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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Youth activists face threats on the frontline of climate change
By El�onore Hughes
Paris (AFP) April 16, 2021

Climate activists look to 2021 to rebound from pandemic
Paris (AFP) April 16, 2021 - Stopped in their tracks by the pandemic, citizens around the world are once again bracing to mobilise for the planet in a year marked by several major international summits on climate and biodiversity.

In 2019, millions of people, led by student and youth organisations, flooded the world's streets to demand that governments act to stave off the worst effects of global warming.

But then came Covid-19, bringing the global movement to a screeching halt, with lockdowns and travel restrictions forcing mass events to be cancelled and activism to shift online.

"The pandemic hit right at the moment when we were peaking in terms of mobilisation," said Nicolas Haeringer, from the environmental group 350.org.

Youth activists quickly adapted to online activism, and the pandemic may even have helped groups based in richer countries to devise better ways to include activists from developing nations.

The School Strike for Climate movement "was deeply rooted in European youth," said Haeringer.

"The pandemic has been used to rebalance things and build real leadership in global south nations."

While the internet is ideal for laying plans, it is clear that the impetus has waned from movements unable to protest in real life.

"It has been hard for movements," said Clare Farrell, a co-founder of the civil disobedience Extinction Rebellion movement.

"We build relationships through face-to-face work often so we are really looking forward to getting back out to do actions in public space, to meet new people and build the movements again."

- Shifting tactics -

Dana Fisher, professor of sociology at the University of Maryland, said that climate activists have spent the last year also campaigning for similar causes in solidarity with other movements.

This includes participating in activism against systemic racism and in helping people of colour gain better access to Covid-19 vaccines.

In the US, "the movement is definitely not stopping, but the tactic of the climate strike is not a dominant form of activism right now and it may never return," said Fisher.

But many youth strikers are undeterred by the turbulent last 12 months.

"We're keeping in touch, it's great and I believe that there will be another youth mobilisation," said Michel Villarreal, a Bolivian student activist.

There are a number of high-profile events in 2021 that activists could use as launch pads for wider activities.

The first is next week with US President Joe Biden's virtual climate summit.

In September, the global congress of the International Union for Conservation of Nature is set to take place in the French port city of Marseille, Covid permitting.

Then comes the COP15 on biodiversity in Kunming, China, in October, followed hot on its heels by the COP26 UN climate talks in the Scottish city of Glasgow.

Groups are already planning a global day of action to "reclaim the initiative", probably at the start of Autumn, said Haeringer.

"It's imperative that we get citizens energised this year to make sure that the powers that be see how widespread support for rapid action really is," added Farrell.

But it remains to be seen how inclusive any climate activity can be.

The global vaccine rollout has been deeply uneven, with stockpiling in richer nations, while poorer countries struggle to get their hands on doses.

"Will the youth movement descend on the streets, express their will for things to change and demand more political courage to implement strong climate policies?" said Amy Dahan, a science historian specialising in climate change at France's CNRS research network.

"It's hard to say."

Just weeks after security forces allegedly killed her friend and fellow human rights defender Melvin Dasigao and eight other campaigners, Filipina activist Mitzi Jonelle Tan was back on the streets protesting.

"Stop funding our destruction," the 23-year-old shouted outside British bank Standard Chartered at a demonstration in Manila last month against the financing of coal plants.

As critical UN climate negotiations loom, young activists from countries already feeling the impact of the accelerating destruction of nature are rising above the challenges of living in remote areas -- and even threats to their lives -- to sound the alarm.

Organising protests can lead to violent reprisal, jail or even death in poorer and less industrialised countries, known as the global south, where protection of individual rights can be weak.

At least 212 environmental campaigners worldwide were murdered in 2019, making that year the deadliest on record for such activists, watchdog group Global Witness said in a July report.

Galvanised from their experiences on the frontline of climate change however, young environmental campaigners refuse to be intimidated.

"I'm willing to take this risk because it's the planet that we're living on that we are fighting for. Worst things could happen," Tan, a full-time activist, told AFP in an interview by video conference.

The Philippines is the second most dangerous country in the world for defenders after Colombia, Global Witness said in its yearly report.

The United Nations said it was "appalled" by the apparent arbitrary killing of the nine activists in the Philippines on March 7, in raids targeting alleged communist insurgents.

"I would be lying if I said I was a completely brave and fearless activist all the time," Tan admitted.

But fears for her future in a country already battered by typhoons made more powerful by rising seas fuel her determination.

When deadly Typhoon Vamco smashed through the Philippines in November, the streets of Marikina City where Tan lives were severely flooded.

