| One November day in 1996, a line of logging trucks
rumbled into an old olive-growing region of Turkey, near the ancient Pillars of Pergamum.
The government-paid loggers had come to clear land for a new gold-mining project sponsored
by the French-based conglomerate Eurogold. But they were able to fell only about 2,500
trees before a small group of incensed olive growers got in their way. The stand-off
lasted for months, to the increasing annoyance of Eurogold and the Turkish government.
Early this April, out rolled the logging trucks and in rolled a line of tanks. The confrontation had been years in the making. When Eurogold first proposed
the mine in 1993, the farmers had been willing to listen. But after preliminary drilling
rendered their water undrinkable for four months, they ended negotiations and started
protesting. Backed by environmental and human-rights groups in Turkey, Germany, and the
United States, the farmers filed a legal appeal and then began to familiarize themselves
with cyanide heap-leaching, Eurogold's planned mining technique.
Eurogold, meanwhile, had launched a public-relations campaign
designed to convince the farmers that their concerns were backward and outdated. At a
public meeting in Ankara, turkey's capital, one company representative even went so far as
to claim--falsely--that "an influential group in the United States called the Sierra
Club" had recently endorsed the use of cyanide in gold mining. But the farmers
quickly rebuffed this and other misleading assertions at meetings of their own, to which
they invited the 300,000 people who lived near the mine site, next to the old Asia Minor
city now called Bergama. They pointed out, for instance, that Eurogold's
"leakproof" tailings pond would in fact be situated on an active fault line.
When the olive growers organized a referendum on the mine last year, nine of ten eligible
voters in the immediate vicinity turned out. Not one voted in favor of the project.
The farmers were prepared, then, when the tanks descended on
Bergama. They immediately countered with a peaceful demonstration that involved 10,000
people and 1,000 tractors. At this point, if the Turkish government had used force to
repress citizens exercising their basic civil rights, it would have compromised its claim
to democracy. Within days, Turkey's highest administrative court had declared the mine
unconstitutional, shutting it down completely.
Given Eurogold's financial resources and the Turkish government's
desperation to attract foreign investment, the farmers will probably have further battles
to fight. But the court's watershed decision has international implications. The judges
ruled that Eurogold's mine violates the provision of Turkey's recently amended
constitution that protects every Turk's fundamental right to a healthy, intact
environment. They set a precedent, in other words, for regarding pollution not as a matter
to be debated among technicians but as an issue of basic human rights.
The United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which
turns 50 next year, does not mention pollution--environmental contaminants received scant
attention in 1948--but it does cover such issues as health, safety, and
self-determination. In the wake of World War II and the crimes against humanity
perpetrated by the Nazis, the United Nations established certain rights as inviolable
regardless of ethnic, religious, or national heritage. As Javier Perez de Cuellar asserted
in 1987 while serving as U.N. secretary-general, international human rights law "has
equal relevance and validity for every political or social system and also every cultural
tradition. It can truly be said to belong to the peoples of the world."
Since 1948 the health and safety promised in the Universal
Declaration have increasingly been secured by environmental laws. And a growing number of
today's crimes against humanity are in fact environmental in nature. As mining, logging,
oil drilling, and waste-disposal projects push into more and more regions and ecosystems,
people all over the world are seeing their basic rights compromised; they are losing their
livelihoods, their traditional culture, and even their lives.
Many of the worst cases of ecological damage occur in countries
under the control of authoritarian, rights-repressive regimes, where affected communities
have no way of holding governments accountable for their actions. In Nigeria, for
instance, where oil exports bring in 90 percent of foreign exchange, military ruler
General Sani Abacha has sacrificed the health of entire villages to accommodate
multinationals like Royal/Dutch Shell, and has responded to protests with violence. Two
years ago, the Abacha regime provoked international outrage--though no economic
sanctions--by executing the writer/activist Ken Saro-Wiwa, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee,
and eight other leaders of the Ogoni people. Saro-Wiwa and his colleagues had committed
the crime of documenting the toxic spills and military repression that continue to
devastate their oil-rich homeland in the Niger River Delta.
