Protestors call on Forum Leaders for coal mine moratorium
Thursday, September 10, 2015 - 19:26
While leaders retreated today for the 46th Pacific Island Forum Leaders meeting in Port Moresby, around 30 Australians walked onto the world’s biggest coal port in Newcastle in support of Pacific Small Island States call for a moratorium on new coal mines.
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'Oku tau faka'amu kotoape ke
'Oku tau faka'amu kotoape ke 'oua na'a uesia 'a Tonga mo e ngaahi 'otumotu 'o e Pasifiki 'ehe ngaahi fakatu'utamaki fakaenatula 'o tatau 'i he kuohili, lolotonga, pea mo e kaha'u na. 'Oku 'ikai ha taha 'i he mamani 'e pule ki he ngaahi fakatu'utamaki ni, ka ko e 'ulungaanga pe ia 'o hono fa'u 'e he 'Otua 'a e mamani (act of God, Mother nature etc ) kuopau ke hoko ia 'i ha feitu'u pe 'e hoko ai, 'i ha fa'ahinga taimi pe, 'i he kuohili, lolotonga, pea mo e kaha'u na. Ko e 'uhinga 'o e polokalama ni ko e 'ilo 'ehe fa'ahinga ko'eni he 'ikai lava ke ta'ofi 'etau ngaue'aki 'etautolu 'a e lolo, 'coal' etc. 'o a'u ki he 'osi 'a mamani. Ko e me'a pe 'oku hoko ko 'enau fai 'a e fakamatala loi ko'eni ke tui kiai 'a mamani kae lava ke fakalao'i mo tukuhau'i mamafa'i 'a e lolo, 'coal' etc ke to'o mei ai hanau 'inasi. Kimu'a 'ia Tupou 1, na'e lotu mo tui fakatevolo 'a Tonga. Ka 'i he hoko mai 'a e Kalisitiane, na'e tapui 'e Tupou 1 'a e lotu fakatevolo, pea haha mo e finematu'a Ha'apai na'a nau kei fai pe 'a e sausau mo e lotu fakatevolo. Talu mei ai mo e lotu faka-Kalisitiane 'a Tonga. Ko'eni, kuo toe ako'i 'etau fanau ki he tui mo e lotu-fakatevolo. 'Oku fiema'u pe ke tau fai ha ngaahi me'a ke 'oua na'a 'uli ai 'a e 'ea, ka 'oku 'ikai ke ne fakatupu 'eia 'a e ngaahi fakatu'utamaki fakaenatula.....SAIA
Me'apango ia koe feinga 'a e
Me'apango ia koe feinga 'a e kau taki he Pasifiki (PICs) moe ngaahi kulupu i Aositelelia ke tau'i e climate change kae lumoluma'i ia mo fakakata'aki ia 'ehe ongo taki ma'olunga 'o Aositelelia: Tony Abbot (PM) mo Peter Dutton (Australian Immigration Minister). Vakai hifo ki he felafoaki 'a e ongo fu'u taki ni:
Pacific Islanders on Friday called upon Australian Immigration Minister Peter Dutton to resign after he was overheard joking about the impact of climate change on their nations. Representatives from the nonprofit 350 Pacific, called for Dutton to apologize and step down over his comments.
"Climate change is a daily reality for us in the Islands and climate inaction from countries such as Australia is only worsening that reality," 350 Pacific Coordinator Koreti Tiumalu said, in a statement.
"We request that Minister Dutton resigns and that Tony Abbott issues an official apology to all Pacific Islanders. We also hope that Australia will offer proper support for and recognition of the impacts that your climate inaction is having upon our culture and out livelihood," Tiumalu added.
Original story:
Australia’s prime minister was overheard joking with the country’s immigration minister about the plight that Pacific nations are facing due to rising sea levels from climate change.
Immigration Minister Peter Dutton was holding a conversation with Prime Minister Tony Abbott ahead of a meeting in Canberra Friday. Discussing the scheduled meeting on Syrian refugees that was running late, Dutton said that it was running to “Cape York time,” to which Abbott replied "we had a bit of that up in Port Moresby," referring to the meeting earlier this week with Pacific Island leaders in Papua New Guinea about climate change, according to the ABC.
Dutton replied, "time doesn't mean anything when you're about to have water lapping at your door."
The two men were then informed that there was a microphone overhead. Dutton later said that the exchange was a “private conversation.”
The pair's exchange, however, has faced criticism from party leaders in the country. Larissa Waters, deputy leader of the Australian Greens party, said, according to the Guardian: “What we’ve seen today is raw contempt for the survival and safety of our Pacific Island neighbors and our own coastal communities. We’re talking about peoples’ lives, and this government is laughing.
