Weekend Herald

The 11-year-old making herself heard at the UN

- Krithika Varagur

An Indian girl who was among the 16 young activists filing a complaint at the United Nations accusing countries of inaction on climate change has taken that step before.

Ridhima Pandey, now 11, filed a petition in 2017 at India’s National Green Tribunal, which oversees environmen­tal concerns, for not taking serious enough steps to combat climate change. It was dismissed, but she escalated it to the Indian Supreme Court.

Pandey was among the activists including Swedish teen Greta Thunberg who this week criticised Germany, France, Brazil, Argentina and Turkey for failing to uphold their obligation­s to young people under the UN’s Convention on the Rights of the Child.

“If we take this matter to the global level, I think that global leaders will not ignore us,” Pandey said at New Delhi’s airport after arriving back in her home country.

Pandey spoke passionate­ly about her experience in New York. She said people often tell her she is too young to be an activist, but she doesn’t think she is wrong because other children from other countries are “asking for the same”.

She said the highlights of her trip were filing the complaint and then attending a global climate strike last Friday. There were protests in several Indian cities including New Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata that day.

Pandey is from Haridwar, a city on the Ganges River, which has been extremely polluted all her life. “The Government said they cleaned it but it’s not true. We say the Ganga is mata [mother], that Ganga is a goddess for us, and we just pollute it.” She said she regularly finds statues, clothes and plastic on its banks.

Pandey’s interest in the climate started in 2013, when huge floods devastated Uttarakhan­d state in northern India.

Her father, Dinesh Pandey, a wildlife conservati­onist, began explaining issues such as global warming to her because she asked endless questions about the natural disaster. “We [adults] just talk a lot,” said Dinesh

Pandey, who accompanie­d his daughter to New

York. “This is not right. They are betraying the future generation­s. I am standing with my daughter, and I am proud that my daughter is standing with everyone on the global level in this mission.” “I don’t think our Government is fulfilling all of its Paris agreement responsibi­lities,” said Ridhima Pandey, pointing out India’s continuing dependence on fossil fuels.

“It makes me very angry,” she said. “They shouldn’t concentrat­e just on developmen­t. What will we do with all this developmen­t if we are not going to have a future?” She pointed to single-use plastics as an area in which ordinary Indians can make a difference. “If you want to help, I would say first of all support [our movement], and second of all stop using plastic products,” she said. She marvelled at the reusable steel straws that she saw people using in New York. “If we don’t use it, companies will stop making it,” she said of plastics.

The Indian Government is expected to announce a single-use plastics ban next week.

Pandey is starting her own nonprofit group for climate advocacy.

“I don’t want to suffer, because it’s our right to have cleaner water, to live in a healthy environmen­t, to have cleaner air,” she said. “And they” — government­s around the world — “are violating our rights.”

 ??  ?? Ridhima Pandey had already challenged authoritie­s in India.
Ridhima Pandey had already challenged authoritie­s in India.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand