Climate change as crime against humanity
If it puts millions of lives at stake, what else should we call it?
Hakan Altinay
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Carelessness alone on the carbon majors’ part will result in the deaths of millions around the globe
24
July, 2016
The
term, in the meantime, has an actual legal definition: the Rome
Statute describes crimes against humanity as widespread acts of
murder, deportation, and other inhumane acts of similar character.
A
vital question which we can no longer avoid is whether a willful
rejection of mitigating climate change constitutes as a crime against
humanity.
Let’s
review the facts: There is not a single Academy of Science around the
world which doubts the reality and the significance of climate
change.
We
know that if we are intent on extracting and burning all hydrocarbons
currently in the ground, the median temperature will increase as much
as 8 degrees centigrade as early as this century.
Nobody
doubts that such a change will cause death and destruction of
millions, and forced displacement of many more, starting with the
poorest in the world.
Given
the stakes, one would assume the greatest contributors to this epic
calamity would be in a rush to eliminate, or at least reduce, their
culpability and fingerprints.
Yet,
we see that Qatar -- with the highest per capita emissions in the
world -- some months ago, submitted their nationally determined plan,
with no numeric targets, to lower their enormous emission levels.
They
demonstrate additional temerity by claiming a developing country
status, while having the highest per capita income in the world,
$150,000 per person.
Or,
take the two largest historical emitters, Chevron and ExxonMobil. No
other entity is more responsible for the stock of GHGs currently in
the atmosphere than these two corporations.
Yet,
Chevron refuses to disclose the climate change research it funds, and
ExxonMobil refuses to take on any numeric target to mitigate or
sequester the emissions for which it is responsible.
Through
acts of commission and omission, Qatar, Chevron, and ExxonMobil will
cause the death and destruction of millions, so in what sense are
they not criminals against humanity?
One
objection may be that these actors are not sadists and are not out to
kill millions. Yet, we need to ask when generic negligence becomes
criminal negligence and criminal recklessness.
If
someone drives a car at 120 km per hour blindfolded, and kills a
dozen people at Times Square, we do not absolve their criminal
responsibility because they did not intend to kill those specific 12
people.
Science
tells us that what Qatar and other carbon majors do will lead to the
deaths of millions, and the displacement of tens of millions.
There
is no doubt that the carbon majors know exactly what they are doing
and the consequences of their actions. If there ever were criminal
gross negligence and recklessness, this is it. At this scale, it can
only have one name: Crimes against humanity.
Another
feature of our cognitive discomfort with calling the acts by Qatar,
Chevron and ExxonMobil as crimes against humanity is that the media
ecosystem which we all inhabit does not provide us with the names,
faces, and stories of probable victims.
Subsistence
farmers in Bangladesh and Niger, fishing communities in Senegal and
Somalia, have not yet cracked the code of garnering the attention of
the global media. Unless they are bearers of contagious viruses or
AK-47s pointed at us, they are free to perish without a blip. Since
they perish without our heed, no crimes, it seems, are committed.
Ordinarily,
we would have expected human rights grandees such as Human Rights
Watch to blow the horn about an impending crime against humanity.
Sadly, climate change does not register at the HRW’s radar either.
Human
Rights Watch did commit a grave error by devoting more attention and
ink to three people which were water boarded and 71 who were abused
at Abu Ghraid, than millions whose lives were destroyed because of an
illegal and illegitimate war, because HRW thinks taking a position on
the legality of a war precludes their ability to review the manner in
which the war is being conducted.
The
verdict of the international public opinion has passed them by on
this issue, and if they fumble the ball on climate change because a
pedantically-narrow rendition of crimes against humanity does not
cover gross negligence and criminal recklessness around climate
change, the costs to their credibility and the credulity of the human
rights paradigm will be greater.
We
should not forget that we got to crimes against humanity because the
world had shared notions of laws of humanity and requirements of
public conscience. We cannot conceive the letter of crime against
humanity treaty in a manner against the requirements of the global
conscience.
The
final hurdle is the fact that carbon majors such as Qatar and
ExxonMobil are not alone. There are several others who are less
responsible than Qatar, but still emit more than their equitable
share of the global carbon budget.
When
the culprits are too numerous, criminal and moral responsibility
becomes less clear.
Victims
ought to have the first say on how to partition responsibility. The
first step has to be for all those in Bangladesh et al -- who have
had nothing to do with creating this global nightmare but has
everything to lose -- to put Qatar et al on notice: Their acts of
omission and commission are tantamount to savagery. They should
either cease and desist, or face the consequences in the court of
global public opinion, and all other competent courts.
If
our current interpretations of the law do not cover a major and
heinous act such the oblivious conduct of the leading climate change
contributors, and if such acts will cause the death and destruction
of -- albeit nameless and faceless -- millions, then it is our
understanding of the law that needs an urgent update.
If
human rights laws and lawyers fail to rise to the occasion, there
will be other meta-narratives seeking to articulate and redress this
grave injustice.
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