their crops on their territory. The companies – Dow, Monsanto, Syngenta and Pioneer – can then accept or refuse these opt-outs, without having to justify their response. Governments can also legislate to ban individual or groups of GM crops approved in the EU. The Commission list of notifications for national bans: http://ec.europa.eu/food/plant/gmo/new/authorisation/cultivation/geographical_scope_en.htm.

[2] Denmark and Luxembourg are so far requesting bans for MON810 and only three other GM crops pending approval.

[3] The pending authorisations include Pioneer’s pesticide-producing GM maize, known as 1507, whose EU approval was opposed by 19 out of 28 EU countries in February 2014: http://www.greenpeace.org/eu-unit/en/News/2014/Record-number-of-EU-countries-opposes-Commission-plan-to-allow-pesticide-producing-GM-maize.

[4] Juncker said: “[I] would not want the Commission to be able to take a decision when a majority of Member States has not encouraged it to do so”: Political Guidelines for the next European Commission (July 2014): http://ec.europa.eu/priorities/docs/pg_en.pdf

U.N. Highlights Importance of Public Spaces, Safety for Women

. . WOMEN’S EQUALITY . .

An article by Tharanga Yakupitiyage, Inter Press Service (reprinted by permission)

Improving access to public spaces, and making them safe for women and girls, increases equity, combats discrimination and promotes inclusion, said Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon during a High-Level Discussion on “Public Spaces for All.”

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The meeting coincided with World Habitat Day, which is observed annually on the first Monday of October.

It brought together top UN officials, private sector representatives, academics, and civil society members to discuss the state of the world’s towns and cities, the right to adequate shelter, and the importance of public spaces.

In Ban’s address, he remarked: “High-quality public spaces encourage people to communicate and collaborate with each other, and to participate in public life.”

“Public spaces can also provide basic services, enhance connectivity, spawn economic activity and raise property values while generating municipal revenue,” he continued.

The Executive Director of the UN Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat) Joan Clos echoed the UN Chief’s comments.

“These spaces shape the cultural identity of an area, are part of its unique character and provide a sense of place for local communities,” Clos stated.

Clos also warned that when public spaces are inadequate, poorly designed or privatized, a polarized city with high social tensions, crime and violence will result.

Deputy Executive Director of UN Women Lakshmi Puri particularly pointed to violence against women and girls in public spaces as a major challenge.

“If violence in the private domain is now widely recognized as a human rights violation, violence against women and girls, especially sexual harassment and other forms of sexual violence, in public spaces remains a largely neglected issue, with few laws or policies in place to prevent and address it,” Puri said.

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Question related to this article:

Protecting women and girls against violence, Is progress being made?

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UN Women has found that women in urban areas are twice as likely as men to experience violence, especially in developing countries. Moreover, 25-100 percent of women and girls around the world have experienced some form of sexual violence in public spaces in their lifetime.

Similarly, according to Gallup data from surveys in 143 countries in 2011, men are more likely than women to say they feel safe walking alone at night in their communities.

In Australia, research conducted by the Australia Institute in 2015 found that 87% of women were verbally or physically attacked while walking down the street.

In Ecuador, a study by UN Women in 2011 found that 68% of women had experience some form of sexual harassment and sexual violence in public spaces.

Puri noted how such violence limits women and girls’ movement, participation in education, access to essential services, and negatively impacts their health and well-being.

She highlighted the role of public spaces in promoting and achieving gender equality.

“Urban spaces are the most important theaters for the working out of the gender equality and women’s empowerment project,” Puri remarked.

Ban also noted the importance of deliberate and careful collaboration with local authorities, residents, and other actors to create successful public spaces.

World leaders are set to meet and define a new housing and urban agenda under the post-2015 development framework at Third UN Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development, or Habitat III.

The conference will address the challenges of urbanization and opportunities it offers to implement the sustainable development goals (SDGs) and its targets.

One such target is 11.7 which aims to provide universal access to safe, inclusive and accessible, green and public spaces, particularly for women and children, older persons and persons with disabilities.

However, Puri noted that no target exists to measure safety in public spaces for women and girls in the SDGs.

(Thank you to Janet Hudgins, the CPNN reporter for this article.)

Mayan People’s Movement Defeats Monsanto Law in Guatemala

. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT .

An article by Christin Sandberg in Upside Down World

On September 4th, after ten days of widespread street protests against the biotech giant Monsanto’s expansion into Guatemalan territory, groups of indigenous people joined by social movements, trade unions and farmer and women’s organizations won a victory when congress finally repealed the legislation that had been approved in June.

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Nim Sanik, Maya Kaqchikel giving a press conference in Chimaltenango
Photo by Josue Navarro
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The demonstrations were concentrated outside the Congress and Constitutional Court in Guatemala City during more than a week, and coincided with several Mayan communities and organizations defending food sovereignty through court injunctions in order to stop the Congress and the President, Otto Perez Molina, from letting the new law on protection of plant varieties, known as the “Monsanto Law”, take effect.

On September 2, the Mayan communities of Sololá, a mountainous region 125 kilometers west from the capital, took to the streets and blocked several main roads. At this time a list of how individual congressmen had voted on the approval of the legislation in June was circulating.