“It’s a huge diplomatic blunder that will enrage our Pacific Island neighbours, who have been calling on Australia to save their homes. What an insult for them to now hear the Australian prime minister laughing at the prospect of their homes going underwater.”
Pacific nations' leaders and international groups have repeatedly accused Abbott of ignoring calls for stronger emission limits.
Leaders of countries, including Papua New Guinea and Kiribati, said at the Port Moresby meeting that they were concerned over Australia’s failure to commit to a strong emissions reduction target, warning that rising sea levels from climate change could threaten their countries’ existence.
“We cannot afford to lock in any further fossil fuel emissions. Green-Blue economies must be the way for now and into the future,” they said in the Smaller Island States Leaders’ Port Moresby Declaration on Climate Change, calling for a global moratorium on new coal mines.
The European Commission also said that the E.U. Commissioner for Climate Action and Energy Miguel Arias Cañete had signed sustainable energy agreements with six Pacific countries -- the Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Niue, Palau, Republic of the Marshall Islands and Tonga -- to help them meet their national renewable energy objectives.
A recent report from Oxfam Australia warned that the policies of Australia and New Zealand were "threatening the very survival of some Pacific nations," and called on them to “do the right thing.”
The Port Moresby meeting came a few months ahead of a major climate change summit set to be held in Paris in December, where the world’s nations are set to determine global climate policy in coming years. Australia’s plan to slash emissions levels by at least 26 percent below 2005 levels by 2030 had already been criticized for being the weakest among developed nations, but an August report from Climate Action Tracker found that Australia is on track to increase emissions to 27 percent above 2005 levels by 2030.
Pea koe ha 'ena 'uhinga faka-politikale pe fakataki ki hono fakakata'i pehe'i e climate change, ne tonu pe kena toe sio loloa ange he 'e malava pe ke ha'u e taki hoko ia ko e tama ia ko hono mala'e ia 'oona koe climate change.
Koe me'a lelei foki 'etau
Ko e me'a lelei foki 'etau potalanoa melino ki he ngaahi 'topic' 'oku tau faikehekehe ai hange ko'eni, 'climate change'. Pea 'e vaeua pe 'a mamani ia 'i he 'topic' ko'eni 'o ta'engata, 'a e kakai, pehe ki he kau taki 'o mamani. Ko e polokalama ko'eni 'climate change' ko e toki fa'u mai pe 'e he kau saianisi he senituli kuo toki maliu atu. Ka ko e ngaahi fakatu'utamaki fkenatula ia, na'e talu pe 'ene hoko 'ana 'i he taimi koia na'e ngaohi ai 'e he 'Otua 'a e univeesi pea mo mamani ta'u 'e laui piliona kimu'a. Ko e taki foki ia 'o 'Amelika ni 'oku ne poupou'i fefeka 'e ia 'a e 'climate change', pea 'oku ne pehe 'e ia ko e palopalema fakatu'utamaki lahi taha 'eni 'i mamani he ngaahi 'ahoni. Lolotonga koia 'oku laui kilu (miliona) 'a e kakai, mo e kakai Kalisitiane 'oku fakapoongi mo tutu'u honau 'ulu 'i he 'Middle East, Europe, Africa etc 'i he lolotonga ni. Kuo hake 'uta kau kumi hufanga 'i 'Europe', 'ikai toe lava hano ta'ofi. 'Oku 'makes no sense' ke tau nofo kitautolu 'o fakasio 'a e fakatu'utamaki fakaenatula 'oku 'ikai te tau pule kiai kae tukuange ke hoko 'a e ngaahi fu'u fakapoo ko'eni 'oku ha sino mo hoko 'i mamani he ngaahi 'ahoni. 'Oku 'makes no sense' ke tau pehe ko e 'emissions' 'oku ne fakatupu 'a e ngaahi fakatu'utamaki fakaenatula (rising sea level ), lolotonga koia 'oku 'ikai ha taha 'i mamani 'e pule ki he me'a koia (fakatu'utamaki fkenatula). Me'apango ia ko e 'omai 'a e potalanoa (private) 'a e 'ongo taki ni ke fakangalikovi;i 'aki kinaua. 'Oku 'ikai totonu, he 'oku na potalanoa 'private' pe ki he me'a 'oku na tui ki ai. Ko e polokalama 'climate change', 'oku fepaki ia pea mo e Tohitapu 'a ia 'oku mau tui kiai..........SAIA