Ireland to help provide ‘rapid response mechanism’ for ‘environmental defenders’
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Ireland is to lead a global effort to put in place a “rapid response mechanism” to safeguard “environmental defenders” – people who are persecuted for raising concerns about damage to the environment where they live.
The human rights body Global Witness recorded 1,539 environmental defenders being killed between 2012 and last year worldwide, a tally widely regarded as a gross underestimate due to under-reporting.
The Government is to provide 50 per cent of the funding – about $100,000 (€85,000) per year for the next four years in partnership with Austria – to support the establishment and operation of the mechanism.
It will operate under the auspices of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) and the Aarhus Convention. The announcement coincided with a meeting of the parties to the convention in Geneva.
Incidents of persecution, penalisation and harassment of environmental defenders have been reported in 16 countries who are parties to the convention since January 2017.
Minister for Environment Eamon Ryan said Ireland’s commitment was “an expression of solidarity with environmental defenders across Europe and neighbouring regions ... we hope it may serve as a model of best practice in other regions as well”.
“It will ensure people exercising their rights, in conformity with the provisions of the convention, are not penalised, persecuted or harassed in any way,” he said.
The mechanism, Mr Ryan added, “will shine a light of justice into dark corners. It will call upon the authorities of the party to uphold the rule of law. It will be a voice for the women and men who are often the last line of defence for our land, air, forests, waters and wetlands”.
‘Deeply concerned’
Attracta Uí Bhroin, vice president of the European Environmental Bureau, said she wished to “warmly applaud this commitment by Ireland and Austria, which speaks volumes of a renewed and practical commitment to the convention – and the right to be able to exercise the rights under the convention without fear of persecution or harassment”.
It also sends a strong message for environmental defenders across the world, she believed. While it applies within the UNECE region, “the hope it will influence the establishment of similar mechanisms in other regions, where they are also needed in an increasingly desperate collective fight to defend an environment without borders”.
Ms Uí Bhroin she had often criticised the Government on environmental issues but on this occasion she wanted to commend its action.
Addressing this week’s meeting, UN secretary-general António Guterres said he remained “deeply concerned by the targeting of environmental activists” and that he welcome efforts to protect them.
“Twenty years ago, the Aarhus Convention entered into force, bridging the gap between human and environmental rights,” he said.
“Today, as the devastating effects of climate change continue to ravage the world, the Convention’s core purpose – of allowing people to protect their wellbeing and that of future generations – has never been more critical.”