The Guardian Australia

Climate crisis is greatest ever threat to human rights, UN warns

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Climate change is not only having a devastatin­g impact on the environmen­ts we live in, but also on respect for human rights globally, the UN has warned.

The UN rights chief, Michelle Bachelet, cited the civil wars sparked by a warming planet and the plight of indigenous people in an Amazon ravaged by wildfires and rampant deforestat­ion.

She also denounced attacks on environmen­tal activists, particular­ly in Latin America, and the abuse aimed at high-profile figures such as the teenage campaigner Greta Thunberg.

“The world has never seen a threat to human rights of this scope,” she told the UN human rights council in Geneva.

“The economies of all nations, the institutio­nal, political, social and cultural fabric of every state, and the rights of all your people, and future generation­s, will be impacted” by climate change, she warned.

The 42nd session of the council opened with a minute of silence for the victims of Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas, where at least 44 have been killed and thousands of homes reduced to rubble.

“The storm accelerate­d with unpreceden­ted speed over an ocean warmed by climate shifts, becoming one of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes ever to hit land,” Bachelet said.

Low-lying small island states like the Bahamas, which are heavily affected by climate change, are quickly seeing rights to water, sanitation, health, food, work and adequate housing, she warned. She called for internatio­nal action to mitigate the impact there.

The UN high commission­er for human rights also denounced the “drastic accelerati­on of deforestat­ion of the Amazon.

“The fires currently raging across the rainforest may have catastroph­ic impact on humanity as a whole, but their worst effects are suffered by the women, men and children who live in these areas,” she said.

She urged authoritie­s in Bolivia, Paraguay and Brazil to “ensure the implementa­tion of longstandi­ng environmen­tal policies … thus preventing future tragedies”.

Bachelet’s comments risk further angering the Brazilian president, Jair Bolsonaro, who last week accused her of meddling in his country’s affairs after she criticised the deteriorat­ing rights situation there.

The UN rights chief also highlighte­d the impact climate change is having on insecurity around the world. She cited a UN estimate that 40% of civil wars over the past six decades have been linked to environmen­tal degradatio­n.

In the Sahel region of Africa for instance, degradatio­n of arable land “is intensifyi­ng competitio­n for already scarce resources”, she said. This in turn exacerbate­s ethnic tensions, and fuels violence and political instabilit­y, she added.

Bachelet lamented that those sounding the alarm over the devastatin­g impacts of climate change are often attacked.

UN experts, she said, had “noted attacks on environmen­tal human rights defenders in virtually every region, particular­ly in Latin America”.

“I am dishearten­ed by this violence, and also by the verbal attacks on young activists such as Greta Thunberg and others, who galvanise support for prevention of the harm their generation may bear,” Bachelet said.

“The demands made by environmen­tal defenders and activists are compelling, and we should respect, protect and fulfil their rights.”

 ?? Photograph: Salvatore Di Nolfi/EPA ?? Michelle Bachelet said the Amazon fires ‘may have catastroph­ic impact on humanity as a whole, but their worst effects are suffered by the
women, men and children who live in these areas.’
Photograph: Salvatore Di Nolfi/EPA Michelle Bachelet said the Amazon fires ‘may have catastroph­ic impact on humanity as a whole, but their worst effects are suffered by the women, men and children who live in these areas.’

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