| Inuit
Claim Arctic Climate Change
Is Human Rights Abuse
Reuters International
Posted October 3, 2003
By Alister Doyle
MILAN, Italy - Inuit hunters said on Wednesday that a thawing
of Arctic ice threatened their human rights in a novel bid
to raise pressure on the United States to do more to fight
global warming.
"The human rights of Inuit are under threat as a result
of human-induced climate change," Sheila Watt-Cloutier,
chair of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference (ICC), told a
news conference during a 180-nation U.N. meeting on climate
change in Milan.
The ICC represents about 155,000 Inuit in Alaska, Canada,
Greenland and Russia and says that rising temperatures are
undermining traditional lifestyles based around hunts of
animals like seals, whales, walruses and polar bears.
In recent years, some hunters have drowned by falling through
thinning ice, while thawing permafrost is destabilizing
buildings and triggering mudslides. U.N. studies say the
Arctic Ocean may be largely ice-free in summer by 2100.
"These are issues of life and death," Watt-Cloutier
said. "We go out to hunt on the sea ice to put food
on the table. You go to the supermarket." She said
the group was exploring legal ways to link human rights
and climate change to put pressure on the United States
and other nations to do more to cut emissions of greenhouse
gases like carbon dioxide.
She said the Inuit were likely to complain about global
warming to the Washington-based Inter-American Commission
on Human Rights, a part of the Organization of American
States.
The Commission's rulings are non-binding but "powerful
governments do not like to be branded as human rights violators,"
she said. "We will probably decide exactly what to
do around April next year."
ARCTIC WARMS FASTEST
U.N. climate models say that global warming, blamed mainly
on carbon dioxide from cars and power plants, is felt first
in polar regions. Most heat rebounds off white ice but when
the ice thaws, the darker water and land below soak up far
more heat.
"The Arctic is the barometer of global environmental
health," Watt-Cloutier said. Climate change was threatening
many Arctic animals while bringing new species like barn
owls and ducks, as well as swarms of flies in summer. She
urged nations to sign up for the U.N. Kyoto protocol (news
- web sites) meant to curb global warming. Washington pulled
out in 2001, saying Kyoto unfairly excluded developing nations
and was too costly to implement. Russia has yet to decide
whether to ratify.
Paul Crowley, a lawyer for the Inuit, said they were unlikely
to try to sue the United States for global warming because
it was probably too expensive. Suing is an idea suggested
by some low-lying Pacific Island states that could be washed
away by rising sea levels.
Reuters International
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