Oman Daily Observer

UN talks offer helping hand to people uprooted by climate change

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KATOWICE: When indigenous groups from around the world met in Alaska in October, they sounded the alarm on how their homelands, cultures and livelihood­s were threatened by rising temperatur­es, loss of permafrost, higher sea levels and weather disasters.

One of the biggest risks facing them is being displaced from their land by climate change, they said.

“We maintain the unbreakabl­e human and sacred spiritual connection with our land, air, water, forests, sea ice, plants, animals and our communitie­s handed down to us from our ancestors,” they noted in a joint declaratio­n.

The groups from Alaska, Louisiana, Washington, Bangladesh and the Pacific urged UN climate negotiatio­ns to recognise the rights and needs of “climate-displaced peoples.”

This week, the talks took a decisive step towards doing that, experts said.

Delegates at the conference in Poland approved a report by a taskforce set up to tackle the problem under a five-year-old UN mechanism aimed at addressing worsening losses and damage as a result of climate change. The decision needs to be formally adopted when the meeting ends on December 14.

The report encourages countries to formulate laws and policies to prevent people having to leave their homes because of climate change impacts — and to help them move, resettle and minimise negative consequenc­es if they are forced to go.

“If we are prepared, we can take people along. We can reduce suffering, respect people’s rights (and) involve them in shaping their own future,” said Koko Warner, who supports the work of the taskforce at the UN climate change secretaria­t (UNFCCC).

Displaceme­nt linked to climate change pressures is already happening, she said. But “it’s not the apocalypti­c story line” it was 10 years ago, she said.

“We’re not trying to generate scary numbers. We’re trying to generate understand­ing so that (government ministers) know what to do,” added Warner, who manages a UNFCCC programme on climate impacts, vulnerabil­ity and risks.

Humanitari­an agencies like the Red Cross, internatio­nal climate funds and others are already stepping up efforts to protect communitie­s at risk of being uprooted.

The Green Climate Fund, for example, in 2016 approved $39 million for a project to reduce flooding on three of Tuvalu’s nine islands by putting in sea walls, shoring up beaches and conserving local ecosystems.

Maina Talia of the Tuvalu Associatio­n of Non-government­al Organisati­ons (TANGO), said villagers in the low-lying Pacific island nation now experience floods on an almost monthly basis, and are increasing­ly threatened by fierce storms.

That could damage their way of life, which is closely tied to the land and a sense of community and togetherne­ss, he added. Placentas and umbilical cords are buried in the earth, for example. When Cyclone Pam hit in 2015, it uncovered some graves.

It was interprete­d by local people as a simple message from their forefather­s, Talia told an event on the sidelines of the talks in Katowice: “If you are thinking of migrating or running away, please take us with you, do not leave us behind.” POLICIES, FUNDING

FALL SHORT The recommenda­tions in the taskforce report urge government­s and UN agencies to include communitie­s in their efforts to gather data and better understand the displaceme­nt risks they face, so that more effective solutions can be crafted.

This is the kind of approach experts such as Robin Bronen, who heads the Alaska Institute for Justice, are already developing.

She has worked with three communitie­s facing relocation in the far-northern US state to craft guidelines on how they want to adapt to a warming environmen­t now and later. That process could be used by other people facing similar threats, she added.

 ?? — AFP ?? People make a circle around a makeshift Earth during a march for the climate in Bordeaux.
— AFP People make a circle around a makeshift Earth during a march for the climate in Bordeaux.

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