Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

High-ranking politicians and corporate bosses who are guilty of massive destruction of nature should be able to be accused of ecocide in The Hague - Rizwana Hasan and Jojo Mehta are fighting for this.

By Anya Rider for Greenpeace Magazin (in German), 11/03/2022

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

…after days of gruelling round-the-clock talks, UN member states finally agreed on a treaty to protect the high seas.

A full day after the deadline for talks had officially passed, the conference president, Rena Lee of Singapore, took to the floor of room 2 of the UN headquarters in New York and announced that the treaty had been agreed. At a later date, the delegates will meet for half a day to formally adopt the text. She made it clear the text would not be reopened.

Karen McVeigh for The Guardian, 05/03/2023

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

Gustavo Gómez, abogado especialista en derecho ambiental y Fiscal General ante la Cámara Federal de Tucumán, Catamarca y Santiago del Estero: “Necesitamos una figura penal para castigar los ecocidios”. 27/02/2022

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

Toxic smoke, contaminated rivers, poisoned soil, trees reduced to charred stumps, nature reserves pocked with craters: the environmental toll from Russia’s war with Ukraine, which has been detailed in a new map, might once have been considered incalculable. The environment ministry has set up a hotline for citizens to report cases of Russian “ecocide”, which so far number 2,303, and issues weekly updates of the tally.

Jonathan Watts for The Guardian, 20/02/2023

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

According to the Children’s Climate Risk Index (CCRI), nearly half of the world’s children ‘are at “extremely high risk” of the impacts of climate change.… And it is happening today.’ (UNICEF, 2021, p. 4)

By Juliette Bail for Humanium, 15/02/2022

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

In the last few years, the ecocide movement has gained momentum. A few smaller island states, Vanuatu and the Maldives, have called on the world community to recognize ecocide as an international crime, and the topic has been on the political agenda in countries such as Belgium, Brazil, France, Britain and Sweden.

By Mette Mølgaard Henriksen for Zetland_, 15/02/2022

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

En su sección ‘Tres preguntas a…’, entrevistan a Maite Mompó, directora de campaña en España. 02/2022

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

Maite Mompó: «las grandes corporaciones incluyen en sus presupuestos las multas por producir ecocidios». 24/01/2022

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

Artículo sobre la Ley del Ecocidio de Ángel Juarez, presiente de la fundación Mare Terra de Tarragona. 24/01/2022

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

Se anuncian "acciones graves" contra los responsables del derrame de crudo de la refinería de Repsol, "un ecocidio". 21/01/2022

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

El trabajo del panel de especialistas y de Stop Ecocidio viene motivado por la evidente crisis climática en la que vivimos. 20/01/2022

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

Entrevista a Rodrigo Lledó, abogado y miembro del panel de expertos para la definición del ‘ecocidio’. 24/12/2021

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

Advocates want to make ecocide a prosecutable offense with the International Criminal Court. It's an uphill battle they seem willing to fight.

Undark

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

The British lawyer and author has held Nazis and presidents accountable for crossing the moral red line. Now, he argues, the time has come to pursue those who commit crimes against the environment.

By Katie Surma for Inside Climate News, 22/12/2021

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

On every continent, humans have left their mark in the form of massive environmental destruction: deforestation in Brazil; strip mining in Canada’s Tar Sands; the devastation of West Africa’s fisheries; the obliterations of landscapes and ecosystems by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

By David Sassoon for Inside climate news, 22/12/2021

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

A global movement is rising to advocate for "ecocide" as a new crime before the International Criminal Court. The goal is draw a “moral line” for the planet.

By Katie Surma for NBC News and Inside Climate News, 2021

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

An expert panel brought together by the Stop Ecocide Foundation proposed last June to amend the statutes of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and include ecocide alongside other international crimes such as war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.

By M. Apelblat for The Brussels Times / 11/12/2021

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

If ecocide were to be criminalised, we could not only punish mass polluters for the damage they cause, but also prevent the advent of new fossil fuel companies and projects.

By Nina de Ayala Parker for AlJazeera, 09/12/2021

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Robin Gairdner Robin Gairdner

In November, the world’s first global citizens’ assembly – made up of 100 people chosen by lottery from around the world – declared its recommended responses to the climate crisis at the UN climate conference COP26. Among these recommendations was that causing severe environmental destruction, or “ecocide”, should become a crime.

By Rachel Killean for The Conversation, 08/12/2021

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