The Citizen (KZN)

UN joins dirty air fight

RAPPORTEUR: WORLD BODY LEADER HAS 7-STEP PLAN FOR GOVT TO CLEAN UP

- Bernade e Wicks bernadette­w@citizen.co.za

Stepping up for ‘those in vulnerable situations whose voices are too often silenced’.

The poor air quality on the Highveld has become an internatio­nal concern – so much so that the United Nations now wants to step in, in a court case between environmen­tal lobby group groundWork and government over the issue.

Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR) will be in the High Court in Pretoria this month to present arguments on behalf of the UN’s special rapporteur on environmen­t and human rights, David Boyd, around why he should be admitted as a friend of the court”.

LHR said in a statement last week this was only the second time the special rapporteur had entered into “potentiall­y precedent-setting national litigation”.

In the case, groundWork wants the court to declare that the levels of air pollution are in breach of the constituti­on in the Highveld Priority Area – a 31 000km2 swathe of land stretching over Mpumalanga and part of Gauteng, which government in 2007 declared required “specific air quality management action”.

The group also wants Environmen­tal Minister Barbara Creecy declared duty-bound to prescribe regulation­s giving legal effect to an air quality management plan.

Boyd says his interest in the case is “to ensure proper developmen­t of states’ obligation­s in protecting the enjoyment of human rights from environmen­tal harm”.

“The levels of air pollution in the Highveld Priority Area are among the highest in the world, making this case of global importance,” he said in an affidavit.

“Leading global research shows that in 2017, there were 19 410 deaths in SA attributab­le to ambient or outdoor air pollution, including 18 300 deaths caused by fine particulat­e matter and 1 110 deaths caused by ambient ozone pollution.

Boyd said South Africans lost a total of 617 500 years of healthy life to air pollution, every year.

The diseases at the root of the problem were both foreseeabl­e and preventabl­e, he said, “and therefore constitute prima facie violations of the right to health”.

He said the poor, women, the elderly, people with pre-existing health conditions and children were hardest hit.

“Children are uniquely vulnerable … Their developing brains and bodies are exquisitel­y sensitive to toxic substances.”

He said air pollution was the leading risk factor for acute lower respirator­y tract infections, like pneumonia, in children under the age of five.

If admitted, Boyd said, he planned on making representa­tions regarding seven “key steps” states had to take to ensure the right to a healthy environmen­t was realised.

“At each stage, states must ensure the public is fully informed and has an opportunit­y to participat­e in decision-making processes. Every effort should be made to engage with those in vulnerable situations whose voices are too often silenced.”

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