Pacific Island Warriors Blockade World’s Largest Coal Port

Octo­ber 25th, 2014

Cli­mate Change War­riors from 12 Pacif­ic Island nations pad­dled canoes into the world’s largest coal port in New­cas­tle, Aus­tralia, Fri­day (Octo­ber 17th) to bring atten­tion to their grave fears about the con­se­quences of cli­mate change on their home coun­tries.

The 30 war­riors joined a flotil­la of hun­dreds of Aus­tralians in kayaks and on surf­boards to delay eight of the 12 ships sched­uled to pass through the port dur­ing the nine-hour block­ade, which was organ­ised with sup­port from the U.S.-based envi­ron­men­tal group 350.org.

The war­riors came from 12 Pacif­ic Island coun­tries, includ­ing Fiji, Tuvalu, Toke­lau, Microne­sia, Van­u­atu, The Solomon Islands, Ton­ga, Samoa, Papua New Guinea and Niue.

Mikaele Maia­va spoke with IPS about why he and his fel­low cli­mate change war­riors had trav­elled to Aus­tralia: “We want Aus­tralia to remem­ber that they are a part of the Pacif­ic. And as a part of the Pacif­ic, we are a fam­i­ly, and hav­ing this fam­i­ly means we stay togeth­er. We can­not afford, one of the biggest sis­ters, real­ly destroy­ing every­thing for the fam­i­ly.

“So, we want the Aus­tralian com­mu­ni­ty, espe­cial­ly the Aus­tralian lead­ers, to think about more than their pock­ets, to real­ly think about human­i­ty not just for the Aus­tralian peo­ple, but for every­one,” Mikaele said.

REUTERS / David Gray

Speak­ing at the open­ing of a new coal mine on Oct. 13, Aus­tralian Prime Min­is­ter Tony Abbott said that “coal is good for human­i­ty.”

Mikaele ques­tioned Abbott’s posi­tion, ask­ing, “If you are talk­ing about human­i­ty: Is human­i­ty real­ly for peo­ple to lose land? Is human­i­ty real­ly for peo­ple to lose their cul­ture and iden­ti­ty? Is human­i­ty to live in fear for our future gen­er­a­tions to live in a beau­ti­ful island and have homes to go to? Is that real­ly human­i­ty? Is that real­ly the answer for us to live in peace and har­mo­ny? Is that real­ly the answer for the future?”

Mikaele said that he and his fel­low cli­mate war­riors were aware that their fight was not just for the Pacif­ic, and that oth­er devel­op­ing coun­tries were affect­ed by cli­mate change too.

“We’re aware that this fight is not just for the Pacif­ic. We are very well aware that the whole world is stand­ing up in sol­i­dar­i­ty for this. The mes­sage that we want to give, espe­cial­ly to the lead­ers, is that we are humans, this fight is not just about our land, this fight is for sur­vival.”

 

Mikaele described how his home of Toke­lau was already see­ing the effects of cli­mate change,

“We see these changes of weath­er pat­terns and we also see that our food secu­ri­ty is threat­ened. It’s hard for us to build a sus­tain­able future if your soil is not that fer­tile and it does not grow your crops because of salt intru­sion.”

Tokelau’s coast­line is also begin­ning to erode. “We see our coastal lines chang­ing. Fif­teen years ago when I was going to school, you could walk in a straight line. Now you have to walk in a crooked line because the beach has erod­ed away.”

Mikaele said that he and his fel­low cli­mate change war­riors would not be con­tent unless they stood up for future gen­er­a­tions, and did every­thing pos­si­ble to change world lead­ers’ men­tal­i­ty about cli­mate change.

“We are edu­cat­ed peo­ple, we are smart peo­ple, we know what’s going on, the days of the indige­nous peo­ple and local peo­ple not hav­ing the infor­ma­tion and the knowl­edge about what’s going on is over,” he said.

“We are the gen­er­a­tion of today, the lead­ers of tomor­row and we are not blind­ed by the prob­lem. We can see it with our own eyes, we feel it in our own hearts, and we want the Aus­tralian gov­ern­ment to realise that. We are not blind­ed by mon­ey we just want to live as peace­ful­ly and fight for what mat­ters the most, which is our homes.”

Toke­lau became the first coun­try in the world to use 100 per­cent renew­able ener­gy when they switched to solar ener­gy in 2012.

Speak­ing about the canoes that he and his fel­low cli­mate war­riors had carved in their home coun­tries and bought to Aus­tralia for the protest, he talked about how his fam­i­ly had used canoes for gen­er­a­tions,

“Each extend­ed fam­i­ly would have a canoe, and this canoe is the main tool that we used to be able to live, to go fish­ing, to get coconuts, to take fam­i­ly to the oth­er islands.”

Anoth­er cli­mate war­rior, Kathy Jet­nil-Kijin­er, from the Mar­shall Islands, brought mem­bers of the Unit­ed Nations Gen­er­al Assem­bly to tears last month with her impas­sioned poem writ­ten to her baby daugh­ter Matafele Peinam,

“No one’s mov­ing, no one’s los­ing their home­land, no one’s gonna become a cli­mate change refugee. Or should I say, no one else. To the Carteret islanders of Papua New Guinea and to the Taro islanders of Fiji, I take this moment to apol­o­gise to you,” she said.

The Pacif­ic Islands Forum describes cli­mate change as the “sin­gle great­est threat to the liveli­hoods, secu­ri­ty and well-being of the peo­ples of the Pacif­ic.”

“Cli­mate change is an imme­di­ate and seri­ous threat to sus­tain­able devel­op­ment and pover­ty erad­i­ca­tion in many Pacif­ic Island Coun­tries, and for some their very sur­vival. Yet these coun­tries are amongst the least able to adapt and to respond; and the con­se­quences they face, and already now bear, are sig­nif­i­cant­ly dis­pro­por­tion­ate to their col­lec­tive minis­cule con­tri­bu­tions to glob­al emis­sions,” it says.

Pacif­ic Island lead­ers have recent­ly stepped up their lan­guage, chal­leng­ing the Aus­tralian gov­ern­ment to stop delay­ing action on cli­mate change.

Oxfam Australia’s cli­mate change advo­ca­cy coor­di­na­tor, Dr Simon Brad­shaw, told IPS, “Aus­tralia is a Pacif­ic coun­try. In opt­ing to dis­man­tle its cli­mate poli­cies, dis­en­gage from inter­na­tion­al nego­ti­a­tions and forge ahead with the expan­sion of its fos­sil fuel indus­try, it is utter­ly at odds with the rest of the region.”

Dr. Brad­shaw added, “Australia’s clos­est neigh­bours have con­sis­tent­ly iden­ti­fied cli­mate change as their great­est chal­lenge and top pri­or­i­ty. So it is inevitable that Australia’s recent actions will impact on its rela­tion­ship with Pacif­ic Islands.

“A recent poll com­mis­sioned by Oxfam showed that 60 per­cent of Aus­tralians thought cli­mate change was hav­ing a neg­a­tive impact on the abil­i­ty of peo­ple in poor­er coun­tries to grow and access food, ris­ing to 68 per­cent among 18 to 34-year-olds,” he said.

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