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JanforGore
Inspired by the Occupy Wall St. movement, protesters calling for “climate justice” are set to gather at the opening of UN climate talks in Durban organisers say.

Note: GJEP is on the ground in Durban, South Africa and, as you can see from some of our previous posts, we have started reportage of what is happening so far. We will continue to do so through the next two weeks. Recently we posted Climate change: vulnerable countries consider ‘occupying’ Durban talks by The Guardian’s John Vidal. Well, the Occupy movement seems to be really on its way here. Before the next article, our colleague and friend, Patrick Bond posted on one of the listservs here, “…the Durban police will smile and stand idly by, it has been confirmed – they’re not savages like in NY and California.” -The GJEP Team

Sapa-AFP | 27 November, 2011 10:57

“A meeting at the ‘Speaker’s Corner’ will be called, an assembly,” Patrick Bond, a professor at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban, told AFP, referring to a spot near the venue of the 17th Conference of the Parties (COP17) under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

“Negotiations have begun with the city on an authorised protest space,” said Bond, who is associated with the largely youth-driven initiative.

A website dedicated to “Occupy COP17″ echoed the frustration of many poorer nations already facing climate impacts with the slow pace and low ambition of the talks.

“Inside their assembly and inside their declarations the needs of the 99 percent are not being heard,” reads a declaration on a the site.

“Private corporations are occupying our seats in the UN climate talks and governments corrupted by corporate influence are claiming to represent our needs.”

On Friday, South Africa’s police minister said his country would deploy 2,500 officers to the UN climate talks starting this week.

“Police will not tolerate criminal acts that are disguised as demonstrations, which in some cases include destruction of property and intimidations,” said Nathi Mthethwa.

The government has given the nod to a civil society march next Saturday, but the minister made no mention of the Occupy event.

The possibility of an “Occupy COP17″ protest was raised earlier this month by former Costa Rican president Jose Maria Figueres at the Climate Vulnerable Forum in Bangladesh.

“With respect to climate maybe we need an Occupy Durban,” he told OneWorld TV.

Such a action could take the form of “a sit-in by the delegations of those countries that are most affected by climate change,” he said.

Some climate-vulnerable states have slammed recent proposals from wealthy nations that a legally-binding climate pact can wait until the end of this decade.

Such proposals are “both environmentally reckless and politically irresponsible,” Joseph Gilbert, Grenada’s environment minister, said several weeks ago on behalf of the 42-nation Association of Small Island States (AOSIS).

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4 comments // Occupy movement comes to COP 17

  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • With the science behind this and the events and effects we are seeing corrolated to it globally affecting agriculture and lives, Durban is exactly where a Climate Justice occupation is necessary. For any wealthy nation to state at this time that the end of this decade is good enough to take action is immoral and criminal.

      “Private corporations are occupying our seats in the UN climate talks and governments corrupted by corporate influence are claiming to represent our needs.”

      This process as well is corrupted. The World Bank President is scheduled to attend this along with reps from corporations no doubt to work out other schemes like REDD to steal the lands of indigenous people so polluters can continue to pollute. Because of course, we can't see the pollution dealt with at the SOURCE, because that hurts THEM.(cough bs cough.)

      And of course, what would a climate conference be without, "celebrities" like Di Caprio, Jolie, Bono, etc. "jetting in" to stay at fancy hotels to steal all of the attention to soothe their own egos while the poor and indigenous peoples on the front lines of climate change are the ones standing outside the convention center being ignored.

      Again, the IEA as all of the scientific organizations of the world have stated that this is a clear and PRESENT danger to our planet's ability to sustain the human race and we can see it with our own eyes. This is no time to once again placate corporations, bankers , governments, bug-eyed deniers on the payroll of fossil fuels in collusion with them or any other distractions. They are the ones who have brought this upon us. Year after year we see nothing but failure from these meetings because the same influences OWS speaks out against are the same influences destroying our environment for their own profit.

      So I say, OCCUPY THE PLANET and take it back before it is too late.

    • 6 months ago
  • artemis6
  • JanforGore
  • artemis6
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