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President Obama: One year on

January 20th, 2010 Hansha Sanjyal 1 comment

File Photo:US President Barack Obama taking his Oath of Office - 2009 January 20

Just one year ago- today, Barack Obama was inaugurated as the President of the United States. Today is the first anniversary of the inauguration of President Obama. The night Obama was elected; relief was felt around the world. He inaugurated presidency not only as a new face on the same government’s body but also the victory of hope over fear. He is the most charismatic politician on earth and very famous in making speeches. Hopes were high but the things are going to get a lot harder. So what went wrong? I believe his biggest failure is not addressing the biggest issue everyone cares and hoped about- Climate Change. What do you think? Share your perspectives on Obama’s one year in the White House.

(Background: The inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States took place on Tuesday, January 20, 2009. The inauguration, which set a record attendance for any event held in Washington, D.C.,  marked the commencement of the four-year term of Barack Obama as President and Joseph Biden as Vice President. Based on combined attendance numbers, television viewership and Internet traffic, it was among the most observed events ever by the global audience).

Year Review: 2009

January 1st, 2010 Hansha Sanjyal 1 comment

2009: The year of  Un- sustainability.

DNA test kits of the H1N1 influenza virus (The rapidly spreading swine flu virus) prepared by PrimerDesign Ltd are displayed at the company laboratory in Southampton in May, 2009. Photo: Leon Neal/AFP/Getty Images)

The year 2009 was memorable for many reasons; once again the world experienced economic recession and recovery, conflict, political unrest, corruption, terrorism and defense, climate change battle, drug war and so on. EV decided to summarize the most important happenings (events) of 2009. Here are the ten biggest and most memorable events of the year 2009.

Swine Flu: The 2009 flu pandemic is a global outbreak  of a new strain of H1N1 influenza virus, often referred to as “swine flu” in the media. The virus, first detected in April 2009, contains a combination of genes from swine, avian(bird), and human influenza viruses.

The outbreak began in Veracruz, Mexico, with evidence that there had been an ongoing epidemic for months before it was officially recognized as such.  The virus continued to spread globally, clinics were overwhelmed by people infected, and the World Health Organisation (WHO) and US Centers for Disease Control(CDC) stopped counting cases and in June declared the outbreak to be a pandemic.

Currently, there are 12,121 confirmed deaths worldwide. This figure is a sum of confirmed deaths reported by national authorities and the WHO states that total mortality (including deaths unconfirmed or unreported) from the new H1N1 strain is “unquestionably higher” than this.

Obama’s inaguration and Nobel peace prize: The inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States took place on Tuesday, January 20, 2009. The inauguration, which set a record attendance for any event held in Washington, D.C, marked the commencement of the four-year term of  Barack Obama as President and Joseph Biden as Vice-President. Based on combined attendance numbers, television viewership and Internet traffic, it was among the most observed events ever by the global audience.

The 2009 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to U.S President Barack Obama ”for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international  diplomacy and cooperation between peoples.”The Norwegian Nobel Committee  announced the award citing Obama’s promotion of nuclear non-proliferation and a “new climate” in international relations fostered by Obama, especially in reaching out to the Muslim world.

Climate Change/Copenhagen Summit: The 2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference, commonly known as the Copenhagen Summit, was held at the Bell  Center in Copenhagen, Denmark , between 7 December and 18 December. The conference included the 15th Conference of the Parties (COP 15) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change  and the 5th Meeting of the Parties (COP/MOP 5) to the Kyoto Protocol. According to the Bali Road Map, a framework for climate change mitigation beyond 2012 was to be agreed there.

The Copenhagen Accord was drafted by the US, China, India, Brazil and South Africa on December 18, and judged a “meaningful agreement” by the United States government. It was “recognised”, but not “agreed upon”, in a debate of all the participating countries the next day, and it was not passed unanimously. The document recognised that climate change is one of the greatest challenges of the present and that actions should be taken to keep any temperature increases to below 2°C. The document is not legally binding and does not contain any legally binding commitments for reducing CO2 emissions. Leaders of industrialized countries, including Barack Obama and Gorden Brown, were pleased with this agreement but many leaders of other countries and non-governmental organizations were opposed to it.

Maldives hold the Cabinet meeting inside the sea and Nepal hold at the Everest base camp to draw the global attention towards climate change impacts.

Anna Kennan and Sara Svensson with other inspiring climate justice campaigners organized 45-days long an international hunger strike calling strong, just action on climate crisis at the Copenhagen Summit.

