The Borneo Post

Pacific Islands accuse US of ‘abandoning’ them to climate change

-

SUVA, Fiji: Pacific Islands at risk of being swallowed by rising seas accused Washington of ‘abandoning’ vulnerable nations and expressed dismay yesterday after Donald Trump pulled the US out of the Paris climate deal.

Leaders of a cluster of small remote island states in the Pacific, which are at the forefront of the battle against climate change and already suffering the effects of unpredicta­ble weather, expressed deep disappoint­ment at the controvers­ial move.

Tuvalu Prime Minister Enele Sopoaga said the Americans were turning their backs on his country in its time of need, despite their alliance during World War II.

“We provided our islands as a launching pad for them to achieve their objectives and now we are facing the biggest war of our time, they are abandoning us,” he told the Fiji Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n during a visit to the neighbouri­ng island.

“It’s really an act of abandoning small island countries like Tuvalu.”

Fiji Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimaram­a, who will serve as president of upcoming UN climate talks in Germany later this year, labelled the US move ‘ deeply disappoint­ing’ but he said the battle to contain the threats to the environmen­t would continue.

“While the loss of America’s leadership is unfortunat­e, this is a struggle that is far from over,” he said.

Bainimaram­a’s Pacific island nation has already felt the impact of climate change through wild storms such as last year’s Cyclone Winston, which killed 44 people and wiped out a third of the economy.

There was also defiance from the Marshall Islands, a Pacific archipelag­o highly exposed to climate-induced sea level rise and the fi rst country to ratify the global pact.

President Hilda Heine expressed disappoint­ment and confusion at the US decision and said it would have grave implicatio­ns.

“We must not give up hope. Our children and their children deserve not only to survive, they deserve to thrive,” she told Radio New Zealand.

The COP 23 talks will be held in Bonn from November 6-17, with Germany inviting Fiji’s PM to act as president to give a voice to those on the frontline of climate change.

Bainimaram­a said the rest of the world remained committed to the Paris deal, known as COP 21, struck in 2015 and signed by more than 190 countries.

“As incoming COP president, I reaffi rm that I will do everything possible to continue to forge a grand coalition that will accelerate the momentum that has continued since the Paris Agreement,” he said.

He predicted Washington would eventually reverse its decision.

“I am also convinced that the United States government will eventually rejoin our struggle because the scientific evidence of man-made climate change is well understood,” he said.

“The issue is settled, and the impacts are obvious, and humankind ignores these facts at its peril.”

Meanwhile, New Zealand’s Climate Change Minister Paula Bennett said many of the claims made by US President Donald Trump were simply incorrect.

“So much of what he said is wrong. It’s not going to cost America to be in it disproport­ionately to others,” she told RNZ.

“Climate change and what we need to do there can create jobs, not take them away.” — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows the coastline of Funafuti, an atoll of Tuvalu. President of the Assembly of French Polynesia Marcel Tuihani expressed his ‘stupefacti­on’ after Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris climate accord. — AFP photo
File photo shows the coastline of Funafuti, an atoll of Tuvalu. President of the Assembly of French Polynesia Marcel Tuihani expressed his ‘stupefacti­on’ after Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris climate accord. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia