Dear friends,
This Friday, the UK government could make history by creating the world’s largest Marine Protection Area around the Chagos Islands.*
Our ocean ecosystems are literally dying under pressure from mass, uncontrolled commercial fishing and pollution. This decision could start to turn the tide. But commercial fishing companies are opposing the move, putting short term profits ahead of all sense. We can’t let that happen -- already, over 90% of big fish like tuna and marlin are gone.
Together, let’s send the UK government a tidal wave of global public support urging them to be bold and protect oceans from exploitation. Sign the petition below, then forward it to everyone you know. It will be delivered to Foreign Secretary David Miliband by the deadline this Friday!
The reports are dire: in 38 years, our oceans could be completely fished-out, in 100 years, all coral reefs might be dead. This action alone, won’t be enough to turn the tide. But it will establish a 210,000 square-mile Marine Protected Area -- bigger than the Great Barrier Reef.
To truly save the world’s oceans from collapse will require bold political leadership and dedicated citizens taking action. In 2010, the International Year of Biodiversity, a UK decision to create the world's largest Marine Protected Area would secure a conservation legacy almost unrivalled in scale and significance. This would set a clear example to other governments around the world.
Let's drown out the voices of the commercial fishing companies, and lay the foundation for protecting our oceans for generations to come. Sign the petition below, and forward it to friends and family:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/save_our_oceans/?vl
With hope,
Alice, Iain, Paul, and the rest of the Avaaz team
*The Chagos Archipelago comprises more than 60 tropical islands roughly
in the centre of the Indian Ocean, about 500 km due south of the
Maldives, 1,600 km southwest of India, half way between Tanzania and
Java. Officially part of the British Indian Ocean Territory, the Chagos
were home to the Chagossians for more than a century and a half until
the United Kingdom and the United States expelled them in the 1960s in
order to allow the US to build a military base on Diego Garcia, the
largest of the Chagos Islands.
More info:
Protect Chagos:
http://protectchagos.org/
Why is Overfishing a problem?:
http://overfishing.org/pages/why_is_overfishing_a_problem.php
World's coral reefs could disintegrate by 2100:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/feb/23/worlds-coral-reefs-dis...
Avaaz.org is a 3.9-million-person global campaign network that works to ensure that the views and values of the world's people shape global decision-making. ("Avaaz" means "voice" or "song" in many languages.) Avaaz members live in every nation of the world; our team is spread across 13 countries on 4 continents and operates in 14 languages.
To contact Avaaz, write to us at www.avaaz.org/en/contact or call us at +1-888-922-8229 (US) or +55 21 2509 0368 (Brazil).
Comments
Re: 2 days to save the oceans
DON'T FALL INTO THE UK STATE'S TRAP
10 Feb 2010
OPEN LETTER FROM LALIT TO LEADERS OF GREEN PEACE
Dear Leaders of Greenpeace,
We understand that your organization has taken a position in favour of the British Government’s outrageous plan to create a “Marine Park” on territory which is not its own, thus tricking ill-informed people into supporting the British State on rather vague grounds of “the environment”, while they are in fact banishing the people who lived there and flaunting the Charter of the UN.
We write in order to request you to re-think your position on what would in fact be the British Government’s perfidious imposition of a planned Marine Protected Area on part of Mauritius in order to mask the fact that it colonizes the land illegally. Britain colonizes the Chagos under the name of “British Indian Ocean Territory”. This colony is, as far as we know, recognized by no government in the world, except the USA, which has a huge military base on it. The Seychelles Government took the British to task, and took those of its islands in BIOT back, so blatant was the theft. The Mauritian Government has so far unfortunately been much more servile to its ex-colonizer.
The British government’s plan for a Marine Protected Area is a very weak, grotesquely transparent ruse designed to perpetuate the banning of the people of Mauritius and Chagos from part of their own country. And the UK has the cheek to do this, while at one and the same time, perpetuating a polluting nuclear base on Diego Garcia, part of this same stolen territory. The timing of their plan is also very humiliating for all those who have fallen into the trap: there is a European Human Rights Court which may soon hand down a judgment in favour of the right to return for Chagossians. Clearly the British Government is preparing a fall-back plan; if they lose the case, then there will be another “reason” for denying the banished people their right of return; another reason for keeping Mauritius from staking its claim under international law.
Surely the point is for environmentalists to get this nuclear base on Diego Garcia, at the very heart of the Chagos, closed down? Not to ignore its existence. Surely the point is for all concerned people to help complete the decolonization of Mauritius and the Chagos? Not to help in a British cover-up its crimes? After decolonization, the people whose land and sea it is can decide on how to protect and nurture it best, how to affect a clean-up of the base once it was closed down, and how to re-generate it into the beautiful atoll it once was. And we would hope for ideas and support from Greenpeace, amongst other environmentalists, as to how best to do this.
The British State and the USA not only collaborated in the forcible removal of all the people of the entire Chagos, tricking them first, denying them passage back after medical visits to Mauritius main island, gassing their dogs as a warning, then finally starving them off the islands; the British State and the USA not only illegally plotted so as to dismember a country and hide this from the United Nations Decolonization Committee, as has been amply made public in the Judgments in the Court Case brought by the Chagossians, but have also set up a huge immensely polluting military base, one of the biggest in the world, a nuclearized base, right there in the same place that the UK now pretends to want to turn into a Marine Protected Area. The USA has even carried out illegal renditions for torture on and around Diego Garcia; after denying this for years, the Mr. Jack Straw finally admitted it in the British Parliament. So, Greenpeace should perhaps bear in mind that these illegal acts do, in time, get exposed and condemned by people.
Greenpeace should dissociate itself from this entire international plot. It is an old plot whose first shady days have gradually been exposed to the public by years and years of active struggle on the part of Mauritian political parties, associations, trade unions and the people displaced from Chagos, with their women at the helm of the demonstrations. Our women members were amongst those arrested by the Police in 1981 at peaceful demonstration in Port Louis. And though the illegal colonization and the nuclear base have both continued, the conspiracy to remove all the people, and for the UK to steal the islands, and for the US to become receiver of stolen goods, have been exposed in public in the British Courts and in international meetings against US military bases. So, being part of the tail-end of this long-term conspiracy will bring shame on organizations like Greenpeace. That individuals fall into this trap is understandable. But for organizations, we are afraid it will be very damaging to your reputation.
In the past, Greenpeace has known about Diego Garcia. We would very much like to remind you that in October, 1998, LALIT sent one of our members to have a formal meeting with your organization at your headquarters in Amsterdam. TheRann nu Diego Committee, a common front of some 10 organizations in Mauritius including one of the two main Chagossian groups, the Chagos Refugees Group, endorsed LALIT’s request for a Greenpeace action on Diego Garcia to oppose the nuclear base there. One of our members, Ms. Lindsey Collen, thus had a formal meeting at your headquarters with Ms. Stephanie Mills, who she found to be a very capable, dedicated Australian campaign worker for your organization. Following this meeting, and following the dossier which we submitted formally at the same time, Greenpeace informed us by e-mail that you had organized for one of your vessels (in a window of opportunity) to take a group of people for an action on Diego Garcia in or around March, 1999, in protest against the military base, its nuclearization, the forcible removals, and the continued colonization of part of Mauritius. We were already discussing how many people, preparing for a campaign to get support from peace and environment organizations world-wide, and thinking up the kind of media plan necessary. LALIT immediately set in motion a very broad campaign for “background support”, which we got from a series of organizations literally all over the world in order to back up the planned action as soon as it would be able to become public. Response from all over the world was very good. The issue was coming up at the right moment. The only thing that prevented the vessel from actually doing this visit, which would have been truly historic, and which would have been one of Greenpeace’s greatest sources of pride as you looked back on your history, was thwarted, we were informed, when the vessel to be used got “iced in” during a trip to the Antarctica in early 1999, and would, by the time it got out of the ice, be too late, as it was already booked for another action afterwards.
Later, in January, 2004, in the outskirts of the WSF meeting in Mumbai, there was a second attempt, this time to ask Greenpeace if you could lead a planned Flotilla to Chagos and Diego Garcia, given that the Chagossians had won a Court Case for the right to return (since overturned - in part by Decree in the UK, and in part by a Privy Council appeal judgment last year). This time it was a joint request from the Chagos Refugees Group and LALIT. Greenpeace were unable to do this, but your leaders at the time were aware of the issues involved.
We mention your past links with the Diego Garcia issue because we believe that your position on the Marine Protected Area which the UK is planning is erroneous. The UK is clearly trying to use the “environment issue” as a desperate attempt to continue its continued colonization of part of Mauritius. Greenpeace should not allow itself to be used this way.
At present our organization is spearheading a campaign to call on the Mauritian Government to do two things:
- Request the UN General Assembly to pass a motion for the ICJ at the Hague to give an opinion as to whose territory the Chagos is (the UK accepted compulsory arbitration except from cases put in by Commonwealth Countries, and when the Mauritian Government some 7 years ago threatened to leave the Commonwealth in order to put a binding case, Tony Blair just sent new instructions to his UN ambassador to change the exception to include ex-Commonwealth members. This shows the kind of lengths the UK State will go to.
- Request the UN International Atomic Energy Agency to do inspections of Diego Garcia for nuclear materials, given the coming into operation in 2009 of the Pelindaba Treaty for a Nuclear Weapons Free Africa.
We would very much appreciate it if Greenpeace could consider supporting these two demands. Both would certainly help the environment of the Chagos, as they both involve exposing then closing the nuclear military base. Just as the UK Government is now being exposed for entering illegally into the Iraq War, and Bush and Blair risk charges as war criminals, so in the future, the UK and USA may be publicly exposed as illegal occupiers, as war mongers on Chagos, and as polluters of the Indian Ocean with truly filthy military base. Because that is what they are.
Yours sincerely,
Ram Seegobin, for LALIT, Mauritius, 8 February, 2010.
lalitmail@intnet.mu www.lalitmauritius.org
153 Main Road,
GRNW, Port Louis, Republic of Mauritius. Tel/fax: 230 208 2132; Tel: 230 208 2555
Faxed (as well as this email) to Greenpeace Headquarters in Amsterdam on +31 207182002.
Contact us
lalitmail@intnet.mu
Good background article
I've asked AVAAZ to take a public position on what the Mauritian party LALIT says above. I find it hard to believe that AVAAZ could be so naive as to lead us into this colonial trap when the issue is so easy to research. Meanwhile have a look at http://www.infoplease.com/spot/dg.html to learn how the Americans use Diego Garcia for their past and ongoing wars and how in 2004 the British government issued an "Order of Council" prohibiting forcibly removed native islanders from ever returning to Diego Garcia, their home. This archaic, centuries-old royal prerogative permitted the Tony Blair government to overrule a 2000 High Court verdict that allowed for their return. My keenness to support a right cause has made a fool of me, a 69-year-old ex-journalist whose DNA has always been skepticism. AVAAZ' answer had better be good, or they've lost me.- Diet Simon
This is their reply:
Dear Diet,
Thank you for sharing your concerns. Avaaz gave careful consideration to this campaign before running it.
Under the UK consultation there are 3 options. The first would create the world’s largest no-take Marine Protected Area. Preventing any commercial fishing in this incredibly sensitive ecosystem. The second would establish a protected area for the 200 mile nautical zone around the islands, but fishing would be allowed to continue, regulated. The third would protect some of the reefs, but not cover the entire 210,000 Sq Mile area.
It is understandable that groups may be concerned that the establishment of such a significant no-take Marine Protected Area might somehow serve as a barrier to the Chagossian Islanders returning to their home. However, Avaaz feels the distinction between commercial fisheries and small-scale artisanal fisheries is not appreciated: under a no-take MPA the former would certainly be banned, but it’s unlikely that the latter would be. Currently “traditional” Mauritian fisheries can apply for licenses at no cost to fish in the Chagos and it seems unlikely that this would be banned under MPA rules. When the Chagossians return we all anticipate that they would be allowed to fish under the same provisions, i.e., that it be artisanal rather than large-scale commercial fishing – although of course everything will be open for discussion. It’s why Avaaz explicitly says in its petition: “Ban commercial fishing in this area, and work with Chagossians to protect these important reefs and our oceans' future.”
All around the world, our oceans are in serious trouble. A UK decision to create the world's largest no-take Marine Protected Area would secure a conservation legacy almost unrivaled in scale and significance. This would set a clear example to other governments. But moreover, it would ensure that our oceans are protected for groups like the Chagossian Islanders who rely on artisanal and subsistence fishing, it will help stop the decline of biodiversity in our oceans, and it will protect these vital resources for future generations.
We hope this response alleviates your concerns with this campaign, and that you can support it.
Best wishes,
Dominick
To which I have replied:
Dear Dominick,
given the previous dirty dealings by the UK and US, I can't believe that this protection declaration serves a good purpose, least of all for the benefit of the Chargossians. I don't see what's really being sought but I feel it in my bones that it is no good and AVAAZ should back off.
Diet