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Derniers articles : Déclaration de la société civile africaine en marge du 2e Sommet Powering Africa - 28 janvier 2016 Pour protéger le climat de la planète, la France doit se désengager du secteur d’exploitation forestière industrielle dans le bassin du Congo - 7 décembre 2015 Environmental and Climate Justice Now! - - 3 December 2014 March to Demand a Solution to Climate Change at COP17 - - 22 November 2011 Appel de Niono contre le nucléaire en Afrique et pour l’abolition des armes Nucléaires - 3 novembre 2011 Les milliers de solutions se trouvent entre les mains des peuples - - 9 décembre 2010 Copenhague ou le fardeau légué par les riches - - 19 décembre 2009 Halt Climate Change - Halt Forest destruction - Halt Plantations - 8 June 2009 Déforestation alarmante, tragique inaction ! - - 15 mars 2007 Regional Conference On Biosafety - - 29 November 2006 Resolution of FoEI Conference on Climate Change - - - 2 October 2006 Les syndicats et les ONG demandent que les Critères de production durable pour l’huile de palme n’autorisent pas les pesticides hautement toxiques - - - 17 novembre 2005 Voir également : Mali : Déclaration de la coalition des organisations de la société civile de Kayes (Mali) à la caravane Ouest-africainedes luttes pour la terre, l’eau et les semences paysannes Mali : Déclaration de Sikasso Mozambique : Denuciation of the Partnership Between WWWF and Prosavana Agriculture - Accès à la terre - Souveraineté alimentaire - Accaparement des terres : Appel à la mobilisation pour la Caravane ouest-africaine pour la terre, l’eau et les semences Nigeria : Outcome appeal against Shell: victory for the environment and the Nigerian people Forum social mondial : Déclaration finale du Forum des Peuples, Siby 2015 Droits Humains - Démocratie : « Tournons la page des régimes fossiles » Cameroun : Un défenseur de l’environnement lourdement condamné au Cameroun Cameroun : La société civile internationale alarmée par la condamnation du défenseur camerounais de l’environnement et des droits humains Nasako Besingi Agriculture - Accès à la terre - Souveraineté alimentaire - Accaparement des terres : Droits à l’eau et à la terre, une lutte commune Libéria : SDI Report Reveals Poverty in the Midst of Plenty in Liberia Afrique du Sud : No good tidings in Christmas nuclear announcement Eau : Droits à l’eau et à la terre, une lutte en commun Afrique du Sud : Environmentalists protest against Zuma’s plans for our coast Afrique du Sud : Nuclear deal with Russia not in the interests of the South African people Site(s) web : Friends of the Earth International : Pesticide Action Network Africa (PAN Africa) : Pambazuka News - Environment : Greenpeace Afrique : http://www.greenpeace.org/afrique/
No REDD in Africa Network - NRAN :Friends of the Earth-Ghana : African Network for Environment and Economic Justice : Biowatch South Africa : Brainforest Gabon : Center for Environment, Human Rights and Development - CEHRD : Centre pour l’Environnement et le Développement : Earth Life Africa : Environmental Rights Action - Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA) : Forests Monitor : Friends of the Earth International : Groundwork - Environmental Justice Group : Justiça Ambiental / FOE Mozambique : Lawyers’ Environmental Action Team (LEAT) : Oilwatch Africa : Plateforme ’Gabon ma Terre mon Droit’ : Social Action : Sustainable Development Institute - SDI : Dernier(s) document(s) : Le climat dans la tourmente des marchés - Un rapport d’Attac France - 10 December 2009 (PDF - 3.7 Mb) Forêts africaines : les clés de l’équilibre du climat mondial - Un rapport de Greenpeace - 2 December 2007 (PDF - 660.2 kb) Réforme du secteur forestier : échec au cameroun, pillage annoncé en RDC - Par Greenpeace - 10 March 2007 (PDF - 471 kb) |
Maputo Statement No REDD in Africa Network Declaration on REDD 17 September 2013 The NO REDD in Africa Network gathered here in Maputo Mozambique, on 26 August 2013 during the occasion of an international workshop on REDD with participants from Mozambique, other African countries, North America and South America deliberated on the implications of Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD) for Africa and by extension the global South. We recognise the decision of the Tunisia meeting in March 2013 that decided on the need for a No REDD Platform to educate and inform communities and governments of the developing countries about the negative impacts of REDD in all its forms. We acknowledge the fact that African governments have been ambushed with offers and promises of development financing flowing through REDD and adopted this without applying critical minds and making the necessary consultations. We appreciate the participation of government officials and representatives of government workers from various departments to contribute to the conversation on REDD but note the unfortunate position expressed by them that despite the repertoire of evidence against REDD, the African governments are adamant to go ahead with REDD. We, the undersigned, noted and expressed the following; 1. REDD was basically designed as an escape hatch for polluters in the industrialised countries to enable them to continue to pollute while assuming that their pollution was offset in forests 2. REDD does not reduce emissions and is merely a project for carbon trading, 3. REDD does not halt deforestation but defers, displaces or actually encourages conversion of forests into monoculture tree plantations, 4. REDD and REDD type projects lead to displacement of forest dependent communities, servitude, killings, repression and other human rights abuses, 5. Much of African land and forests have been targeted for REDD and carbon credit projects or are marked to be auctioned off to private interests, 6. REDD rewards logging companies and agri-business, 7. REDD projects have been rushed on developing country governments with very little opportunity for internal and local consultation with the promise of development funding, 8. REDD represents a major threat to security of land, food and water in Africa as it is a land grabbing agenda of continental scale. On the basis of the above and other considerations, the workshop declared as follows 1. Governments must take steps to protect our forests from deforestation and degradation and do so without expectations of carbon credits, 2. Polluting industries and countries must stop emissions at source and not deflect the burden to other countries, 3. Demand and over-consumption are major causes of deforestation and must be reduced to sustainable levels, 4. Governments must improve weak and ineffective forest sector governance and ensure that forest-dependent communities are duly consulted and their consent obtained with regard to actions on their forests and forest resources, 5. Governments must facilitate and support a new development pathway not premised on forest conversion, 6. Governments must consider development alternatives that are based on the historical capacities of the local communities and only collaborate with investors on projects designed by them rather than accept development projects designed elsewhere primarily to meet the interests of others, 7. African governments have a duty to protect the resources of their nations and protect the people and resources in their care from recolonisation. List of signatories: Mozambique
Regional & International 23. Friends of the Earth International
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