Showing posts with label Global Community. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Global Community. Show all posts

08 July 2008

Responsible Travel

Image: Arctic Sounds

I've just come across a great website called Responsible Travel.
They handpick inspiring holidays from all over the globe to give a fantastic experience to the traveller at the same time as making a real difference to local people and the environment.

I thought...so it's basically The Body Shop of travel agencies... then, when reading the 'About Us' section I discovered it was actually set up by a former Head of Marketing at The Body Shop (UK). responsibletravel.com was even financially backed by a small group of private investors including Anita and Gordon Roddick!

So how does it work?
From their website:
We do not claim to have addressed every single issue relating to responsible travel, as these are both complex and variable in each destination. Rather, we have created a way for the industry and tourists to work openly together to improve tourism for travellers and local communities.

All industry members have been screened to meet the required environmental, social and economic criteria for responsibletravel.com. You will find summaries of how they have achieved this, and their full responsible travel policies on the site. In addition, we require a short summary of the responsible travel aspects of every trip and form of accommodation on the site.


I like it.


I'm thinking about going to India in January for a holiday but also to visit Teddy Exports (the Fair Trade community where we get all our massagers from). I'm not sure if it works for people travelling from Australia but I'm definitely going to check it out.

www.responsibletravel.com

01 July 2008

Children of Burma

By Adam Valvasori - Values Manager


Group Shot
Originally uploaded by .ash

This is a photo taken by my friend Ash, who I used to work with in World Vision. He's a great photographer and currently posted in Burma where he's helping the Burmese recover from the biggest natural disaster to hit Asia since the Boxing Day Tsunami. He writes in the caption:

"Kids in a cyclone-affected village in the Myanmar Delta happily pose for a picture. Up to half the kids in this village were lost in last month's cyclone. "


Their smiles are amazing.
The statistic sobering.

25 June 2008

SAVE ZIMBABWE FROM MUGABE

From AVAAZ

"Violence, intimidation and murder have won the day in Zimbabwe."
- Moses Moyo*

In elections this March, the people of Zimbabwe sent a clear message: Morgan Tsvangirai, not Robert Mugabe, should lead their government.

Since then, through a campaign of violence, fraud, and intimidation, Mugabe's government has undermined any hope for a legitimate run-off on June 27. The MDC has, appropriately, withdrawn. But this is not a concession of victory -- it is an acknowledgment of reality.

Now, the world's eyes turn to the leaders of Southern Africa -- without whom even Mugabe cannot retain power. Please sign on to this message to Thabo Mbeki and other Southern African leaders, and Avaaz will deliver it this week in newspaper ads throughout the region.





* Moses Moyo is the pseudonym of an independent Zimbabwe-born journalist based in Harare, who is reporting exclusively for The First Post



28 May 2008

The Guides Say...

By Deb Baxter
Advocacy is at the heart of Australia's young women. Girl Guides Australia has released the results of their first National Survey of Australian Girl Guides after members asked to be given a voice to raise awareness about issues that are important to girls and young women.

The report gives an insight into the concerns of the next generation of Australian women, detailing the responses of 4,500 girls from 5 to 17 years to the broad questions of which issues Guides care about in the world, in Australia and in their community.

Nationally, the primary concerns for Australian Guides at a global level were Global Warming (16.9%), Environment (15.6%) and Poverty (15.1%) whilst 21.2% of Guides were concerned about Water as the most serious issue facing Australia.

At both the national level and at the local level, Environment (Aust.18.0% and local 12.3%) and Addictions (Aust. 8.7% and local 10.8%) were considered of significant concern. Bullying (8.4%) out ranked Water (7.5%) as a concern to Australian Guides in their local communities.

The older Guides varied from the national averages, recording their primary global concern as Poverty (22.3%) and issues relating to Government and Body Image were also seen as important issues facing Australians today.

The Body Shop is proud to have been associated with Girl Guides Australia for a number of years now, through the cork recycling program. This program enables even the youngest girls to advocate by doing something practical to make a difference and educate their peers and community.


23 May 2008

Kiva - Loans that change lives

By Adam Valvasori - Ghana Bakery Investor

Have you ever invested in a taxi in Tajikistan, a beauty salon in Nigeria, a grocery store in Vietnam?

These are just some of the amazing business ventures being supported by local micro-finance institutions around the world and the www.kiva.org website. All it needs is you.

Brian Cullis-Overton (Vegetable Store Investor - Tanzania) from The Body Shop Geelong and I would like to share the joy of Kiva with you.

Kiva's mission is to connect people through lending for the sake of alleviating poverty.

Kiva is the world's first person-to-person micro-lending website, empowering individuals to lend directly to unique entrepreneurs in the developing world.

Choose an Entrepreneur, Lend,
Get Repaid


It's so easy. Here's how it works. The below diagram shows briefly how money gets from you to a developing-world entrepreneur, and back.


1) Lenders like you browse profiles of entrepreneurs in need, and choose someone to lend to. When they lend, using PayPal or their credit cards, Kiva collects the funds and then passes them along to one of our microfinance partners worldwide.