- Melting glaciers -

The 2015 Paris climate treaty, signed by virtually all the world's nations, calls for capping global warming at "well below" two degrees Celsius compared to preindustrial levels.

Since then, the world has seen its five hottest years on record.

Bolivia, the home of 18-year-old activist Michel Villarreal, is particularly vulnerable to the impact of rising temperatures.

The Andean country is struggling to cope with an increase in forest fires, river floods and melting glaciers that create water shortages, Oxfam said in a report in December.

Yet, says Villarreal, climate activists are equated with troublemakers.

When she and her friends hung carefully-crafted placards in trees in La Paz during a march for World Children's Day in November, police ripped them up and accused them of vandalism.

"It was really sad. We just wanted people to see them and realise the situation we are living in," the first-year law student told AFP by WhatsApp.

"We don't succeed in having an impact because we are always stopped and threatened," she added.

While low-emitting countries contribute the least to climate change, they tend to be the hardest-hit by the consequences.

Kenya is responsible for less than 0.1 percent of global C02 emissions, according to tracking website Worldometer based partly on European Commission data.

But it suffers from locust invasions that destroy crops and irregular rainfall sparking floods and droughts.

Such disasters can cause hunger given that many farmers are weather dependent.

When unusually heavy rain fell in Kenya's western Baringo region in June 2019, activist Kevin Mtai says a part of his grandmother's house as well as her cows and chickens were swept away.

Keenly aware of his country's vulnerability to climate change, Mtai travelled 15 hours by bus from his village, Soy, to join protests in Nairobi and Mombasa last month.

-'I went into hiding'-

In July, Mtai was part of a campaign to stop a hotel being built on Nairobi's National Park that activists said would endanger local wildlife.

After a top official called the campaigners "noisemakers" on television -- since seen in a video recording by AFP -- Mtai and a fellow activist received threats.

"I went into hiding because I did not want people to find me. Here in Kenya you can be killed and disappear," the 25-year-old told AFP via WhatsApp.

Human Rights Watch said in its 2020 world report that the lack of accountability for serious human rights violations remained "a major concern" in Kenya.

However, intimidation has not diminished Mtai's activism.

As well as helping to shed light on plastic waste exportation to Kenya as part of the "Africa is not a dumpster" campaign, Mtai is working on a documentary on the issue.

He is also launching a gardening project to teach children in remote areas of Kenya how to plant vegetables sustainably.

In November, nations are expected to ramp up plans to combat global warming at the UN climate summit in the Scottish city of Glasgow, the COP26.

It was pushed back from last year due to the pandemic.

The coronavirus crisis has also often made it difficult for young activists to carry out events.

In the Philippines, Tan has co-organised a week-long camp for indigenous leaders and students to exchange knowledge and experiences of climate change.

But with Covid-19 cases rising, the get-together planned for the end of this month is likely to be cancelled.

"We're still trying to figure out how to have some form of onground strikes," Tan told AFP, adding she believed that health guidelines had sometimes been used to prevent protests.

The uneven rollout of vaccine campaigns across the world also risks preventing activists in low-income countries from attending the Glasgow summit.

-'Last chance'-

Greta Thunberg -- who inspired millions with her school strikes for the climate -- has said she will not attend unless a fairer vaccine rollout ensures countries can participate on even terms.

"For someone of my age and social status living in Nigeria, I don't think I have any hope of getting vaccinated anytime soon," activist Kelo Uchendu told AFP in a Zoom interview.

Uchendu said that being a part of global summits or school strikes was invigorating as kickstarting a climate movement in Nigeria was difficult.

"People believe it is a problem for the global north, they believe we have other problems like corruption that need more attention than climate change," said the 25-year-old, who lives in the southern city of Enugu.

But as a top oil producer and Africa's largest economy, Uchendu said Nigeria had a crucial role to play in battling the destruction of nature.

To raise awareness, the engineering student organises essay competitions and hackathons on climate change at his university.

And to engage older people, Uchendu helped set up the Nigeria branch of Parents For Future which promotes intergenerational solidarity within the climate strike movement.

Looking ahead to the UN talks, Bolivian activist Villarreal says global leaders have a historic opportunity to embrace a sustainable way of life in their economic recovery plans following the health crisis.

Piling pressure on leaders with other youth activists is her number one priority, she says, because Glasgow is "our last chance".

ech/kjm/oho

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US climate envoy John Kerry will visit China this week in the first trip there by the Biden administration, seeking to raise global ambitions despite soaring tensions with Beijing on other fronts. The former secretary of state will visit Shanghai as well as the South Korean capital Seoul on a trip starting Wednesday, the State Department confirmed. His trip comes in preparation for President Joe Biden's virtual climate summit next week to which the US leader has invited both Chinese President Xi ... read more

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