When Congress convened on September 4, Mayan people were waiting outside for a response in favor of their movement, demanding a complete cancellation of the law –something very rarely seen in Guatemala. But this time they proved not to have marched in vain. After some battles between the presidential Patriotic Party (PP) and the Renewed Democratic Liberty Party (LIDER), the Congress finally decided not to review the legislation, but cancel it.

protests as follows: “Corn taught us Mayan people about community life and its diversity, because when one cultivates corn one realizes that there is a variety of crops such as herbs and medical plants depending on the corn plant as well. We see that in this coexistence the corn is not selfish, the corn shows us how to resist and how to relate with the surrounding world.”

Controversies surrounded law

The Monsanto Law would have given exclusivity on patented seeds to a handful of transnational companies. Mayan people and social organizations claimed that the new law violated the Constitution and the Mayan people’s right to traditional cultivation of their land in their ancestral territories.

Antonio González from the National Network in Defense of Food Sovereignty and Biodiversity commented in a press conference August 21: “This law is an attack on a traditional Mayan cultivation system which is based on the corn plant but which also includes black beans and herbs; these foods are a substantial part of the staple diet of rural people.”

The new legislation would have opened up the market for genetically modified seeds which would have threatened to displace natural seeds and end their diversity. It would have created an imbalance between transnational companies and local producers in Guatemala where about 70 per cent of the population dedicate their life to small-scale agricultural activities. That is a serious threat in a country where many people live below the poverty line and in extreme poverty and where children suffer from chronic malnutrition and often starve to death.

The law was approved in June without prior discussion, information and participation from the most affected. It was a direct consequence of the free trade agreement with the US, ratified in 2005. However, recently the protests started to grow and peaked a couple of weeks ago with a lot of discussions, statements and demonstrations.

At first the government ignored the protests and appeared to be more interested in engaging in superficial forms of charity like provision of food aid while ignoring the wider and structural factors that cause and perpetuate poverty in Guatemala such as unequal land distribution, deep rooted inequalities, racism, to name but a few.

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Question for this article

Indigenous peoples, Are they the true guardians of nature?

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But soon enough they decided to act. Even though politicians claimed not to act on social demands, it is without doubt a decision taken after enormous pressure from different social groups in society.

Criminalizing the Mayan people – again

There was a great risk that the Monsanto Law would have made criminals of already repressed small farmers who are just trying to make ends meet and doing what they have done for generations – cultivating corn and black beans for their own consumption. The Monsanto Law meant that they would not have been able to grow and harvest anything that originates from natural seeds. Farmers would be breaking the laws if these natural seeds had been mixed with patented seeds from other crops as a result of pollination or wind, unless they had had a license for the patented seed from a transnational corporation like Monsanto.

Another risk expressed by ecologists was the fear that the costs for the patented seeds would have caused an increase in prices and as consequence caused a worsened food crisis for those families who could not afford to buy a license to sow.

Academics, together with the Mayan people, also feared that the law would have intensified already existing fierce social conflicts between local Mayan communities and transnational companies in a country historically and violently torn apart.

Mayan people and Mother Earth

Currently international companies are very interested in gaining control of the abundant and rich natural assets that Guatemala possesses. There is just one problem: the Mayan people – or actually most people – in Guatemala do not agree with a policy of treating nature like a commodity to be sold off piece by piece, especially when they receive nothing in return. It is very difficult to argue that it is a rentable business for Guatemalan society as a whole, and less the local communities, when it is a rather small but powerful economic elite which benefits on behalf of the environment, nature and society.

So what happens when the people organize in defense of their territory? The international companies call the government and have them use whatever means necessary to remove those standing in their way so they can construct megaprojects like mines or hydroelectric dams or extend monocultures in any region they see fit without much concern for those who might be affected.

Last month three men were killed when police used violent force to evict a community whose population had organized itself to protest against a hydroelectric megaproject in their community in Alta Verapaz. Hundreds of police officers were sent to the area on orders from the Ministry of Home Affairs, Mauricio López Bonilla. It was not an exceptional case by any means.

Ongoing conflict

As for the Monsanto Law, for a chilling reminder of where this was most likely headed, one need look no further than the USA: according to information from Food Democracy Now, a grassroots community for sustainable food system, Monsanto’s GMO Roundup Ready soybeans, the world’s leading chemical and biotech seed company, admits to filing 150 lawsuits against America’s family farmers, while settling another 700 out of court for undisclosed amounts. This has caused fear and resentment in rural America and driven dozens of farmers into bankruptcy.

It is impossible to predict how this controversy might unfold, but the reality in Guatemala today is one marked by an ongoing conflict between the government and the Mayan people, who constitute over half of the population.

Nim Sanik, Maya Kaqchikel from Chimaltenango comments on the victory over the Monsanto Law: “The fight to preserve collective property of Mayan communities such as vegetable seeds, which historically have served as a source of development and survival for the Mayan civilization, is a way to confront the open doors that the neoliberal governments have widely open in favor of national and transnational corporations that genetically modify and commercialize the feeding of mankind. We have just taken the first step on a long journey in our struggle to conquer the sovereignty of the people in Guatemala.”