Financial Hangovers: Global economic collapse, averted. Recession, analysts declared, was over. But aside from the few who got Wall Street bonuses, nobody was celebrating. In 2009, old-fashioned thrift became dire necessity. Those lucky enough to have jobs and homes scrimped, saved, and sanctioned. Stimulus plans tried to revive a wilted economy, but the bubble burst had had the effect of a financial atomic bomb. People rolled up their sleeves and dug in to make the shift from crisis to survival, and went online to make sense of the seeming chaos around them. Here now, the Search lowdown on economic bad news.

Michael Jackson’s death: The death of Michael Jackson (King of Pop) occurred after he suffered cardiac arrest at his home in Holmby Hills, Los Angeles, Californiaon June 25, 2009. He was treated by paramedics at his home, but was pronounced dead at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center.

Jackson’s death triggered an outpouring of grief around the world, creating surges of Internet trafficand causing sales of his music and that of the Jackson5 to soar. He had been scheduled to perform the This is it concert series to over one million people at London’s O2 arena , from July 13, 2009 to March 6, 2010. His public memorial service on July 7, 2009 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, where he had rehearsed for the London concerts just two days before his death, was broadcast live around the world, attracting a global audience of up to one billion people.

Total Solar eclipse 2009: The solar eclipse of 22 July 2009 was the longest total solar eclipse during the 21st century, not to be surpassed until June 2132. It lasted a maximum of 6 minutes and 39 seconds off the coast of Southeast Asia, causing tourist interest in eastern China, Japan, India and Nepal.

The End of Sri Lanka’s Cataclysmic Civil War: The Sri Lankan Civil War was a conflict fought on the island of Sri Lanka. Beginning on July 23, 1983, there was an on-and-off insurgency against the government by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (the LTTE, also known as the Tamil Tigers), a separatist militant organization which fought to create an independent Tamil  state named Tamil Eelam in the north and the east of the island. After a 30-month-long military campaign, the Sri Lankan military defeated the Tamil Tigers in May 2009.

For over 25 years, the insurgency caused significant hardships for the population, environment and the economy of the country, with over 80,000 people officially listed as killed during its course.

After two decades of fighting and three failed attempts at peace talks, In 2007, the government shifted its offensive to the north of the country, and formally announced its withdrawal from the ceasefire agreement on January 2, 2008, Since then, aided by the destruction of a number of large arms smuggling vessels that belonged to the LTTE, and an international crackdown on the funding for the Tamil Tigers, the government took control of the entire area previously controlled by the Tamil Tigers, including their de-facto capital Kilinochchi, main military base Mullaitivu and the entire A9 highway, leading the LTTE to finally admit defeat on May 17, 2009.

“Endless War” in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan: On March 3 Gunmen attack a bus carrying Sri Lankan cricketers in Lahore, Pakistan, killing eight people and injuring several others. This is not a large terrorist attack but one that was significant by virtue of the target. Analysts say al-Qaida is mutating into a global insurgency and US and its ally must display sincerity. Pakistan is now becoming a new Afghanistan. Hundreds of innocent people are dying every day in these countries because of bombing and bloody war. Experts fear ‘endless’ terror war.

Sports- Bolt and Messi Year: Usain St. Leo Bolt, born on 21 August 1986, is a Jamaican sprinter and a three-time Olympic gold medalist. He holds the world recordfor the 100 meters, the 200 meters and, along with his teammates, the 4000 meters relay. He also holds the Olympic record for all three of these races. At the 2008 Summer Olympics. Bolt became the first man to win three sprinting events at a single Olympics since Carl Lewis in 1984, and the first man to set world records in all three at a single Olympics. In 2009 he became the first man to hold the 100 and 200 m world and Olympic titles at the same time.

Lionel Andrés Messi born on 24 June 1987 is an Argentine footballer who currently plays for La Liga’s Barcelona  and the Argentine national team. Messi is considered to be one of the best football players of his generation, having received several Ballon d’Or and FIFA World Player of the Year 2009 2009. His playing style and ability have drawn comparisons to football legend Diego Maradona, who himself declared Messi his “successor”.

Also, the International Olympic Committee awards the  2016 Summer Olympics to Rio de Janerio.

World’s first openly Lesbian head of government: Johanna Siguroardottir is appointed as the new Prime Mibister of Iceland, becoming the world’s first openly Lesbian head of government. Born 4 October 1942, she had previously been Iceland’s Minister from 1987–1994 and 2007–2009. She has been a member of the Althing (Iceland’s parliament) for Reykjavik constituencies since 1978, winning re-election on eight successive occasions. She became Iceland’s first  female Prime Minister on 1 February 2009; she also became the world’s first openly gay head of government of the modern era. She is a social democrat and Iceland’s longest-serving member of Parliament.

Youth Climate Leaders Stand With Millions Demanding a Real Deal NOW

December 18th, 2009 Hansha Sanjyal No comments

Youth address world leaders at high-level plenary at UN Climate Summit, demanding governments commit to bold targets to ensure survival and climate justice.

