Originally appeared in Indian Country Today.
By Terri Hansen, Today correspondent
CANCUN, Mexico – The U.N. Forum Convention on Climate Change denied entry to Indigenous Environmental Network
Executive Director Tom Goldtooth Dec. 8 after a protest with chanting
by non-Native participants arose a day earlier in the halls of the Moon
Palace, site of the official U.N. climate convention. The convention is
hosting 194 countries to further negotiations on the Kyoto Protocol, and
climate-related issues.
The peaceful demonstration was sparked as Goldtooth and representatives of Friends of the Earth International, Grassroots Global Justice Alliance
and their allies expressed frustration over the failure of the COP
negotiations to address central issues of reducing CO2 emissions during a
press conference hosted by Global Justice Ecology Project and La Via Campesina.
The negotiations, Goldtooth said, had become a “trade show for promoting
false solutions and generating capital.” When he returned to the Moon
Palace the following day, he was removed from the grounds and his
accreditation as a member of civil society was revoked.
A Dec.
9 IEN press release that followed said the accreditation of a dozen
others representing civil societies had also been revoked. However,
Goldtooth also said his accreditation was reinstated thanks to the
intervention of Gustavo Torres from the Mexican government with the
UNFCCC secretariat security, and support from other allies.
“Both inside and outside the U.N. process the voices of indigenous
peoples, social movements and the communities most directly affected by
our fossil fuel dependency must continue to be heard as we reject false
solutions like the carbon market mechanisms of REDD,” Goldtooth said.
“We demand that the Cochabama People’s Agreement
be acknowledged as a path forward towards addressing the real solutions
to the climate crisis based in traditional indigenous knowledge,
community-based practices, indigenous and human rights and the rights of
Mother Earth,” he said.
Representatives of the Grassroots Global Justice Alliance and Youth 4 Climate Justice
who were also ejected said they were from communities
disproportionately affected by climate disruption, and were drawing
attention to the serious dangers of false solutions such as REDD and the
carbon market.
The UNFCCC “silenced our voices,” they said in a joint statement. “By
penalizing and ejecting us as individuals the U.N. is also silencing the
collective voices of our communities. We stand firmly rooted in our
principles to lift the voices of women, young people, and indigenous
peoples throughout the world and to advance the real solutions to
cooling the planet found in our grassroots movements.”
Their impromptu protest coincided with the thousands who marched in Cancun and in 300 cities around the world in the “1,000 Cancúns Global Day of Action for Climate Justice” organized by La Via Campesina, an international federation of peasant and smallholder farmers.
While the La Via Campesina is a-political, allies such as migrant
workers and environmental activists marched to condemn the “false
solutions and backroom deals” unfolding in the negotiations.
For updates visit the environmental blog, Mother Earth Journal.