The Turkish olive growers succeeded in blocking Eurogold's mine
because they were able to mount the kind of protests that are still impossible in Nigeria.
In general, protecting basic civil rights may be the best way we have of ensuring that
future generations inherit a planet that is still worth inhabiting.
Upholding human rights can also help victimized communities even
after the damage had been done by enabling them to seek financial compensation for the
destruction of their resources. While judges in many countries still have few
environmental standards on which to base their decisions--what level of which pollutants
constitutes contaminated water?--they do have accepted international human-rights
standards. And while no court exists to try repressive regimes themselves, it is possible
to sue the multinational corporations whose business ventures keep those regimes in power.
Earlier this year, two communities did just that. A group of Burmese
citizens, denied due process in their own country, sued the Unocal oil company in
California for its involvement in a disastrous natural-gas project in Burma. And a number
of Indonesian tribal leaders filed a class action suit on Louisiana against the mining
giant Freeport-McMoRan for its actions in their homeland of Irian Jaya.
The case against Unocal involved not only the destruction of
tropical forests, wetlands, and mangrove swamps in territories inhabited by the Karen,
Mon, and Tavoy peoples, but also human-rights abuses ranging from forced relocation to
rape, torture, and murder. While these abuses were not directly perpetrated by Unocal
employees, the lawsuit seeks to hold company executives liable for allowing their hosts,
Burma's State Law and Order Restoration Council, to conduct a systematic terror campaign
against everyone who stood in the path of the pipeline. The suit claims that given SLORC's
horrendous human rights record--documented by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch,
and the U.S. State Department--Unocal's negotiators must have known what to expect when
they asked SLORC to set up the company's field headquarters and build access and service
roads. According to independent observers, SLORC military personnel have murdered peaceful
demonstrators and destroyed entire Karen and Mon villages, forcing the inhabitants to
break rocks, haul dirt, and cut trees.
The Burmese plaintiffs, represented by a coalition of environmental
and human-rights organizations, including EarthRights International and the Center for
Constitutional Rights, overcame their first challenge on March 25, when a federal court
judge rejected Unocal's argument that the case was outside the court's jurisdiction.
Though there has not yet been a final ruling on the suit, the judge's decision set an
important precedent for prosecuting multinationals on U.S. soil for actions in other
countries that violate international human-rights agreements.
In the Freeport-McMoRan suit, the Indonesian citizens charge that
gold and copper extraction at Freeport's Grasberg mine in Irian Jaya has resulted in the
daily dumping of about 100,000 tons of rock waste into local rivers, poisoning the water
and food supply of several thousand indigenous people. Tom Beanal, leader of the Amungme
Tribal Council, first brought this case before a federal court last May. The judge
dismissed it, citing the lack of international environmental standards. In an extensive
opinion, however, he suggested that the suit focus on the killing of an estimated 2,000
indigenous protesters by Indonesian soldiers, who receive housing, food and transportation
from Freeport in return for "security" services. A human-rights approach, the
judge wrote, would almost certainly guarantee the court's acceptance of the complaint.
Beanal and his lawyer, Martin Regan, have revised and refiled the $6 billion suit and
expect it to be heard late this year.
Of course the human-rights approach to environmentalism is most
effective when it is integrated directly into development projects, allowing those
affected to voice their concerns from the very beginning. Local people who get to
participate in relevant decisions and who have access to ecological information are well
positioned to act as stewards of the local environment.