2) Kiva's microfinance partners distribute the loan funds to the selected entrepreneur. Often, our partners also provide training and other assistance to maximize the entrepreneur's chances of success.

3) Over time, the entrepreneur repays their loan. Repayment and other updates are posted on Kiva and emailed to lenders who wish to receive them.

4) When lenders get their money back, they can re-lend to someone else in need, donate their funds to Kiva (to cover operational expenses), or withdraw their funds.



I just invested 50 bucks in a bakery in Ghana. The lady in the photo wearing the blue dress is Araba Amoaniwaa's daughter, who is helping the business. Araba wants to use the loan to buy flour, margarine, sugar, and firewood to expand her operation. In the time it has taken to write this blog post, Araba's loan request of $525 went from 85% funded to 100% funded! It's amazing how quick and easy it is for us affluent web users to park some money in a business that will help alleviate poverty!

You can check out my Kiva profile here.

If you can spare the money just do it. You get the money back and it makes such a great difference for people trying to fight their own way out of the poverty trap.

www.kiva.org

~ Adam

19 May 2008

Burma Cyclone Nargis Emergency

By Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

Mark Knight's Reality Check Aisle 3 Cartoon in today's Herald Sun.

I understand it's really hard to always be "on" for charity. People are busy and have their own stresses, money problems and sometimes can feel overwhelmed by all the worthy causes out there. Save The Children's founder, Eglantyne Jebb, said it well: “The world is not ungenerous, but unimaginative and very busy”.

We know this to be true today but it is quick and easy to make a difference for children living in drastic poverty and far, far, far worst off than any of us.

Can I beg that in the case of an emergency like the one Cyclone Nargis caused a few weeks ago in Burma, there is never a better time or a better reason to dig deep.


Non-Government Organisations are still working tirelessly in Burma to get the 2 million people left homeless, food, water and shelter in order to prevent the further loss of human lives (Currently estimated at 216,000 people!).
Click here to find Australian Council for International Development (ACFID) member charities with Cyclone Nargis Emergency Appeals.

There is still lots to be done to save more lives.



The Body Shop has been working behind the scenes in the last two weeks with Save The Children Australia to organise collection tins in all of our stores. I'm also very proud to announce that the Chairman of The Body Shop, Graeme Wise, has kick started our efforts with a $25,000 donation!

Save The Children have reached 80,000 people in four Yangon townships and has distributed 175 tons of relief supplies to affected families throughout the region. Supplies have included rice, water, oral-rehydration solution, blankets and materials for cooking and shelter. The Department of Social Welfare has granted Save the Children an official letter to state that we are ‘official partners’ in this emergency response.


Take Action:
  • Donate to Save The Children; right now online or via their toll free number toll free number 1800 76 00 11
  • Send us a cheque/money order payable to Save the Children Australia. Forward it to Burma Emergency Appeal, Save the Children, PO Box 340, Fitzroy VIC 3065. Make sure to enclose your name and address for receipting purposes
  • Build a hero page to help Save the Children fundraise for the Burma Cyclone Appeal
  • Go to any The Body Shop store
  • Go to any Bunnings Sausage Sizzle this Friday (23 May)
Thank you!

~ Adam

Save The Children photos Cyclone Nargis

14 May 2008

Voice Your Choice in the Corporate Hall of Shame 2008

By Adam Valvasori - Values Manager




Hi everyone! The below is a tiny bit extreme, but it's still well worth a read. We know, for example, that not all corporations abuse their power. Many try the best they can at being responsible members of the community. However I still think - in this age of Corporate Social Responsibility 'spin' it's vital for NGOs to carefully monitor corporate power which is allowed to run largely unchecked, is not transparent or democratic. From the CAI Website:

Corporate Accountability International has been waging winning campaigns to challenge corporate abuse for more than 30 years. Corporations boost profits at the expense of people's health and environment by using campaign contributions, aggressive lobbying, deceptive public relations and influence over global trade talks to write the rules that govern our economy and society to their advantage.

As corporations grow richer and more powerful than many countries, it becomes even more important to challenge the undue influence they use to weaken government policies that should protect people

The Nominees:

(Archer Daniels Midland) for making Indonesia the world’s worst contributor to global warming (after the U.S. and China) through its clearing of endangered forests and wildlife habitat for palm oil plantations.
Read more.

for killing unarmed Iraqi civilians, hiring paramilitaries trained under military dictatorships, and using its close political and financial ties with the Bush Administration to secure lucrative contracts. Read more.

for predatory mortgage lending to elderly and non-English-speaking borrowers, and for gouging minority borrowers with discriminatory rates and fees. These actions have forced nearly a quarter of subprime borrowers into default, at the same time their CEO earned a $120 million salary.
Read more.

for producing tens of millions of lead-contaminated toys and aggressively lobbying against bans on other highly toxic chemicals. Read more.

for numerous labor violations including child exploitation, contributing to the obesity epidemic, and threatening community water supplies for its bottled water brands. Read more.

for aggressively lobbying against increased fuel economy standards and state measures to reduce global warming gas emissions, while hypocritically spending millions to advertise its environmental leadership and popular Prius line. Read more.

for displacing local businesses, failing to cover employees under the corporation’s health plan, and opposing legislation that would increase homeland security. Read more.

for its contribution — as America’s third largest fast food franchise — to the growing childhood obesity and diabetes epidemics, and for refusing to meet nutritional labeling regulations. Read more.


