Dear friends,
Next week, desperate due to accelerating sea level rise, a group of small islands' leaders plan to take the unprecedented step of putting a resolution before the United Nations calling upon the Security Council itself to address climate change. Stand with these threatened people:
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Imagine the sea rising around you as your country literally disappears
beneath your feet, where the food you grow and the water you drink is
being destroyed by salt, and your last chance is to seek refuge in
other lands where climate refugees have no official status.
This
is not a dream, it's the fearful reality for millions of people who
live on islands around the world, from the Maldives to Papua New Guinea.
That is why these small islands are planning the unprecedented step next week, ahead of the UN General Assembly meeting, of
calling on the Security Council itself to address climate change as a pressing threat to international peace and security.
This is a creative move born of desperation, a challenge to global
powers to end their complacency and tackle this lethal crisis with the
urgency of wars. This effort could help shift the tenor of the world's
debate -- from a far-off storm cloud to a life-threatening crisis here
and how. But
the island states' campaign will meet fierce opposition from the world’s biggest polluters,
so they need our help. Sign the petition now to raise a worldwide
chorus of support for this call -- our signatures will be presented to
the UN by the islands' ambassadors as they introduce their resolution
next week:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/sos_small_islands
For the first time in human history, the North Pole can be circumnavigated --
the Arctic ice is melting more quickly than almost anyone anticipated.
Now, small island nations -- where homes are, at most, mere meters
above sea level -- are preparing evacuation plans to guarantee the
survival of their populations. They are on the frontline, experiencing
the first wave of devastating impacts from climate change which soon
will threaten us all.
President Remengesau of Palau, a small island in the Pacific, recently said:
Palau
has lost at least one third of its coral reefs due to climate change
related weather patterns. We also lost most of our agricultural
production due to drought and extreme high tides. These are not
theoretical, scientific losses -- they are the losses of our resources
and our livelihoods.... For island states, time is not running out. It
has run out. And our path may very well be the window to your own future and the future of our planet".
Beyond the islands, countries like Bangladesh -- population, 150
million -- face losing large parts of their landmass. The experience of
our planet's most vulnerable communities serves as a warning sign of
the future world we can all expect: extreme weather growing in
intensity, conflict over water and food supplies, coasts disappearing
and hundreds of millions made refugees.
The more signatures we raise to be delivered to the UN next
week, the more urgently this call will ring out to protect our common
future. Sign now:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/sos_small_islands
The small islands' brave campaign for survival is our campaign as well.
Just as sea levels rise or fall everywhere at the same time, the
choices of every person everywhere affect the future of our common
home. By standing with the people at the front line of the climate
crisis, we show them, and ourselves, that we recognize our fundamental
shared humanity -- and the responsibilities that come with it.
With hope, Ben, Iain, Alice, Paul, Graziela, Pascal, Ricken, Brett, Milena -- the Avaaz team
PS: For a report on Avaaz's campaigning so far, see:
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/report_back_2
PPS: These are the States who are sponsoring the resolution:
Fiji, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, Papua New
Guinea, Philippines, Samoa, Seychelles, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu,
Vanuatu, joined by Canada and Turkey.
For a draft of the Small Islands States Resolution, please see:
http://islandsfirst.org/draftres.pdf
For more information about those presenting the petition please visit:
http://islandsfirst.org
For information on Tuvalu's evacuation plan and climate refugees, see:
http://www.wwf.org.au/articles/climate-refugees-in-a-drowning-pacific/
For information about how rising sea levels will affect us all:
http://www.earth-policy.org/Updates/Update2.htm
For more information on the rapidly-melting Arctic ice:
http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/climate-change/for-the-first-time-in-human-history-the-north-pole-can-be-circumnavigated-913924.html
For more information about all of the island states:
http://www.sidsnet.org/aosis/
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