Shame
on Canada! If there is a regime in the Anglophone countries that is
worse than that of John Key, it is Canada's Harper.
Canada
only UN member to pull out of droughts and deserts convention
The
Conservative government is pulling out of a United Nations convention
aimed at fighting droughts and desertification in Africa, making
Canada the only country in the world to leave the agreement.
27
March, 2013
The
withdrawal from the UN Convention to Combat Desertification was
ordered last week by the federal cabinet on the recommendation of
Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, but only made public Wednesday.
Every
UN nation -- a total of 194 countries and the European Union -- is
part of the convention. Canada was one of the first countries to sign
the UNCCD in 1994. Now it is the first to walk away.
The
Sahel region of Africa, once considered a green paradise, has been
taken over by the Sahara Desert.
NDP
Foreign Affairs Critic Paul Dewar says the move risks further
isolating Canada, by indicating that the government acts outside of
‘international norms.’
Sources
told CTV News that the decision was made more than a year ago as part
of the government’s plan to cut the deficit. It was announced to
the affected departments a few months ago and there was little, if
any, consultation, they said.
Meanwhile,
just two weeks ago, Canada attended a high-level meeting about the
issue in Geneva, Switzerland.
At
the Geneva meeting, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada manager Harvey
Hill said it was “critical” that the international committee
address drought.
The
UN secretariat for the convention was not aware of Canada’s
withdrawal, and was only informed through a telephone call from The
Canadian Press.
Baird’s
office forwarded questions about the withdrawal to the Canadian
International Development Agency, but CIDA did not respond to
interview requests.
In
an email statement, a spokesperson for International Co-operation
Minister Julian Fantino said "membership in this convention was
costly for Canadians and showed few results, if any for the
environment."
Fantino’s
office would not say how much money was being saved by withdrawing
from the convention, but documents show that the government committed
to providing around $350,000 a year to the convention.
Fantino
said Canada is focusing tax dollars where they can provide “real
results,” and remains committed to fighting desertification and
drought.
NDP
foreign affairs critic Paul Dewar said the move risks further
isolating Canada, by indicating that the government acts outside of
“international norms.”
Dewar
also questions why the move went unannounced.
“Was
this something they were hoping no one would notice?" Dewar
asked.
Canadian
NGOs told CTV News they don’t understand the move.
“The
biggest impact (made by) this move, for me, is the signal it’s
sending to the world,” Oxfam Canada’s Robert Fox said. “And it
isn’t clear what that signal is.”
Established
in 1994 following the 1992 Rio Earth Summit, the UNCCD aims to fight
increasing desertification and land degradation.
Desertification
is defined by the UN as “the degradation of land in arid, semi-arid
and dry sub-humid areas.” It is caused when dryland ecosystems,
vulnerable to over-exploitation, are used inappropriately.
Increasing
desertification has been pushed to the forefront in recent years, as
droughts in Africa’s Sahel belt in 2012 and East Africa in 2011
pushed millions into poverty and caused severe food crisis.
The
UN says that the UNCCD is the sole legally binding international
agreement that links environment and development to sustainable land
management.
Canada’s
withdrawal comes before a major meeting about the convention in Bonn,
Germany, next month.
Major
stakeholders including scientists, governments and members of civil
society will be heading to the meeting, where the United Nations
Environment Program plans to complete “a comprehensive cost-benefit
analysis of desertification, land degradation and drought.”
The
analysis will be the first ever, the UNEP said.
Canada’s
withdrawal from the convention will likely prompt more criticism of
the Harper government’s handling of environmental issues.
Critics
have already slammed the Conservatives for their track record on the
environment, pointing to the decision to opt out of the Kyoto
Protocol, removing protections from thousands of lakes and streams in
Bill C-45, and the muzzling scientists.
In
a report called “Canada's First Report on Domestic Activities
Relevant to the United Nations Convention to Combat Diversification,”
CIDA said that Canada is affected by desertification because of the
“existence of drylands in the Canadian prairies.”
According
to the CIDA report, the convention requires Canada to address the
issue of desertification in any sustainable development plans and
policies. As well, Canada would be required to report on its progress
in fighting desertification.
During
a May 2008 speech to the United Nations Commission on Sustainable
Development, Canada’s representative said that “Canada has been a
strong supporter” of the UNCCD.
The
text of the prepared speech said that Canada pledged to support the
fight against desertification and drought.
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