Here’s how to vote and help expose the worst abusers:
  1. Read More!
  2. Vote for your top three choices or write in another corporation at the Hall of Shame website.
  3. Post comments, if you like, about why these corporations should be inducted.
  4. Encourage friends and family to vote. Voting closes on July 4th. Corporate Accountability International will continue to expose their abuses through the year – making sure to publicise genuine efforts at reform.
~ Adam

01 May 2008

Compost To Combat Climate Change!

By Adam Valvasori - Values Manager






















Hey there... International Composting Awareness Week starts this Saturday so there's never been a better time to start your worm farm.

Approximately 60% of the rubbish Australians put in the everyday mixed-waste ‘garbage bin’ could be put to better use in the garden as compost and mulch or could be returned to agricultural land to improve soil quality.

Alarmingly, such a huge amount of organically-active material buried ‘anaerobically’ (without air) in landfill causes over 3% of Australia’s total greenhouse gas emissions annually by producing methane: a gas with 25 times the global warming potential of carbon dioxide!

If properly composted instead, this same organic waste could help to abate climate change in yet another way: by sinking or ‘sequestering’ carbon back into the soil.

Find out more at www.compostweek.com.au

Compost Week provides a great segue for me to plug a couple of fantastic, discoveries I've made recently, whilst riding my bike around Melbourne....

CERES is an urban oasis, a vibrant and thriving Community Environment Park in Brunswick East, the product of remarkable contribution and commitment. It includes an organic cafe, co-op markets, community farming plots, orchids, an eco-house, chooks and wormie bins. They also do children's parties in different cultural themes... Aboriginal, Indonesian, African or Indian! It's truly amazing! I have friends that get all their fruit & vegies there. There's also a place called The Bike Shed that can make you a recycled bike from scratch for only $30 - $70 !

www.ceres.org.au


Established in 1979 the Collingwood Children's Farm is a not-for-profit community resource providing country experiences for city people.

Visitors can milk the cow at 10am and 4pm, bottle feed young lambs (seasonal), wander around, feed the animals, help with farm chores, go into the paddocks with the sheep and goats, cuddle a guinea pig, waddle with the ducks, feed the chooks, look for eggs or just sit and unwind under a shady tree or on the banks of the Yarra river.

Explore their website for all the amazing programs and activities they have on offer. A must for families with munchkins.

www.farm.org.au

31 March 2008

Scrub Away My Bad Habits Plastic Sponge!






















Hey when I was in one of our stores the other day, I noticed something about recycled plastic bottles on the package of one of our sponges. On closer inspection I discovered it's not the packaging that is "ingeniously recycled from plastic bottles" as I first thought, but the sponge itself!

WOW! Apparently it's an amazingly effective exfoliator too.

Outdoor clothing company Patagonia is right: it's all about leading an "examined life". We do things everyday that harms the planet - we often don't mean to - we just haven't thought much about it.

Campaigns like Earth Hour are all about creating space and time in our collective conscience to examine our individual and community impact on the planet. When enough people, stop, think and change enough of their bad habits we'll start to see real global change.

This is true for social as well as environmental justice issues. We all have a bad habit of looking at the price tag of our clothes, coffee or chocolate and not thinking if it was ethically made. Who was really, really ripped off to get me this $15 t-shirt? If we stop and think about issues like child slavery in cocoa farms we don't mind adjusting our habits to buy fair trade certified chocolate. We just need more "a-ha!" moments.

I've got one of the Skin Sponges (pictured above) to give away to the most creative idea for the next big Earth Hour / "a-ha!" type event. Email your idea to values@thebodyshop.com.au. I'll post the best ones here next week.

Here are some other amazing products made out of recycled PET plastic bottles.


Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

13 March 2008

The Real Cost Of Chocolate

Your chocolate Easter Egg might not taste so sweet when you consider that with each bite you are supporting an industry where children are forced to work long hours in dangerous conditions instead of going to school.

About 70% of the cocoa beans used to make chocolate around the world come from West Africa, with Ivory Coast and Ghana among the biggest producers. Criminal networks have been caught moving children across regions and international borders to work on cocoa farms. There are claims that in the worst cases children as young as six are being forced to work 80-100 hours a week, enduring beatings and malnutrition.

