Human Rights and Climate Change
On
17th July 2007, H.E. President Gayoom delivered a speech to the Royal
Commonwealth Society in London in which he asked the question: "Is
there a Right to a Safe Environment?" In the speech, the President
noted that despite twenty years of international advocacy on climate
change, the problem is worse today than it has ever been. Looking
towards the crucial Climate Change Conference in Bali, Indonesia in
December 2007, the President therefore suggested supplementing
traditional negotiations on climate change with a new approach focused
on the linkages between human rights and climate change. This approach
would build-on existing international agreements, such as the 1972
Stockholm Convention, which have demonstrated that the quality of the
environment has clear implications for the full enjoyment of human
rights. Taking this one step further, the President’s proposed new
initiative on the "human dimension of global climate change" would
address the fact that if environmental degradation impacts on human
rights, and if climate change causes environmental degradation, then
there must be a relationship between climate change and human rights.
On 20th September 2007, H.E. Abdulla Shahid, Minister of Foreign
Affairs, gave a landmark speech to the UN Human Rights Council in which
he called on the Council to hold a debate on the link between climate
change and the full enjoyment of human rights.
On 13th-14th November 2007, the Maldives hosted a Small Island States
Conference on the Human Dimension of Global Climate Change. During the
Conference, the world’s Small Island States, which are among the most
vulnerable communities on the planet to climate change, discussed the
impact of global warming on individual people in their countries and
also, for the first time, asked the question: how does climate change
affect the human rights of our citizens. The outcome of the Conference
was the Male’ Declaration on the Human Dimension of Global Climate
Change which for the first time in an international agreement
explicitly said that "climate change has clear and immediate
implications for the full enjoyment of human rights".
After helping agree a South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation
(SAARC) Declaration on Climate Change in Delhi, India, which stated
that climate change impacts on the right to development; the Maldives
was also central to efforts to raise awareness of the Human Dimension
of Climate Change during the historic United Nations Climate Change
Conference that took place in Bali, Indonesia in December 2007, and
which launched the Bali Process of climate change negotiations. During
that Conference H.E. President Gayoom delivered a keynote speech in
which he urged negotiators to be mindful of the human rights
implications of climate change. Also at Bali, Minister Shahid and the
United Nations Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights, Ms. Kyung-wha
Kang, delivered major speeches on human rights and climate change.
Building on the momentum generated by these steps, in March 2008 the
Maldives, together with 80 co-sponsors from all regional groups,
secured the adoption, by consensus, of United Nations Human Rights
Council Resolution 7/23 on "Human Rights and Climate Change" which, for
the first time in an official UN resolution, stated explicitly the
global warming has implications for the full enjoyment of human rights.
The resolution asked the Office of the High Commissioner for Human
Rights (OHCHR) to prepare a study on these implications ahead of a full
Human Rights Council debate on the subject in March 2009.
Ahead of the Human Rights Council debate, and in order to provide
useful input into the OHCHR study, the Maldives is organising a year of
events and activities designed to develop thinking and understanding
surrounding the inter-related and inter-connected issues of climate
change, human life, human rights and justice. Events have already been
organised in Geneva and New York and more are planned for late 2008 and
early 2009. Finally, the Maldives is currently working with the Center
for International Environmental Law (CIEL) to produce a detailed
appraisal of the effects of climate change on individual rights and
freedoms in the Maldives. This will be published in mid-August 2008.
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