FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: December 7, 2009 Contact: The
Indigenous Environmental Network Media Team Mobile Number: +45 526
85596 E-mail:
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Copenhagen,
Denmark - A multi-generational delegation of 21 Indigenous Peoples from
North America have arrived in Copenhagen, Denmark this week to advocate
for the incorporation of Indigenous Peoples rights in the language of a
fair, binding, and science-based global climate treaty at the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
The
delegation is comprised of Native American, Alaskan Native, and First
Nation activists and leaders from the communities most affected by climate
change and fossil fuel development in North America. They represent many
Nations including Cree, Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Blackfoot, Ojibwe,
Kachiquel Mayan, Pasqua, Gwich'in, Navajo, Mikisew Cree, Inupiaq, Mohawk,
Oneida, Zuni, and Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation.
The delegation,
coordinated by the Indigenous Environmental Network (IEN), are attending
the international climate negotiations to speak on behalf of their
Nations, communities, and future generations in support of strong climate
action and also to network with other Indigenous Peoples from across the
world.
Nikke Alex, 24, an IEN youth delegate from the Navajo
Nation, AZ, said, "My community has been greatly affected my climate
change. In my community, many do not have basic utilities like running
water and electricity, and over the summer, the wells and springs dried up
forcing my family and many others to drive over 30 miles for water. I'm
happy to see other Indigenous youth here to voice their concerns about
decisions being made that will impact their future."
In order to
protect their homelands from climate chaos, the IEN delegation is pushing
for not only strong targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions, but
also demanding effective, fair and equitable methods to address the
climate issue. Global expectations for Copenhagen outcomes have dimmed in
recent weeks, most prominently due to inaction by the world's biggest
emitters, such as the United States and Canada. IEN delegates will work to
pressure their home governments to step up their efforts to combat climate
change.
We are here to tell the world, as the Indigenous Peoples of
North America we will not sit on the side lines as the American and
Canadian governments systematically kill international climate
negotiations in the interest of promoting dirty fossil fuel development
such as the Tar sands in Northern Alberta, Canada," says Clayton
Thomas-Muller, Tar Sands Campaigner for IEN.
The delegation will
also be working in solidarity with Indigenous Peoples from around the
globe to advocate the inclusion of the UN Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples' (UNDRIP) in any climate agreement. In addition to
lobbying, the delegation will be educating other UNFCCC and Klimaforum 09
attendees through workshops, non-violent direct actions, and most
importantly, informing their own communities about progress in
Copenhagen.
Click here (pdf) or here (word doc) for IEN Delegation
information. ### The Indigenous Environmental Network (IEN) is a United
States-based non-governmental (Indigenous) organization formed in 1990
addressing environmental and economic justice challenges. IEN is a network
of Indigenous Peoples empowering Indigenous communities and Nations
towards sustainable livelihoods, demanding environmental justice, and
maintaining the Sacred Fire of our traditions. Since 1998, IEN has been
working on issues of climate change and global warming. IEN is one of the
leading organizations/networks within the U.S. environmental justice
movement involved in climate change policy - locally, nationally and
globally. Visit http://www.ienearth.org for more information. Click here (pdf) or here (word doc) for IEN Delegation
information.
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