THE BODY SHOP & COCOA
We use a lot of cocoa! Its in every one of our body butters and we sell one of those every two minutes in Australia alone! The Body Shop values the human rights of the Cocoa Farmers in Ghana through our Community Trade program. We're proud that our Community Trade program:
  • creates jobs for over 50,000 small-scale Cocoa farmers that are members of the Kuapa Kokoo Ltd Farmers Cooperative in Ghana.
  • pays them a social premium to help fund basic necessities such as wells,health and education for the wider community.
  • makes us the third largest user of fair trade cocoa beans in the UK.
  • gave us the opportunity to donate $AUD 591,506 of capital to the Day Chocolate Company (partly owned by Kuapa Kokoo and now Divine - a world leader in fair trade chocolate).
  • guarantees that no child labour is used in the cocoa farming process
So I think we can safely say - as a company we have helped to address the child trafficking problem in West Africa. But it's not enough, we can do more as individuals to totally eradicate all child labour contained in our chocolate. Here's how....

BE A GOOD SHOPPER
It's so easy. Just always choose fair trade chocolate that's guaranteed not to use cocoa sourced using child labour! Download the Good Chocolate Guide to find out which brands to support.

LOBBY YOUR LOCAL SUPERMARKET
Hand this coupon to the retailer where you buy your favourite chocolate and mention why you are doing it!

LOBBY THE CHOCOLATE MANUFACTURERS
Print and send this letter to the manufacturer of your favourite chocolate c/o The Confectionery Manufacturers of Australasia. Let them know that you believe they have a clear responsibility to actively address the problems!

SPREAD THE WORD

Forward this email to a friend, colleague or family member.

For more on this campaign check out World Vision's Don't Trade Lives website, which includes more information on child trafficking, events and links to activist groups you can join.



Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

18 February 2008

Is Supre Profiteering On Whaling?



Photo of the 'Whale Sucks' t-shirts on sale outside Supre's Bourke St Store in Melbourne.

I'm not sure about this one. Maybe I'm being overly critical so I thought I'd poll you about it (have your say to the right before you read any further). Do you think Supre is cashing in on the anti-whaling campaign or helping to create awareness with their massive teen audience?

We've been retail activists for a long time so maybe we're just more experienced at it? I do want to congratulate Supre if this is about their passion for social and environmental change not profits! Here's what I think the 'campaign' is missing:
  • "Whaling sucks!" and so does working in a sweatshop... Supre hasn't signed up to the Home Worker's Code of Practice . The code ensures that workers will be paid minimum wage.
  • There aren't any facts about the campaign - reasons why "whaling sucks"
  • There are no action suggestions for customers or even links to anti-whaling organisations like Greenpeace or Sea Shepard in their stores or online.
  • They seem to be keeping all the profits and so buying the t-shirt isn't directly helping the whales or the organisations trying to protect them.
But I'll let you decide if, overall, you think their involvement in the anti-whaling campaign is positive or negative. Vote in the poll or leave a comment.

Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

25 January 2008

Inspiration Scheme

Anne McFarlane (Sales, RSC), Laura Zammit (At Home), Amber Taylor (Collins Street VIC), Kelly Savill (Westlakes SA) and Kaye Findlay (At Home) participated in the Inspiration Scheme in Vanuatu in August 2007.

The Inspiration Scheme is a truly exceptional experience. It is not an ordinary workshop; but rather a life changing experience. To know that in one week of your life you can make such a difference to others is quite humbling.

During the week we spent in Vanuatu it did not take long for our TBS staff to realise that the workshop was not about training, but rather about sharing our skills and knowledge. Relishing in the opportunity to help open the minds of the participants and draw out the answers that they each had within. We were there to guide, grow, develop and stretch the participants’ ideas, reassure them, challenge their perceptions and most of all inspire
them to be the best that they can be. Every second, every minute and every interaction was an opportunity for the participants and TBS staff to SHINE!

Although it was very hard to leave, we left feeling tremendously proud and privileged at the opportunity we were given and the new friends we had made! I had the honour of presenting the certificates and speaking on behalf of TBS at the closing ceremony, below is a part of the lasting message, for some of you this will look similar:

“When we leave remember to have supreme confidence in yourself and your abilities. Know you can do anything that you put your mind to. Develop unrelenting determination and commitment to follow through on whatever you desire to do. The certificates presented to you today aren’t about completing this workshop - They are symbolic of your commitment to yourself, your community, your future and the future of Vanuatu! It speaks volumes about the immensely talented and inspirational person that you are!”

This message brought tears to the eyes of many of the participants and us included. I wanted to share this, as it is reflective of the intensity of the friendships this workshop creates. To be immersed in a new culture and to work with local representatives who passionately care about the welfare and future of their people is truly enriching in every aspect.

Without the commitment and vision of The Body Shop, United Nations, and the Commonwealth Youth Program, this workshop would not be possible.


It is however the commitment of the people who make it the true success. Amber, Kelly, Laura & Kaye would have made you proud and were outstanding ambassadors for The Body Shop. We left knowing that every day they & WE have a choice:
  • To be the best that we can be and to help others to do the same.
  • To want to learn and push the boundaries and be the young entrepreneurs of tomorrow – in Bislama “Tumaro’s Ledas” (Tomorrow’s Leaders)
I want to thank personally Graeme, Polly & Isabel for allowing me the opportunity to be a facilitator in the program as it is truly most rewarding. My commitment is to continue to be an ambassador for the Inspiration Scheme encouraging others to apply next year as I want each of you to share the journey and be a part of this incredible experience.

