Enhancing Biodiversity in Palestine
From Michael Pilarski, December 31, 2022
Mazin Qumsiyeh is one of the most courageous people I know and an eloquent spokesperson for the planet, oppressed people in general and Palestinians in particular. Here is part of his end of the year message for 2022.
Palestine Institute for Biodiversity and Sustainability
Statements. https://www.palestinenature.org/statements/
20 December 2022 Statement on COP15 for the Convention on Biological Diversity
PIBS which is facilitating the effort to create a new National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan (NBSAP) for the State of Palestine with teh Environment Quality Authority is very pleased to support the new Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. Thanks to work from us and many in the Global South, the new framework with its four main goals and 17 targets does take issues like Nature’s benefit to people. Our new NBSAP reflects those priorities. Yet, we believe that the ambitious goals (which replaced the Aichi targets that failed) can only succeed if there is serious global, national, and local efforts to implement these.
Earlier Statements
20 November 2022 Statement on COP27 UNFCCC meeting, Sharm AlShaikh, Sinai, Egypt
PIBS reiterates our statement made (see below) for COP26. We deplore holding such a meeting with 600 lobbyists (the right term for those who represent industries and other groups that damage the environment) in a country notorious for violations of basic human rights of its people including their right to live on their own lands as happened in Sinai itself. We regret the Jordanian-Israeli cooperation announced on the margins of this conference that also violates people’s rights
3 November 2021 Statement on COP26 Meeting in Glaskow, Scotland
Conference of Parties (COP) 26 (the 26th!) on climate change is underway in Scotland with over 50,000 people attending online or in person. The UN Secretary General talked about the climate “emergency” and how we are treating our planet “like a toilet.” He and other world politicians are starting to use language that we as activists have used for decades (except we were also acting). We in Palestine and activists around the world are thus not satisfied with the progress to address this existential crisis. We are not satisfied with the blah blah blah of politicians as Greta Thunberg noted. Millions of us have been working hard to change local situations and lobbying our own and global politicians (i.e. thinking globally and acting locally and globally as the world is interconnected). We obviously need and must do more and accelerate this. We are not merely in a “climate emergency” but in a global catastrophe (an Environmental Nakba). We only have 7 years to act at much higher levels. Significant sums of money are being pledged for climate change adaptation and mitigation and for conservation. Yet, money is being misdirected and used mainly to alleviate the guilty conscience of rich countries who exploited and continue to exploit others (dumping money at the problem is not a solution). We have argued in a number of meetings in the past few weeks (about 3 meetings weekly) in the lead to COP26 that among others, these things are needed:
1) Liberate minds from mental colonization. This goes beyond the issue of “environmental awareness and education”. It goes to issues of learning and empowerment for liberation. Liberating minds from notions of powerlessness and subservience to political leaders. It is nothing short of revolutionary liberation from old ways that shackle brains and developing new paradigms for sustainability and coexistance (with each other and with nature). It involves developing RESPECT (for ourselves, for others, for nature)
2) We cannot go back to a pre-COVID19 systems of governance and world structures. The systems dominating world economies like consumerism and capitalism must be changed to develop systems based on caring, empathy, and collaboration both across borders (which eventually should be dismantled) and within borders. A better world is possible.
3)
We must use our indigenous knowledge, practices, and value systems. Using
technology that works together with these should create food sovereignty while
protecting the environment.
4) We have to have environmental justice. People should be entitled to clean
air, clean water, and a healthy environment all around. [see also the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights for basic rights]
5) We need human capacity building especially in developing countries including restructuring of educational systems at all levels. For example universities now kill creativity & innovation and create conformist consumers instead of helping young people become better innovative citizen activists!
Just as one example of action towards these among hundreds of thousands around the world, we can cite the work of our Palestine Institute for Biodiversity and Sustainability at Bethlehem University (PIBS, see palestinenature.rg and our 2020 annual report posted at http://www.palestinenature.org/about-us/2020-Annual-Report.pdf ). For conservation issues in Palestine, see http://www.palestinenature.org/conservation/ and our group statement and action plan from “Palestine Action for the Planet”: http://www.palestinenature.org/palestine-action/ . We (PIBS with the Environmental Quality Authority and other stakeholders) are now working very hard on the National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan for Palestine (despite the ongoing colonization). It is a lot of work in order to be successful to preserve our human and natural resources: even its desktop study is now >200 pages.