With over 1000 youth leaders from more than 100 countries gathered in Copenhagen, the International Youth Climate Movement at the UN Climate Summit today sent a powerful message to the assembled world leaders that governments must rise above the divisive politics of the past and show true leadership to ensure nothing less than the very survival of current and future.

“We have all worked for the past two years with the promise of a strong deal in Copenhagen to safeguard our future. Now it seems you will not get it done,” said Juan Carlos Soriano, a youth delegate from Peru, addressing the summit plenary. “This is unacceptable. We placed our trust in you. You should be ashamed.”

“Our rivers are drying up. Our crops are turning to dust. An unrelenting sun scorches our land while other areas are ravaged by storms and diseases,” said Esther Agbarakwe from Nigeria. “If developed countries set aside just 5% of their GNP for effective adaption by the most vulnerable countries, we will survive beyond 2050.”

“I came as a part of the Pacific youth delegation, but here I united with the Caribbean, the Maldivian, and the International Youth Climate Movement as a whole, calling out with one united voice for only 1.5 degrees of temperature rise and 350ppm of carbon concentration in the atmosphere”, said Krishneil Narayan from Fiji. “If the youth can unite as one movement at COP-15, we expect the leaders deciding our future to do the same, and deliver a legal binding treaty to ensure our survival.

Youth are calling for a Fair, Ambitious, Binding deal in Copenhagen, to avoid catastrophic climate change and ensure the survival of current and future generations, that:

Ensures Climate Justice

Limits global temperature rise to no more than 1.5 °C

Reduces atmospheric carbon dioxide levels back down to 350 PPM or lower

Commits developed countries to financing for adaptation of at least 5% GDP by 2020

Reduces the emissions of developed countries at least 45% below 1990 levels by 2020

Too Much or Too Little Water in the Himalayas

December 11th, 2009 Hansha Sanjyal No comments

Hundreds of millions of people in the Hindu Kush-Himalayan region and in the river basins downstream are being forced to adapt to a new reality: climate change.

Climate change is increasing uncertainty and the risk for extreme droughts interspersed with extreme floods that are challenging food security, housing, infrastructure, business and even survival.Even hardy mountain populations, adapted for centuries to survival in extreme environments, are undergoing events so unprecedented that their traditional coping strategies are being overwhelmed by the events unfolding.

These are some of the main findings of a new study released today at the UN climate convention meeting in Copenhagen by the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), and the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research (CICERO).

The findings are based on five field teams in China, India, Pakistan and Nepal who took part in this unique collaborative pilot study to look at the realities facing mountain populations and hundreds of millions people downstream.

The acute experiences of people in this region are living proof of the pressures some societies are already enduring  as a result of the onset of climate change—adaptation here is not just a necessity but a question of local communities’ very survival,” said Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director.

In Nepal, a country normally known as a country of water abundance, extreme droughts in some cases lasting years have impacted large parts of the country. People who can afford machinery respond by digging trenches in the dry river beds. Now the trenches and tube wells have to be guarded to protect them against those who cannot afford to get water this way, leading to increased inequality and conflicts in the society.

In Assam and Bihar in India, embankments built to contain the Koshi River have led to waterlogging, and even worse, cause catastrophic floods when they suddenly burst as a result of improper construction and inadequate maintenance. People who have settled closest to the embankments are the most vulnerable and take the heaviest toll.

“Policies that determine people’s access to resources when facing water stress and floods are currently weak throughout the region, thus people rely on their own innovations,” said Andreas Schild, Director General of ICIMOD. “Governments have to find ways to support improved livelihood strategies, and increase people’s influence in the governance of infrastructure, such as embankments,” he added.

For the impoverished, everyday activities are focused on immediate survival, thus rendering the hope of developing long-term resilience and economic development even more remote, says the report.

In some places, necessity has forced local farmers to sell off livestock and land during droughts to pay short-term debts, to cope with elevated food prices, or to rebuild destroyed housing– resulting among others from extreme climate events and inadequate policies elsewhere in the world.

Traditional institutions, like the Gram in Chitral, Pakistan, help people to manage scarce water resources in an equitable way. In Pakistan, a near doubling of the population in just 40 years will also challenge the food production, which is mainly based on irrigation from rivers fed by meltwater from snow and glaciers in the mountains.

Social networks and cultures are an asset in dealing with the extremes, such as the designation of women as water guards in Yunnan province in China, to manage water conflicts.

Networks can also ensure that migrants find help, as in Chitral, Pakistan, where kinship and traditional hospitality help fellow villagers re-settle after catastrophes. But in some cases traditions can also challenge the need for new ways to adapt.

In Assam, India, non-Mishing people are unwilling to use the flood-tolerant housing techniques developed by the Mishing because they do not wish to be associated with another caste.

Traditionally, many of the government policies in the countries of the region have been sectoral in nature, such as the investments in irrigation infrastructure in Yunnan. These investments, focused on increasing cash crop production at the national level, have largely improved and strengthened lowland communities’ coping capacity and productivity – but they have not helped the up-land communities in dealing with water stress, as this was not their focus.

Similarly, road development in Nepal has increased market access and thereby supported new livelihoods, but has destroyed many traditional streams and wells, reducing local ability to cope with drought. Restoration programmes following droughts have frequently simply reconstructed buildings in high-risk flood zones, even new schools have been constructed in high-risk flash-flood locations.

A chief finding of the report is the need for governments to prioritise the development and improvement of national and regional policies to provide better support for local adaptation against a more extreme climate, helping to shift planning from acute survival towards long-term resilience. Many of the countries in the region, such as India, have assigned special institutions nationally to address disaster management.

“The report is ground-breaking in that it brings together best-practices aimed at increasing adaptation and resilience from across borders in Pakistan, India, Nepal and China,” Mr. Steiner said. “If the world is to deal decisively with climate change, we must also address the need for programmes targeted towards adaptation strategies to build long-term resilience. Local people already have to make choices daily, and governments with adequate international assistance must step up their efforts to support them in coping,” he added.

Key Findings from the Report and Statistics on the Hindu-Kush Himalayan region:

Extreme climate events are destroying crops, depleting water resources, causing losses in livestock, cropland, and agricultural productivity, and destroying the meagre infrastructure present, thus reducing market access and access to public services.

The warming in the Himalayas appears to be much faster than the global average, for example, 0.6 degrees Centigrade per decade in Nepal compared with the global average of 0.74 degrees Centigrade over the last 100 years. The rate of change is higher at higher altitudes.

Glaciers are generally receding in the Hindu-Kush Himalayas, some 40-80% have been projected to be lost by the end of the century, with the exception of the Karakoram, where the glaciers have been more stable.

The proportion of glacial melt in rivers varies from 2-50%, with mountain snow and ice being critical for much larger shares of the flow in some rivers.

Irrigation water from rivers sustains nearly 55% of Asia’s cereal production and around 25% of the world cereal production, feeding over 2.5 billion people in Asia. Another UN report, “The Environmental Food Crisis”, warned that the melting glaciers and snow could jeopardize world food security and drive prices to unprecedented levels.

OVER 1,000 YOUTH DESCEND ON COPENHAGEN FOR UN CLIMATE TALKS

December 10th, 2009 Hansha Sanjyal No comments
By Hansha Sanjyal
10 December is “Young and Future Generations Day”; Highlights Youth Call for Climate Action.

A member of the Intenrational Youth Climate Movement hands out a scarf to a delegate to signify the beginning of Youth and Future Generations Day. Photo Credit: Robert vanWaarden)

Hundreds of youth from around the world are celebrating “Young and Future Generations Day” with the UNFCCC at the Copenhagen Climate Change Conference on Thursday, December 10. More than 1,000 young people from over 100 countries are attending the UN Climate Summit calling for bold climate leadership by their governments. Their collective vision is to protect their future and the lives of future generations threatened by climate change.

Organized in partnership between the YOUNGO (youth) constituency and the UNFCCC secretariat, Youth and Future Generations Day seeks to send a powerful message of inter-generational equity to COP15 delegates, as well as highlighting the vital role of youth as both advocates for, and implementers of climate solutions. Highlights of the day includes an Intergenerational Inquiry with Yvo de Boer, Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC, as well as the launch of “Growing Together in a Changing Climate”, a publication featuring efforts by youth and the UN to engage young people on climate issues. Side events through the day showcase Youth and Student Movements’ leadership on climate, the role of education, and youth voices on deforestation and degradation (REDD).

“Today’s youth will live their lives with the decisions made in Copenhagen, and our governments have a moral responsibility to deliver a fair, ambitious and binding deal”, said Prisca Randriamampihavana, a 20 year old youth delegate from Madagascar. “We want to ask world leaders, how old will you be in 2050?”

UNFCCC Executive Secretary, Yvo de Boer adds that “Young people…have brought their energy and creativity to the intergovernmental process, demanding concrete action from their governments.”

The year 2009 has seen an explosion of youth climate advocacy, and the emergence of what many youth in Copenhagen are calling the “International Youth Climate Movement,” joining hundreds of youth organizations and climate advocates from around the world. On 10 December, visit youth and youth organizations at the Youth Arcade and find out what they are already doing to tackle climate change and how you can engage with them on working towards solutions.

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