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Global Justice Leicester and Leicestershire

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Event

Council pension funds invest in fossil fuels

February 2, 2023 by Leicester & Leicestershire

Do you want our local Councils to stop their pension fund investing in fossil fuel producing companies?

Monday 6th February at 6.30pm – Friends Meeting House, Queen’s Rd, LE2 1WP

Come to a #LeicsDivest get-together – Meet people, share food, have fun & get involved

Find out about the #LeicsDivest at: Climate Action Leicester and Leicestershire

Sign the petition: Invest in solutions to climate, cost of living and energy crises – not fossil fuel companies (actionnetwork.org)

Filed Under: Campaigning, Event

Climate justice demonstration and vigil at Leicester Clock Tower

September 28, 2022 by Leicester & Leicestershire

Friday, September 30th between 5pm and 6pm – Climate justice demonstration and vigil at Leicester Clock Tower. Pakistan is in the news with its catastrophic floods, as is Puerto Rico as a result of the recent hurricane, and there are many other countries where climate change is making a huge impact.

Come to the vigil with your own placard, the flag of a country where you know people are being hit by climate change, or just turn up and use one of our placards. Bring a friend, if possible – the more people who attend, the bigger the impact we make.

Climate vigil at the Clock Tower last year
Climate vigil at the Clock Tower last year

 

Filed Under: Campaigning, Event

Day of Action on Corporate Courts – May 21st

May 13, 2022 by Leicester & Leicestershire

On May 21st the Phoenix in Leicester is showing the film Arica – at 5.30pm (part of Great Big Green Month)

Arica is a documentary about a Swedish mining company who made a deal to dispose of toxic waste in Chile and the case that the community took to court to try and get justice.  The toxic waste had a terrible impact on the health of the small community. This gripping film has been made by film makers Lars Edman and William Johansson.

Join us to watch Arica at the Phoenix cinema in Leicester on Saturday – after the film there is a Question and Answer session.

Global Justice Leicester & Leicestershire is taking a stall to the screening and will explain how Corporate Courts are being used to oppose climate protections. You can find information about Corporate Courts on the Global Justice Now website.

Filed Under: Campaigning, Event

Decolonise vaccines speaker tour: Leicester

March 24, 2022 by Leicester & Leicestershire

When: Tuesday 29th March at 7pm

Where: George Davies Centre, Lecture Theatre 1, University Rd, Leicester, LE1 7RH (see on Google maps)

Speakers:

Maurine Murenga, director of Lean on Me Foundation, Kenya

Dr Zainabab Mai-Bornu, politics lecturer, University of Leicester

Simon Brasch, patient leader, Just Treatment

Book your place 

More about the tour

The global response to Covid-19 has been so unequal that some global south activists have called it ‘vaccine apartheid’. While those of us in the UK have been offered third and even fourth doses of the vaccine, across the whole of Africa only 11% are double jabbed. This injustice is rooted in a colonial history that has devalued the lives of people in the global south over centuries. And it is reinforced by global economic rules designed to concentrate wealth and power in the hands of multinational corporations in the global north.

For the pharmaceutical industry, making massive amounts of money for their wealthy shareholders has long been more important than the lives of people in the global south. Twenty years ago, Big Pharma even sued Nelson Mandela’s government when it tried to import cheaper medicines, because South Africa was unable to afford the astronomically-priced HIV drugs it needed during the Aids crisis.

Come along to hear our speakers discuss an alternative, and join our campaign to fight for a decolonised pharmaceutical system.

Filed Under: Campaigning, Event, Speaker meeting

Vacines for Profit or for the People – online briefing on 15th March

March 6, 2022 by Leicester & Leicestershire

The People’s Vaccine: changing the rules to allow countries to manufacture vaccines themselves

Global Justice Nottingham is hosting at an online event on 15th March at 7.30pm. Please join the conversation.

Register on Eventbrite: Vaccines for profit or for the people?

About this event

The Covid-19 pandemic has exposed deep inequities in global health systems, with only 1 in 10 people in low-income countries receiving a single vaccine while the rest of the world rolls out huge booster programmes. Meanwhile, big pharma companies have made record profits from Covid-19 vaccines, even though the bulk of the research behind them came from government funds.

Led by South Africa and India, countries in the global south are demanding an end to big pharma’s monopoly control of vaccine patents. Changes in the rules would help many more countries produce their own vaccines and gain control over their pandemic response. Governments like the UK and EU have stood in the way of this move, while pharma companies continue to lobby against it with all their might.

But the green shoots of an alternative system are growing across the world. In South Africa, scientists have copied Moderna’s vaccine and plan to teach others how to make it. Cuba is sharing the technology for its vaccine and providing it cheaply. And even in the US, a team of researchers has committed to provide its vaccine patent-free and profit-free.

The talk will lay out the case for a more democratic, de-colonised global healthcare system and discuss how we can bring it about.

