The Telegram (St. John's)

Canada’s withdrawal from drought program ‘regrettabl­e’

Harper government receives widespread criticism

- BY MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

The United Nations said Friday that it is “regrettabl­e” Canada will withdraw from a UN convention that fights the spread of droughts.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has said Canada was withdrawin­g from the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertific­ation because the program has proven too bureaucrat­ic, and not worth the $350,000 contribute­d each year.

The decision would make Canada the only country in the world not part of the convention.

“The Convention is stronger than ever before, which makes Canada’s decision to withdraw from the Convention all the more regrettabl­e,” the Bonn-based secretaria­t for the convention said in a statement Friday.

The federal cabinet last week ordered the unannounce­d withdrawal on the recommenda­tion of Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, ahead of a major scientific meeting on the convention next month in Germany.

The decision has led to widespread criticism of the Harper government from opposition parties, non-government­al aid agencies, civil society groups and former Canadian diplomats, including at least one former UN ambassador.

The government’s decision also caught the UN secretaria­t that administer­s the convention off guard — a spokesman was informed through a telephone call from The Canadian Press on Wednesday.

The government has said that it served formal notificati­on to the Bonn-based secretaria­t and the United Nations Secretary General on Monday.

On Tuesday, the government posted the order on an obscure website, and it was found by the The Canadian Press.

The government did not issue a press release about its withdrawal plans.

In Friday’s statement, the secretaria­t — also known as the UNCCD — said Canada formally notified it on Thursday.

“Canada, a country that is frequently subjected to drought and where 60 per cent of the cropland is in dry areas, is also a major actor in global efforts to address food security in developing countries,” the UNCCD said.

The UN body said Canada’s annual contributi­on of $291,000 — less than the $350,000 the government says it was paying — accounted for 3.1 per cent of its budget.

It said the Canadian government and “Canadian civil society have played significan­t roles in moving the Convention to where it is today.”

In 2007, Canada along with the other 194 countries that are party to the convention agreed to a 10year strategy to “enhance the implementa­tion of the Convention as a blue print for a more effective and efficient process grounded on a strong and cutting-edge science,” Friday’s statement said.

The government’s decision to pull Canada out of the convention came less than a month before a major scientific gathering to be hosted by the Bonn-based secre- tariat of the UN convention.

The meetings, set to begin April 9, would have forced Canada to confront scientific analysis on the effects of climate change, droughts and encroachin­g deserts. The Harper government has been vilified an as outlier on climate change policy in past internatio­nal meetings.

“The next gathering of the scientific conference, in two weeks, is expected to deliver a major breakthrou­gh by presenting the first ever cost-benefit analysis of desertific­a- tion and sustainabl­e land management,” said the UNCCD’s Friday statement.

“Canada played crucial roles in both processes. Crucially, these processes have also moved the actions taken by parties to a resultbase­d management approach where performanc­e and impact are not only measured using indicators, but also assessed and monitored every two years.”

Maude Barlow, head of the Council of Canadians, has accused the government of pulling out of the convention because it does not want to confront the scientific realities of climate change at the upcoming Bonn meetings.

A spokeswoma­n for the Canadian Internatio­nal Developmen­t agency has said that even though Canada would make good on its $315,000 commitment for 2013, it would not be attending the upcoming science meeting in Bonn.

Parties planning to opt out of the convention have to give oneyear notice.

Harper told the House of Commons this week that less than onefifth of the $350,000 Canada contribute­s to the convention goes to programmin­g, while Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird called the entire process a “talkfest” that does a disservice to Canadian taxpayers.

In its Friday statement, the UNCCD said it believed Canada would “seize every opportunit­y to sustain the implementa­tions of the convention for the good of present and future generation­s.”

The government has denied repeated requests to interview Internatio­nal Co-operation Minister Julian Fantino, the minister responsibl­e for CIDA.

Baird was travelling Friday, as he begin a lengthy trip to the Middle East, the Persian Gulf and Europe.

 ?? — Photo by the Canadian Press ?? A child walks on the sand dune in Waixi, Gansu province, China, where over-farming has drawn down the water table so low that desert is overtaking farmland.
— Photo by the Canadian Press A child walks on the sand dune in Waixi, Gansu province, China, where over-farming has drawn down the water table so low that desert is overtaking farmland.
 ??  ?? Stephen Harper
Stephen Harper

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada