Tag: nations

  • Nations negotiate terms of global plastic pollution treaty in Kenya

    Nations negotiate terms of global plastic pollution treaty in Kenya

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    The latest negotiations towards a global treaty to combat plastic pollution opened in Nairobi on Monday, with tensions expected as nations tussle over what should be included in the pact.

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    Some 175 countries agreed last year to conclude by 2024 a UN treaty to address the plastic blighting oceans, floating in the atmosphere, and infiltrating the bodies of animals and humans.

    While there is broad consensus a treaty is needed, there are very different opinions about what should be in it.

    As the talks formally opened, Peru’s Gustavo Meza-Cuadra Velasquez, chair of the forum’s intergovernmental negotiating committee, warned that plastic pollution posed “a direct threat to our environment, human health, and the delicate balance of our planet.”

    “We have the collective power to change this trajectory,” he said.

    Negotiators have met twice already but the November 13-19 talks are the first to consider a draft text of the treaty published in September and the policy options it contains.

    Around 60 so-called “high ambition” nations have called for binding rules to reduce the use and production of plastic, which is made from fossil fuels, a measure supported by many environment groups.

    It is not a position shared by many plastic-producing economies, including the United States, which have long preferred to focus on recycling, innovation and better waste management.

    The negotiations in Kenya are expected to get heated as the details are hammered out.
    The negotiations in Kenya are expected to get heated as the details are hammered out. © Simon Maina, AFP

    The draft presenting the various ways forward will form the basis for the high-stakes deliberations at the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) headquarters in Nairobi.

    With more than 2,000 delegates registered, and advocates from environmental and plastic groups also in the room, the negotiations are expected to get heated as the details are hammered out.

    Read moreTackling plastic pollution: ‘We can’t recycle our way out of this’

    Hundreds of climate campaigners, waving placards reading “Plastic crisis = climate crisis”, on Saturday marched in Nairobi calling for the talks to focus on cutting the amount of plastic produced.

    Kenyan President William Ruto described plastic pollution as “an existential threat to life, to humanity and everything in between.”

    “To deal with plastic pollution, humanity must change. We must change the way we consume, the way we produce, and how we dispose (of) our waste.”

    Call for urgency

    The meeting to debate the future of plastic comes just before crucial climate talks in the oil-rich United Arab Emirates later this month, where discussions over fossil fuels and their planet-heating emissions are due to dominate the agenda.

    As in the UN negotiations on climate and biodiversity, financing is a key point of tension in the plastic talks.

    Kenyan President William Ruto has described plastic pollution as "an existential threat".
    Kenyan President William Ruto has described plastic pollution as “an existential threat”. © Simon Maina, AFP

    Rich economies have historically polluted more — and for years exported trash for recycling to poorer nations, where it often winds up in the environment.

    Some developing nations are concerned about rules that might place too great a burden on their economies.

    Environment groups say the strength of the treaty depends on whether governments commit to capping and phasing down plastic production.

    Read moreTen statistics on global plastic addiction and its consequences

    Plastic production has doubled in 20 years and in 2019, a total of 460 million tonnes of the stuff was made, according to the OECD.

    Despite growing awareness of the problem surrounding plastic, on current trends, production could triple again by 2060 without action.

    Around two-thirds of plastic waste is discarded after being used only once or a few times, and less than 10 percent is recycled, with millions of tonnes dumped in the environment or improperly burned.

    Some developing nations are concerned about rules that might place too great a burden on their economies.
    Some developing nations are concerned about rules that might place too great a burden on their economies. © Chaideer Mahyuddin, AFP

    The Nairobi meeting is the third of five sessions in a fast-tracked process aiming to conclude negotiations next year so the treaty can be adopted by mid-2025.

    Campaigners say delegates in Nairobi must make considerable headway to remain on course and warned against time-consuming debates over procedural matters that caused friction at the last talks in Paris in June.

    (AFP)

     

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  • Middle East conflict takes diplomatic toll on African nations

    Middle East conflict takes diplomatic toll on African nations

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    Two African countries that are strong supporters of the Palestinian people are facing turmoil amid the ongoing violence between Israel and Hamas. South Africa’s diplomatic links with Israel have soured following what it called the “unfortunate conduct” of the Israeli ambassador – while Tunisian lawmakers are at odds with the president over a bill criminalising ties with Israel.

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    South Africa described the targeted killings of civilians in Gaza by the Israeli armed forces as war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide – three of the crimes within the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court (ICC).

    “These are not indisciminate attacks by Israel … We’ve seen hospitals, schools, bakeries being targeted,” said Zane Dangor, the director-general of South Africa’s Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO).

    “It’s all meant to make the lives of the people in Gaza impossible.”

    On Thursday 9 November, Dangor met with Israel’s ambassador to South Africa, Eliav Belotsercovsky, who faced a formal reprimand because of “continuing disparaging remarks … about those who are opposing the atrocities and the genocide of the Israeli government”.

    Dangor told Belotsercovsky that South Africa would ask the ICC to speed up its investigations into the situation in the Palestinian territories, and to include the most recent atrocities in the scope of its investigations.

    “A genocide under the watch of the international community cannot be tolerated,” said Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, the Minister in the Presidency.

    “Another holocaust in the history of humankind is not acceptable.”

    Appeal for ceasefire

    South Africa once again called for an immediate comprehensive ceasefire, the opening of humanitarian corridors, and the release of all civilian hostages.

    “If Israel commits to a ceasefire, not a pause, then we can talk about restoring peace and resuming negotiations,” Dangor told RFI.

    DIRCO acted under instructions from South Africa’s cabinet to withdraw its diplomatic staff from Tel Aviv and issue a formal reprimand to the Israeli ambassador.

    “We felt it important that we should call the ambassador in, and really he should desist from making the kinds of statements he’s making, without having had any discussion with senior members of the government of South Africa,” said Naledi Pandor, the country’s Minister of International Relations.

    Pandor said there seems to be a “strange practice among some ambassadors in South Africa that they can just say what they like”.

    She was referring to comments made by the United States ambassador who said South Africa had supplied arms to Russia to help its ally in the Ukraine war.

    On Monday 6 November, South Africa recalled all its diplomats from the embassy in Tel Aviv, “for consultation”.

    Back in 2018, South Africa withdrew its ambassador from Israel in response to the Israeli government’s ongoing expansion of its settler policy. Since 2019, the government has decided not to replace the ambassador. It has since maintained a small team of lower level diplomats in a liaison office.

    Last month, Nomvula Mokonyane, deputy secretary general of the ruling African National Congress, called for a boycott of Israeli imports in reaction to Israel’s armed retaliation in Gaza.

    Mokonyane stressed that the ANC’s criticism of what it calls an “apartheid regime”, imposed by the Israeli government against the Palestinians does not mean that the ANC is “anti Jews”.

    Standoff in Tunisia

    Meanwhile, in Tunisia, the Israeli-Hamas conflict has created a rift between MPs and President Kais Saied who last week scrapped a bill criminalising the normalisation of relations with Israel.

    Saied has long maintained that normalising relations with Israel would be “akin to high treason”.

    The bill called for jail sentences for any person of Tunisian nationality who maintained relations with “the Zionist entity […] which calls itself Israel”.

    It was under discussion at the national assembly when the president performed a U-turn, and decided it would not be in Tunisia’s international interests.

    Saied added that Tunisia’s intention was to free the Palestinian people rather than criminalise rapport with Tel Aviv.

    One of Saied’s staunch allies, Mahmoud ben Mabrouk, called for a referendum on the issue.

    The MPs said that they intend to examine the bill at a later date and will not deal with any other topic until this bill is put to vote.

    This marked the first time members of the national assembly – whose powers have been greatly reduced since Saied grabbed control of the country in 2021 – have dared show defiance against the president, a year out from general elections.

    If Saied rejects the bill, he is likely to severe ties with most of the MPs; if he approves it, he will put Tunisia in a difficult position on the international scene.



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