And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

X-Originating-IP: [156.106.136.18]
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: "tom goldtooth" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Third Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee For A Global Convention on 
Peristent Organic Pollutants (POPs)
Geneva, Switzerland
September 7, 1999
Sheila Watt-Cloutier

Good morning. My name is Sheila Watt-Cloutier. I am President of the Inuit 
Circumpolar Conference Canada (ICC), Vice-president at the international 
level of ICC which defends the rights and represents the interests of Inuit 
in Canada, Greenland, the Federation of Russia and the United States. With 
me are Shirley Adamson of the Council for Yukon First Nations, and Larissa 
Abroutina of the Russian Association of Indigenous Peoples of the North.  I 
spoke to you in Montreal and Nairobi about the effects of contaminants on 
our land, our country food, and our peoples, and of our growing fear of this 
threat to our cultures and our very existence.

We had hoped to make this intervention yesterday, my apologies Mr. Chairman. 
However, I feel my intervention at this time is most related to Article D.

Let me remind you that the breast milk of Inuit women in the eastern Arctic 
contains 1,210 ppb of DDT and DDE. By comparison, milk of non-native women 
in southern Canada have levels of DDT and DDE measuring 171 ppb. These 
levels in our people cause us great concern.

For those of you who have heard me speak before, the following may sound 
repetitive, however, it is my feeling that these issues cannot be overstated 
when it comes to the survival of my people and the indigenous peoples of the 
circumpolar world. Anyone who has an eye on the circumpolar indigenous world 
will understand that the challenges we face as a people are monumental. We 
are trying on a daily basis, because of the tumultuous change that has 
occurred in our homeland over the past 50 to 60 years, to pick up the pieces 
for our children, to create solid, strong institutions that reflects wisdom 
and security. In terms of our children, the last thing we need to worry 
about is endocrine disrupting pollutants that affect the health and 
intellect of our children whom we are trying to prepare for strong 
leadership so that we may be able to survive culturally. We must not be made 
to choose between our cultural heritage and our country food. This is our 
bottom line.

We heard yesterday about the importance of DDT in much of the developing 
world. Stark figures of potential deaths were used to illustrate the need 
for continued use of DDT to control Malaria. Death and disease are not 
hypothetical, nor potential. They are real. We know. We are few in 
number--there are only 100,000 indigenous peoples in northern Canada, 140,00 
Inuit in the whole world and only 200,000 indigenous people in all of 
northern Russia--but we know about disease and death.

That we are few in numbers must not detract from our case. The loss of any 
of our people has an enormous impact on our societies. For example, last 
year, most of the world heard that we lost nine people in one of our 
communities through an avalanche. In terms of scale of loss this was the 
equivalent of 50,000 people dying in Montreal or 400,000 in all of Canada. 
We must not see this solely in terms of numbers. In my stating these figures 
I am certainly not attempting to play the numbers game but rather to show a 
clear picture of our sense of loss. In the circumpolar indigenous world 
where we are most affected by POPs, this issue is about the survival of 
whole peoples. I ask you to understand this. Earlier this century Inuit in 
the Beaufort Sea region of Canada and Alaska were virtually annihilated by 
smallpox. In the last hundred years our people in some communities have had 
2/3 of their community wiped out in one outbreak of disease. Very few 
families were spared. Some indigenous people in northern Russia stand now on 
the brink of physical extinction.  Contaminants in our food may yet lead to 
our cultural extinction--a loss to the whole world. We just won't - cannot - 
allow that to happen. This is why we are working with you to get a 
comprehensive, verifiable and rigorously implemented POPs convention.

We empathize with people who feel they need DDT to preserve life and health. 
We will not be party to any agreement that threatens others. This is just 
not our way. Nobody should repeat the experience of our pain or loss. I am 
sure that many in the room share these sentiments.

Do not think of the DDT issue in "either or" terms. This road leads to 
inappropriate choices. I can not believe that a mother in the Arctic should 
worry about contaminants in the life giving milk she feeds her infant. Nor 
can I believe that a mother in the South has to use these very chemicals to 
protect their babies from disease. Surely we must commit ourselves to 
finding and using alternatives. While simultaneously adopting elimination, 
not perpetual management as an ultimate goal, the POPs convention must 
ensure that cost-effective alternatives, particularly for DDT, are made 
available in the developing world.

We have heard the request by developing nations for financial and technical 
assistance.  Your requests must be answered positively and we urge 
developing nations to do so. New money must be committed to implement this 
convention either through a reformed and refinanced Global Environment 
Facility or a multilateral fund. Financing is the other side of the coin to 
effective implementation and compliance. We look for a compliance regime 
that provides monitoring and inspection to help developing countries 
implement obligations detailed in the convention and to build confidence 
that all parties are implementing the agreement.

Please bear in mind what I said in Montreal: one poisoned Inuk child, a 
poisoned Arctic, and a poisoned planet is one and the same. This shared 
understanding will, inevitably, lead us to an effective POPs convention, 
which will protect the health of peoples throughout the world.

Nakomek

______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com 
Reprinted under the Fair Use http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html doctrine 
of international copyright law.
            &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
           Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit)
                      Unenh onhwa' Awayaton
                   http://www.tdi.net/ishgooda/       
            UPDATES: CAMP JUSTICE             
http://shell.webbernet.net/~ishgooda/oglala/
            &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
                              

Reply via email to