Anne McFarlane - National Deputy Retail Manager

17 January 2008

A Dingo Took Our Moral High Ground



Ok, sometimes it's uncomfortable to have a mirror held up to you. You don't like what you see. This happened to me today when I watched the above video (9:56mins) released by the pro-whaling movement in Japan. Although I think the way they've gone about this is totally wrong not to mention downright misleading at times. It made me wonder in a Carrie Bradshaw fashion...

Did a dingo take our moral high ground?

RACISTS?
Some of the accusations the video makes are true. The White Australia policy describe a collection of historical legislation and policies which intentionally restricted non-white immigration to Australia from 1901 to 1973. - Wiki

INDIGENOUS AUSTRALIANS?
Our treatment of first Australians is maybe even more disgraceful. Indigenous Australians didn't have the right to vote until Commonwealth legislation in 1962. We didn't acknowledge their right to native title of land until 1990! Our federal government has promised to say 'sorry' for a whole generation of children stolen from their families this year! - Wiki

DINGOS?
The video does reveal a disturbing truth about Dingos that I don't think many of us (including yours truly) are aware of. I was ready to disbelieve everything, so, when they claimed Dingos are in the same World Conservation Union (ICUN) status as Humpback whales... I had to investigate. Sadly it's true! In 2004 the ICUN gave Dingos 'Vulnerable' status. However, the video fails to mention that although hunting and killing them as pests is abhorrent, it's not the main reason why they're population size is vulnerable. Both the ICU and the Australian Conservation Foundation (ACF) Dingo Policy Statement site interbreeding with wild or domestic dogs as being the major threat to their species.

KANGAROOS?
I'm sure the vast majority of people that use or eat animal products don't wish for that animal to have suffered in death. Those images of joeys being killed - make me sick. They are barbaric and awful. However I've heard that eating kangaroo meat is much more sustainable compared to other livestock. According to this Burke's Backyard Fact Sheet on Kangaroo Meat,(I know) Tim Flannery (then) biological scientist at the Australian Museum says:
  • It costs the Australian environment nothing to produce kangaroo meat. In comparison, seven kilograms of soil are used to produce one kilogram of wheat.
  • Farming wild animals is less cruel than raising domesticated animals for meat. Kangaroos do not suffer the stress of live trucking and abattoirs. Instead they live freely in the wild until they are killed instantly by professional shooters.
WHALES?
Australia stopped whaling in 1979. Japan continues to whale for commercial use despite an international ban. I've never tasted it but the Japanese girl towards the end of the video looked like she was trying hard not to spit her whale out (didn't she realise she was on a pro-whaling commercial?).

MEDIA?
This video made me consider how we treat animals in Australia. We see whales being harpooned but kangaroos (and all other animals we eat) happily cruising around. Why? We don't like holding up the mirror do we? Are our killing methods humane?

I just wish the Japanese would understand that it's not just Australia but the entire global community's wish to protect whales from extinction.

I'd like to give a big shout out to the activists on the high seas working or volunteering for Greenpeace and the Sea Shepards. Stay safe! I hope you put aside your differences and support each other out there to defeat a common enemy.

Take Action: The ACF is concerned that in most States/Territories, the dingo is classified as a noxious animal, pest or vermin species and that this status requires its destruction. Write to your State Government to get this changed!

Adam Valvasori - Not a Sex in The City fan

18 December 2007

Human Rights Watch - Open Letter to our PM
















Photo: sunrise.seven

Copy & pasted in it's entirety from the Human Rights Watch website...









December 17, 2007

The Hon Kevin Rudd MP
Prime Minister
Parliament House
CANBERRA ACT 2600

Re: Australian foreign policy with regard to Burma, China, Indonesia, and Papua New Guinea and Australian domestic policy on counter-terrorism, refugees, indigenous Australians, and same-sex relationships

Dear Prime Minister Rudd:

Congratulations on your recent election as Prime Minister of Australia.

Human Rights Watch is a nongovernmental organization based in New York that monitors and reports on international human rights, refugee, and humanitarian law issues in more than 70 countries around the world.

We write to you outlining key areas of foreign and domestic policy where we believe that Australia can and should do more to promote and protect human rights. On foreign policy, Australia is a significant political actor and donor in the Asia-Pacific region, so your government is well placed to play a leading role in promoting human rights at a regional and international level. Over the past decade, the Australian government was notably absent or obstructionist in such efforts. The significant international attention paid to your signing of the Kyoto Protocol and your statement at the Bali conference on climate change shows the clout Australia has and the ways in which it can be put to good use.

Any promotion of human rights, of course, begins at home. Your government has an opportunity to distinguish itself on domestic issues by reversing some of the previous government’s policies that undermined basic rights in areas such as refugees, indigenous Australians, counter-terrorism, and discrimination against same-sex couples.

Australian foreign policy

Burma
Your new government should redouble efforts to pressure the brutal military government in Burma, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), to respect human rights and begin a genuine transition to civilian rule. The brutality of the crackdown on peaceful protestors, monks, and nuns in September 2007 must not be forgotten. Human Rights Watch welcomes efforts by the Australian government to curtail the financial power of the SPDC, its leadership, senior officials, and their financial supporters through Reserve Bank restrictions on money transfers. We also welcome the decision to deny the appointment of a former Burmese army officer to the post of Burmese ambassador to Australia. We call on your government to pursue other measures which will continue to pressure the SPDC to reform, including:

  • Lead efforts in the United Nations to impose an arms embargo on Burma, particularly arms transfers that directly assist continued military rule and further military abuses against civilians;
  • Lead efforts in the UN Human Rights Council to institute a commission of inquiry into human rights violations in Burma;
  • Lead efforts to interdict financial transactions through regional networks which directly assist the military leadership and the army to stay in power;
  • Impose targeted sanctions on imports, exports, and new investment in sectors of Burma’s economy that substantially benefit the military and/or are associated with serious human rights abuses. These include the petroleum (oil and gas), mining (gems, metals, minerals), and logging (logs and timber) sectors, as well as hydropower and other major infrastructure projects;
  • Institute monitoring of Australian business investment in Burma, particularly energy companies, to ensure that human rights violations are not perpetrated as a result of their business presence and that profits do not flow directly to the SPDC and military.

China
For more than 20 years, Human Rights Watch has investigated and documented extensive human rights violations in China. These include violations of freedom of religion, freedom of expression and labor rights, media and internet censorship, and forced evictions of people from their homes. As a fluent Mandarin speaker with a longstanding interest in human rights in China, you surely understand the severity of the current situation there. Under your leadership, we expect Australia to play a major role in raising human rights concerns with China’s senior leadership in Beijing. The strong trade relationship between Australia and China, which subordinated human rights concerns in the last government, should instead be an avenue to raise such concerns, as will be the period before the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games. As a matter of priority, we urge you to publicly as well as privately raise the following concerns with Chinese officials at the earliest opportunity and call on the Chinese government to:

  • Ensure media freedom by enforcing the temporary regulations providing greater freedoms for foreign journalists put in effect in the run-up to the Olympics, so that foreign journalists do not face harassment, intimidation, or detention, extending these rights to Chinese journalists, and making the “temporary” regulations a permanent component of Chinese law;
  • End unlawful forced evictions carried out in preparations for the Olympics and ensure all evictions are carried out in line with legal requirements regarding adequate notice, compensation and access to new housing;
  • Ensure implementation of the labor law so that all Chinese workers receive their legally mandated pay and benefits, including accident and health insurance, paid overtime, days off, and a healthy and safe work environment;
  • End restrictions on Chinese workers’ freedom of association and assembly by allowing workers to form independent trade unions outside of the government’s official All China Federation of Trade Unions.

Indonesia
Australia’s military links with Indonesia’s special forces, Kopassus, are of serious concern given Kopassus’ long history of human rights abuses in East Timor, Aceh, and Papua. We welcome your comments, made in 2003 as Opposition Foreign Affairs Spokesperson, against the decision by the Australian government to resume links with Kopassus.

You have talked about the need to expand Australia's counter-terrorism cooperation with Indonesia. In doing so, you should recognize that essential efforts to reform the Indonesian military to make it more accountable have stalled. For example, a 2004 law (Law No. 34/2004) mandated an end to the military’s involvement in business, and set a five-year deadline, until 2009, for the Indonesian government to take control of all the businesses the military owns or controls. Yet a draft government decree selectively defines “military business” to cover only a few companies and ignores business activity carried out by military foundations and cooperatives, gutting the reform process before it has truly begun. Meanwhile, military profit-making continues. In May 2007, Indonesian marines in east Java killed four villagers, including a pregnant woman and a three-year old, in a land dispute tied to the Navy’s local business interests.

This is a crucial test of military reform in Indonesia, but much remains to be done to turn the promise of the 2004 law into real change.

We call on your government to:

  • Formally end the military relationship with Kopassus and cease any future planned joint training exercises between Australia’s Special Air Service and Kopassus Unit 81;
  • Press the Indonesian authorities to act quickly and decisively to eliminate all military business activity, without exception.

Papua New Guinea
Human Rights Watch welcomes the strong commitment of Australia to sustainable development in Papua New Guinea and to address the country’s rapid increase in HIV/AIDS. Recent research by Human Rights Watch shows that police violence in Papua New Guinea is systemic and widespread, particularly against vulnerable populations such as children, sex workers, and men who have sex with men. This violence has a significant negative impact on the development of a functioning justice system and on the response to the country's rampant HIV/AIDS epidemic.

As the largest donor of foreign aid to Papua New Guinea and given the central role that Australia has played in training and developing the Royal Papua New Guinea Constabulary, the Australian government should be more proactive in addressing widespread police violence. To this end, it should:

  • Express concern at the highest level to the Papua New Guinea government over police violence, including torture, rape and excessive force, against vulnerable populations such as children, sex workers, and men who have sex with men;
  • Call on the government of Papua New Guinea to ensure that police treatment of all citizens conforms to international human rights standards;
  • Ensure that mechanisms, both internal and external to the Papua New Guinea police services, are instituted that hold police accountable for any violence committed;
  • Assist local human rights groups and other nongovernmental organizations to develop effective independent monitoring of police violence and provide services and support to victims of any such violence;
  • Support a human rights based approach to HIV/AIDS, which adequately supports and empowers vulnerable populations such as young people, sex workers, and men who have sex with men.

Domestic issues

Counter-terrorism
Australia should amend its counterterrorism legislation to bring it into compliance with international human rights standards. The case of Dr. Mohammed Haneef, an Indian citizen who was detained without charge for almost two weeks in July 2007 under the 2005 Anti-Terrorism Act (he was then charged, but the charges were dropped), highlights the need to revisit Australia's approach to counter-terrorism. In order to combat terrorism more effectively, the government should reaffirm its commitment to human rights principles.

Human Rights Watch recommends that Australia reform the Anti-Terrorism Act of 2005 in the following ways:

  • Revise control orders procedures to ensure that individuals have access to the information submitted to the courts for the purpose of securing control orders, that control orders are limited in time, and that they do not effectively constitute house arrest. Imposing house arrest through control orders is tantamount to meting out criminal punishment without trial, violating the fundamental right to due process;
  • Amend the law’s overbroad provisions on sedition to avoid infringing the right to freedom of expression;
  • Modify preventive detention procedures to allow detainees to promptly inform their family members and legal counsel that they are being detained and ensure their communications with lawyers are not monitored by the police;
  • In line with the December 2006 report of the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism on Australia, narrow the law’s definition of “terrorist act,” so that it covers only conduct carried out with the intention of causing death or serious bodily injury, or the taking of hostages.

Refugees
Human Rights Watch welcomes the pledge by the Labor Party to end the "Pacific Solution" policy by closing the Nauru and Manus Island processing and detention facilities and to replace the temporary protection visa scheme. We are pleased to note that your government already granted political asylum to seven Burmese refugees who spent more than a year on Nauru Island, and we see this as a very positive sign of your intention to restore Australia’s reputation as a country that provides refuge to the persecuted.

In order to ensure that Australia's refugee policy respects human rights and meets international obligations, we call on your government to:

  • Close the Nauru and Manus Island facilities and offer asylum in Australia to any of the 89 people found to be refugees;
  • End the policy and practice of mandatory detention of asylum seekers. Introduce community-based supervision for people whose refugee application is pending, with detention used only as a last resort where there is a compelling security risk;
  • End the practice of excluding parts of Australian territory from the Australian migration zone through “territorial excision,” which dictates that asylum seekers processed in excised places such as Christmas Island do not enjoy the same legal rights as those processed on mainland Australia. All asylum seekers under Australian jurisdiction should be able to file a claim for asylum and have full access to legal assistance, an independent appeal process, work permits, and community support;
  • Not implement the agreement with the United States to “swap refugees” between Nauru Island and Guantánamo Bay;
  • Replace the temporary visa protection scheme with a system that accords the same protection to all recognized refugees regardless of their manner of entry into the country.

Indigenous Australians
The quality of life for most indigenous Australians remains unacceptably low, with a 17-year gap in life expectancy between indigenous and non-indigenous Australians, an infant mortality rate that is almost three times higher than the general Australian population, and rates of death from treatable and preventable conditions such as diabetes and respiratory illness ranging from three times to eight times higher than for non-Indigenous Australians. Although they live in one of the world's wealthiest countries, most indigenous Australians do not have access to adequate health care, housing, food or water. Human Rights Watch welcomes your commitment to close the gap in life expectancy, and to formally apologize to indigenous Australians for the Stolen Generation of indigenous Australian children. We call on your government to act immediately to:

  • Make the existing Northern Territory National Emergency Response, designed to address child abuse and social breakdown in rural indigenous communities, subject to the Racial Discrimination Act 1975. All government action taken should be consistent with the fundamental right to racial equality;
  • Ensure, in deciding the future of the Northern Territory National Emergency Response, that indigenous Australians are regularly consulted and play a central, formal role in addressing child abuse and social breakdown in their communities.

Discrimination against same-sex couples
Australia was at one time at the forefront of international efforts to recognize the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) citizens. Over the past decade its record on this issue has fallen behind many other countries. The lack of legal recognition of same-sex relationships under federal law means that these Australians and their children face disadvantage and exclusion on a daily basis. We welcome the commitment by the new government to tackle this discrimination by implementing the recommendations of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission's (HREOC) report, "Same-Sex: Same Entitlements." We call on the new government to remove all discrimination against same-sex couples by:

  • Enacting legislation as a first-term priority that implements the recommendations of the HREOC report, so that same-sex couples and their children have equal access to benefits and entitlements in areas such as public sector superannuation, the Medicare and Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme Safety Nets, income tax, and child support;
  • Providing for effective educational programs to ensure that all those affected by the HREOC reforms are aware of the changes, particularly Commonwealth employees and agents who will be responsible for administering the new laws;
  • Introducing federal anti-discrimination legislation that prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity;
  • Amending the Marriage Act 1961 so that civil marriage in Australia is available to any two persons, regardless of their gender.

