Photo: Amantha Perera/IRIN. Baun has come under sustained attack for a decade
Source: IRIN
BALI, 20 August 2014 (IRIN) - Amid increasing documentation of attacks
on people engaged in environmental activism, experts are calling for a
global protection regime to defend and support campaigners subjected to
harassment and abuse.
“We need to come up with an umbrella organization that looks after
environmental activists’ rights and is in a position to launch rapid
action that assists those in trouble, like what we see with media
organizations,” Emilienne de Leon, a board member of the International Network of Women’s Funds (INWF)
told IRIN. (INWF’s mission is to “strengthen the political and
financial capacity of Women’s Funds to empower women and girls and
redistribute resources to transform their lives and communities”.)
During the first week of August activists, donors and researchers
gathered in Bali, Indonesia, for the world’s first international summit
on climate and women; a large part of the discussion was centered on
attacks on people campaigning to protect the environment.
“We will prepare a document advising donors and others on the way
forward and hopefully we will be able to act on the recommendations
sooner than later,” de Leon said, adding that the initial plan involves a
three-way partnership between Global Green Grants (an environmental sustainability and social justice organization), INWF, and the Urgent Action Fund for Women’s Human Rights.
The need for a global response is becoming more evident as documentation of attacks increases.
A report by Global Witness,
an international organization that investigates corruption and
environmental degradation, found that between 2002 and 2013 at least 903
citizens engaged in environmental protection work were killed, just shy
of the 913 journalists killed in the same time period.
Calling the issue of violence and threats against environmental
campaigners “notoriously under-reported”, Global Witness argued in its
report Deadly Environment
that “the death rate points to a much greater rate of non-lethal
violence and intimidation” and noted that “three times as many people
were killed in 2012 than 10 years previously, with the death rate rising
in the past four years to an average of two activists a week.”
In her 2011 report
to the Human Rights Council, Special Rapporteur on Human Rights
Defenders Margaret Sekaggya noted that environmental campaigners may be
particularly vulnerable to abuse and called for increased attention to
their plight, saying: “defenders working on land and environmental
issues are particularly disadvantaged due to the often limited knowledge
they have about their rights and lack of information on how to claim
them, scarce resources and weak organizational capacity.”
As attention gradually increases and more attacks come to light, experts
are calling for a coordinated global response mechanism to protect
“green” campaigners.
“Attacks are rising and so is their impact on the work that is being
carried out on [the] ground,” said Terry Odendhal, executive director at
Global Green Grants.
A sustained assault
Aleta Baun, an activist from Indonesia’s Timor island who has campaigned
for the past decade against mining companies, said threats and
intimidation have not been single incidents but were part of a sustained
assault.
Baun told IRIN she was first attacked while she was orchestrating a
multi-day campaign which involved indigenous women blocking the path to a
marble mine by sitting on the site and weaving their traditional cloth.
A group of over 30 men waylaid her in a remote part of the island and
surrounded her.
“At one point they were debating whether to kill me or rape me,” she
said, explaining that they decided murder was not viable because there
were too many witnesses present. “They decided not to rape me because
there were too many men waiting to take their turn,” she said, adding
that in the end they stabbed her in her legs and took all of her money.
The authorities arrested and prosecuted the men responsible for the attack.
However, Baun said, such legal action did not get to the heart of the
issue as the orchestrators of the assault - those who paid the attackers
- were never charged.
“After the attack, police arrested some of [the attackers] for
obstructing a protest,” Baun explained. “When they got released, the men
who attacked me came to me to ask help to withdraw my complaint. They
told me that they had not been paid the sums promised for their work
attacking us, and they were fed up.”
Power in numbers
Suryamani Bhagat an activist with the "Save the Forests of Jharkhand
Movement", a campaign in India’s eastern Jharkhand State, said her most
consistent tormentors have been government forestry officials.
“They want to use the forests for commercial purposes, but for us the
forest is part of our way of life,” Bhagat said, adding that she has
faced several threats from forestry officials and has been harassed by
police. She and her co-campaigners, who are mostly women farmers, have
evaded arrest by showing solidarity in the face of police threats.
“Once we told the police that we would all come to the police station
voluntarily, but our children and our livestock will also come with us,
since there will be no one left at home to take care of them if we are
arrested,” she said.
“I make sure that I work with a large number of women who can stand with me if there is a threat,” she said.
But attackers were persistent and Baun was forced to flee her home and
seek refuge in the same forest she was campaigning to protect, remaining
in self-imposed exile for a year.
“Staying there for my safety meant I could not provide hands-on
leadership to the campaign against mining operations,” she said, adding
that while protests against the mines continued, the movement lacked a
clear leader in her absence.
She was eventually able to re-join her fellow campaigners, but says: “If
not for the attacks and the threats, maybe we could have gotten the
mining groups out much earlier.”
The frustrations of fending off harassers linger: Bhagat said that
because she has to constantly worry about forest officials bothering her
or making complaints against her which could land her in jail, half of
her time is spent looking over her shoulder or managing threats.
“Dealing with harassment takes time that I could have spent on building
community awareness. Now I have to spend more time trying to undo the
damages done by forest officials,” she said, adding that pervasive and
persistent threats discourage more people from joining campaigns as
well.
According to de Leon, in addition to coordinating a rapid response
protection mechanism for activists in danger, the global platform will
lobby donors and policymakers to build awareness on the persistent
dangers environmental campaigners face.