Filed Under: Campaigning, Event, Speaker meeting

Climate Justice and COP26 Decisions

November 28, 2021 by Leicester & Leicestershire

CLIMATE FINANCE AND DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

This is a summary of issues raised in various online reports and COP 26 decisions – written by Alison Skinner who is a member of Global Justice Leicester and Leicester Friends of the Earth.

We know that  getting climate justice for the nations most affected by climate change who have contributed little or nothings in emissions is a huge priority.   These include Tuvalu and the Marshall Islands threatened by rising sea levels, parts of sub Saharan Africa and the Arctic and the Caribbean.

The pledge from Copenhagen 2009 to provide $100b a year starting  2020-25 has not yet been delivered – figures from 2019 show that poor countries were given $80b  according to the OECD.

COP26 Vigil at Clock Tower in Leicester on 6th November
Global Justice Leicester joined the COP26 Day of Action on 6th November

The two main distinctions are between money for projects aimed at mitigating green house gasses such as developing  alternative energy generation using solar panels, hydro and wind farms etc.and projects designed for adaptation such as early warning systems for extreme weather events, air conditioning to counter extreme heat, resettlement of communities away from coastal areas and changing agricultural practices to crops more resistant to draught. Examples from the November Geographical magazine include creating mangrove seawalls in Indonesia, building amphibious rather than stilted houses in Vietnam and planting salt tolerant crops in Bangladesh.

Both approaches are valid but the key issue for developing countries  is that only about 20% of the $80b funding allocated is for adaptation projects – Global North countries preferring to sell the type of material on which they can make a profit.

Global South countries are lobbying for the financial allocation between these two approaches to be 50:50 rather than the skewed distribution at present.

Another problem is the status of the finance provided. In 2019 71% of the public climate finance took the form of loans rather than grants and this can suck poorer countries into a cycle of debt.

They have to borrow money at punishing rates of interest to repair the effects of hurricanes and cyclones.and if they use their loan to pay for a project that gets destroyed in the extreme next weather event they are left with a debt and no tangible benefit.

Small island states and least developed countries are now lobbying for a new stream of funding for loss and damage in addition to mitigation and adaptation projects. Historically the Global North has been extremely reluctant to buy into this and resists any notion of funding being compensation or restitution.

Antigua, Barbuda and Tuvalu have announced a commission to explore if there might be legal grounds for loss and damage funding from polluting countries. 

COP 26  Decisions

Many developing countries were left very disappointed by the decisions made on issues which were critical for them and it would seem that the conference was particularly a debate between Global North countries about how far they were prepared to go to reduce emissions having accepted to some extent there was some urgency required to keep within 1.5c. Some of the developing country decisions appear to be a holding operation to be considered at another day.  

Climate funding

There were new pledges from US, UK, Germany, Japan and others of climate funding which it is estimated would finally achieve $1billion by at least 2025 or perhaps a little earlier if other funding could be brought in. Some experts are saying that funding in trillions would be more realistic.

There was a recommendation, rather than a requirement, that developed countries should double their collective provision for adaptation projects by 2025, but this would still fall short of the 50:50 provision requested by Global South countries and there was no detail concerning time scales and transparency.

There was a mention of the impact of debt levels carried by poorer countries for the first time but no indication of how this could be reduced. It does provide a marker for future discussion however.

There was some recommendation about making funds available as grants but also recommendations about making cheap loans which still allowed wide discretion on the part of funders.

Jubilee Debt Campaign claims however looking at the small print that some countries may pay their contributions out of their existing aid budget instead of making new money available which is in the spirit of the funding. This could include the UK. 

Loss and Damage Funding

This was a very important issue for front line island nations and others which was effectively sidelined with the promise that a “dialogue on loss and damage would begin next year in Egypt.”

To their great credit Scotland has promised £2m to a special Loss and Damage Fund, managing this way to provide UK money, but circumventing Boris and the Treasury who have made no such pledge. Wallonia – an area of Belgium has also pledged 1m euros.

There will be a huge head of steam on this issue by next year, particularly after another year of global warming induced weather events, so we will wait to see what transpires. 

Indigenous People Support

Five countries including the US and UK and global charities have promised $1.7b to support indigenous people and the conservation of their land. How this gets to the grass roots in an effective way will need scrutiny. 

Deforestation

A group of countries have pledged £14b by 2030 to halt and reverse global deforestation by restoring degraded land, managing wildfires and supporting indigenous people. This has included Brazil’s president who will need detailed supervision on this!

The introduction of annual COPs means we are now in continuous campaigning mode on this issue

which should increase important pressure.

Filed Under: Campaigning, Event

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Primary Sidebar

The next Global Justice Leicester and Leicestershire meeting is on Thursday 4th April at 7.30pm

Contact Us

Please email and we will send an invitation to the group Zoom meeting -
globaljusticeleicester@gmail.com

Links
  • Christians Aware
  • Climate Action Leicester and Leicestershire (CALL)
  • Fairtrade Foundation
  • Friends of the Earth
  • Jubilee Debt Campaign
  • Just Fairtrade
  • Leicester Friends of the Earth
  • The Climate Coalition
  • Via Campesina
  • War on Want

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