This type of community-based development is only a pipe dream in
places like Burma, Indonesia, and Nigeria, but it has been extremely successful in other
developing countries, where governments were willing to explore alternatives to
conventional extraction projects. In the West African nation of Burkina Faso, for
instance, and anti-desertification program has dramatically improved the lives of farmers
living in 240 marginal villages--mainly because project officers conducted surveys to find
out what sort of agricultural assistance the farmers themselves desired. Some farmers
ended up using custom-designed irrigation devices; others spread manure composts over
previously unfertilized crops. After just a few years, the participants had reclaimed
24,700 acres of formerly unproductive drylands, and the 1,400-pound deficit in the average
family's annual food supply had turned into a 300-pound surplus.
Occasionally, though, communities that have already suffered
culturally and economically from intrusive development choose to ignore environmentally
sound options in favor of what they hope will be quick fix. The Kayapo Indians of the
Brazilian Amazon, fed up with both impractical ecological solutions and the government's
inability or unwillingness to keep loggers and miners from invading their lands in search
of mahogany and gold, have begun selling off extraction privileges for hard cash. Forced
to accept mercury poisoning in local rivers and widespread destruction of the rainforest,
some Kayapo chiefs decided that they should at least get paid for the loss of their
culture.
In the northwestern United States, the Makah Indians have expressed
similar frustrations. The Makah's tribal identity was formerly based on whaling culture,
but the group stopped hunting 70 years ago, when commercial whaling nearly wiped out the
local species. Now the Makah have submitted the proposal to the International Whaling
Commission to be granted a yearly aboriginal quota of five gray whales.
Given the comeback of the eastern Pacific gray, whose population now
numbers around 20,000, the Makah's request does not seem unreasonable. But some
environmentalists--and some traditional Makah--are concerned that granting the tribe's
request could result in the widespread resurgence of whaling under the guise of honoring
"cultural" traditions. Norway and Japan, traditional whaling nations that oppose
the Whaling Commission's ban on whale hunting, are giving the tribal leaders their full
support because they believe that the Makah request could yield the precedent they need to
resume commercial whaling at full capacity. Meanwhile, there have been reports that the
Makah elders who oppose the whaling request have been harassed and told to keep silent by
younger tribal leaders. "They've ostracized us," says elder Dotti Chamblin, a
descendant of whale-hunting chiefs. "They say they're traditional, but they are not
listening to or protecting the elders. And shooting a whale with a machine gun is not
spiritual."
Environmental organizations can play a crucial role in resolving
such situations by providing conflicted communities with relevant information and
alternative development strategies that address both economic and ecological concerns.
"I know no safe despository of the ultimate powers of society but the people
themselves." Thomas Jefferson wrote, "and if we think them not enlightened
enough to exercise their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not take it
from them, but to inform their discretion." In the case of the Makah, organizations
like Greenpeace and the Cousteau Society, while endorsing the community's right to
self-determination and its effort to affirm its cultural ties with whales, have proposed
whalewatching as an alternative to the hunt; it would strengthen the Makah's maritime
traditions as well as provide employment opportunities.
"The environment," wrote the late Ken Saro-Wiwa in a
letter smuggled from his Nigerian jail cell, "is man's first right." Today more
and more activists are using this concept not just as a theory but as a practical
strategy. Human-rights workers and environmentalists have begun a fruitful partnership,
combining the moral authority of human-rights law with the power of ecology to show that
each of us is equally dependent on a healthy environment. Recent collaborations between
groups like the Sierra Club and Amnesty International mirror the two movements'
longstanding cooperation at the local level, where activists have been struggling for
years to get vulnerable people more involved in deciding how to use--and protect--the
ecosystems upon which they depend. People like the Ogoni in Nigeria, the Amungme in
Indonesia, and the olive growers in Turkey are some of the world's most powerful defenders
of environmental resources. But they cannot continue their struggles without the basic
freedoms of a civil society.
Aaron Sachs is the author of Eco-justice: Linking Human Rights
and the Environment, World Watch Paper 127 (Washington, D.C.: World Watch Institute,
December 1995).
Source: Sierra. Sierra Club, San Francisco,
November/December 1997. |