We thank you for your attention to these issues, and hope that your recent election will mark a turning point for Australia’s record on human rights, both domestically and abroad. We look forward to a constructive relationship with your government.

Sincerely,


Kenneth Roth
Executive Director


Cc:
The Hon Stephen Smith, MP - Minister for Foreign Affairs
The Hon Robert McClelland, MP - Attorney-General
Senator the Hon Chris Evans - Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
The Hon Jenny Macklin, MP - Minister for Indigenous Affairs
The Hon Bob McMullan, MP - Parliamentary Secretary for International Development Assistance
Michael Lye - Social Policy Advisor to the Prime Minister

13 December 2007

Australia Lacks Courage on Climate Change



























Photo: Oxfam. Bangladesh: Shahanara (45) stood in flood water near the camp she has been staying at for five months since her house was destroyed in the floods in the village of Puteakhal.


It feels like we were in the global-political good books for all of one week. Didn't it feel great?! Our new Government came out of the stalls sprinting; signing the Kyoto protocol and our PM personally attending the Climate Change Conference in Bali. Things were really starting to happen.

I hope you enjoyed our brief time in the sun because we're back on the dark side again. Yep, together with the USA (no surprise there), Japan and Canada (!) we are refusing to sign up with the rest of the world for a global emissions cut of between 25 and 40 per cent by 2020 (at 1990 levels).

To recap this is perhaps the greatest humanitarian crisis the world has ever seen and people are still protecting their environmentally unfriendly industries despite:
  1. The IPCC and other studies point to clear-cut ecological and social dangers above three degrees Fahrenheit of additional warming.
  2. The only way to avoid that threshold, the scientists said, is to cut global greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2050 from their levels in 1990.
  3. And the only hope of doing that lay in starting now, they said.


Sometimes all the numbers are hard to take in but think about the humanitarian angle. According to Oxfam, poverty will deepen unless we tackle climate change – immediately. It’s already hitting millions of vulnerable people in developing countries – where drought, flooding, hunger and disease are becoming more common than ever.

Oxfam sees the impact extreme and unpredictable weather is having on people’s homes and livelihoods in poor communities all over the world. Poor people will simply get poorer unless something is done, fast.

What can you do?
  • If Avaaz collects 100,000 electronic signatures it's going to publish a full-page ad in the Jakarta Post and deliver them directly to country delegates to stiffen their nerve against any bad compromise. Add your name to the campaign now!

Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

03 December 2007

Bali Climate Change Conference

Image: Associated Press

The United Nations Climate Change Conference 2007 will start in Bali today. I wonder how Indonesia, the third-largest greenhouse gas emitter (thanks to logging Borneo to make way for palm-oil plantations), gets to host this thing. Anyway, it’s on and it’s a crucial opportunity for Australia to finally join the global community in the leadership and action needed to avoid dangerous climate change.

Why’s climate change such an important issue again?

If global average temperatures go above two degrees here in Australia our agriculture and tourism sectors will be badly hit. We'll face more severe bushfires, droughts, and water shortages. There'll be more disease risk and heat stress, costly damage to infrastructure and low lying housing, and even put the Great Barrier Reef at high risk.

For more nightmares read the WWF’s Dangerous Aspirations: Beyond 3 Degrees Warming report.

What is this Bali Conference all about?
  1. This year’s scientific report from the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has made clear beyond doubt that climate change is a reality and can seriously harm the future development of our economies, societies and eco-systems worldwide.

  2. Immediate action is needed to be able to prevent the most severe impacts.

  3. Since climate change is a global issue, tackling climate change and its impacts can only be successfully coordinated at the international level. The UN Framework on Climate Change presents the appropriate forum to do this. It has been expanded by the Kyoto Protocol which includes emission reduction commitments for developed countries over the period 2008–2012.

  4. A new international climate change deal must be put in place in time to ensure that necessary action is undertaken immediately after 2012 when the current phase of the Kyoto Protocol ends. Therefore, comprehensive negotiations on a new climate deal need to begin without further delay. At the Bali Conference, Parties are expected to agree to the launch of this process.

What can the Bali conference deliver? (and what not)

The main goal of the Bali Conference is to deliver this necessary breakthrough and get negotiations going on a new international climate change agreement. The Bali Conference will not deliver a fully negotiated and agreed climate deal but is aimed to set the necessary wheels in motion. If you’re into the machinations of international climate change bureaucracy you can watch the webcast of the plenary sessions and press conferences.

We voted in a new greener* Government what can we do now?

Stay together - stay focused! Coincidentally I had a great meeting with the ACF today and they had some ideas for The Body Shop staff, customers and you out there, whoever you are, reading this blog who want to get active with like-minded people passionate about climate change:


Adam Valvasori - Values Manager


*we hope

19 November 2007

Japanese whalers hunt humpbacks


A humpback whale off Port Macquarie, NSW. Photo: iansand

We (humans!!!) decimated the population of whales including humpback whales during the late 1950s a