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Khalifa
Receives Cannes Honour for Conservation of Environment
Gulf News
03/07/2004.
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Cannes Greater Prize for Environment and Water. Picture: WAM |
His Highness
Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Abu Dhabi Crown Prince and Deputy
Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, has been conferred the
Cannes Greater Prize for Environment and Water.
The award was conferred by the Cannes
International Conference on Environment and Water is in appreciation
of the role Sheikh Khalifa, who is also Chairman of the Environmental
Research and Wildlife Development Agency (Erwda), plays in the
conservation of environment and water.
The jury
elected the Abu Dhabi Crown Prince for the prize by majority of vote.
The prize is instituted by Unesco's Mediterranean Network of Water
Resources, Sustainable Development and Peace awards.
Sheikh Hamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Member of
the Abu Dhabi Executive Council and Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Economic
Department, accepted the prize and a certificate of appreciation on
behalf of Sheikh Khalifa in a ceremony held on Thursday by the
Cannes-based international organisation.
A number of international and French
personalities attended the function. The
Abu Dhabi city
was also awarded the Cannes prize for its positive role in the re-use
of sewage water, landscaping and anti-desertification.
Sheikh Hamed, who returned home yesterday,
attributed success attained by the UAE in the conservation and
development of environment to President His Highness Sheikh Zayed bin
Sultan Al Nahyan and Sheikh Khalifa.
"I'm too proud that such prestigious prizes
were awarded to the UAE, something that mirrors efforts made in the
conservation of water resources, landscaping and
anti-desertification," he told WAM.
He said with the prize,
Abu Dhabi city
has gained international acclaim for its efforts in environment and
water.
Sheikh Hamed earlier briefed the press in the
French principality on the UAE's accomplishments in the field of
environment and water conservation.
Sheikh Hamed also received Bernard Brochand,
Mayor of Cannes, who lauded the relations between the UAE and France.
His Highness Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed
Al Nahyan, Abu Dhabi Crown Prince and Deputy Supreme Commander of the
UAE Armed Forces, has been conferred the Cannes Greater Prize for
Environment and Water.
Insight: Helping conserve UAE's
marine heritage
Gulf News -
02/07/2004
A
children's painting competition was the perfect environment for the
Emirates Diving Association to put across its message - and for
Ibrahim N. Al Zu'bi to tell Gulf News about the role of the
organisation.
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Emirates Diving Association staff
have a role that goes beyond overseeing diving sport in the
U.A.E. ©Gulf News |
Al Zu'bi, director of the association's
environment department, pointed to some of the pictures painted by
children.
"You will notice that all the artwork has a
common theme – pollution," he said.
There were pictures of boats dumping brown
sludge, while another showed sailors throwing bottles, cans and old
boots over the side as a fish pleads for mercy.
"One of our main aims is to make people of
all ages aware of the true costs of marine pollution. Once you make
children aware of the problem, the message gets through to their
family and friends," Al Zu'bi said.
Kenyan Environmentalist Awarded Peace Prize
By Robyn Dixon Times Staff Writer
,09/10/2004
JOHANNESBURG,
South Africa — The joyful music of
ululating African women rang through the offices of Kenya's Green Belt
Movement on Friday after its founder, Wangari
Muta Maathai,
became the first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize.
Dancing and celebrating, the movement's administrator, Nancy
Muthiani, said the award was a message to
African women to never give up. "We are screaming, we are singing, we
are dancing. Everybody is overwhelmed," she said.
Maathai,
a 64-year-old Kenyan environmental activist, also is a member of
Kenya's parliament and deputy environment minister.
Her
mostly female Green Belt Movement has planted about 30 million trees
to halt deforestation in parts of Africa. The campaign has created
thousands of jobs while providing a sustainable source of firewood for
families.
It
is the first time since the prize was established in 1901 that it has
been awarded for efforts to protect the environment. "Peace on Earth
depends on our ability to secure our living environment," the
committee said.
"I
think it's a wonderful recognition," Maathai
said by telephone from Nairobi. "It's a very important message to the
women of Africa because it's recognition of their struggle and
recognition of their resilience and perseverance despite all the
difficulties that they face."
Describing the reaction of her supporters, she said, "They have been
very encouraging and very proud and feeling very good and feeling that
they too have been sharing this prize. They understand how important
and famous this prize is."
Last
year's Peace Prize also was awarded to a woman — Iranian human rights
activist and lawyer Shirin
Ebadi.
Maathai
was an outspoken critic of the corrupt Kenyan regime of Daniel
Arap Moi and
often was in trouble with the authorities.
She
campaigned on issues such as poverty, malnutrition, corruption,
women's low economic status and the lack of media freedom in Kenya
under the former regime. She also has criticized the negative images
of Africa in the Western media and the reluctance of rich countries to
relieve Africa's debt.
Maathai
has notched up many milestones for African women and been awarded
numerous prizes. She reportedly was the first woman in East and
Central Africa to earn a doctorate.
Selected from a record list of 194 nominees, a stunned
Maathai said she had no idea she had a
chance of winning the prize until journalists called her a few hours
before the announcement. She was driving to her parliamentary district
when she heard the news, but continued with the day's task of handing
out ID cards to young people before returning to Nairobi, the capital.
"What we do in the environmental movement is that in trying to protect
the environment we are preventing conflict, because many of the wars
that we know are over natural resources," she said. "This is a way of
ensuring that if the natural resources are
sustainably maintained, there will be less conflict."
The
award, created by Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel as a bequest in
his will, carries a prize of about $1.3 million.
Maathai
studied in Kansas and Pittsburgh in the 1960s and founded the Green
Belt Movement in Kenya in 1977. The movement began as a small nursery
in her backyard, but grew to such strength that it was perceived as a
threat by Moi's government.
She
was arrested several times for her environmental campaigning and once
was beaten to unconsciousness by police.
She
stirred up so much public opposition to a plan in the late 1980s to
build a skyscraper in Nairobi's
Uhuru
Park, the city's main open space, that the government labeled her and
the Green Belt Movement as subversive.
She
was attacked in parliament, with some MPs calling for her movement to
be banned.
But
she won the fight. The
Uhuru
Park project eventually folded because of popular opposition.
In
2002, when the Moi government was voted
out, she was elected to parliament and last year was appointed
assistant minister for the environment, natural resources and
wildlife.
Maathai,
always outspoken and often controversial, recently was quoted in
Kenya's Standard newspaper as calling AIDS (news
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web sites)
a biological weapon developed as part of an evil conspiracy to destroy
black people.
"Do
not be naive. AIDS is not a curse from God to Africans or the black
people. It is a tool to control them designed by some evil-minded
scientists, but we may not know who particularly did," the Aug. 31
article by reporter Amos Kareithi quoted
her as saying at a workshop in Nyeri, in
her district.
The
Nobel Peace Prize committee praised Maathai
as "a source of inspiration for everyone in Africa fighting for
sustainable development, democracy and peace.
"We
believe that Maathai is a strong voice
speaking for the best forces in Africa to promote peace and good
living conditions on that continent," the committee citation said.
Explaining her motives in the phone interview, she said, "I think what
drives me is the commitment that comes from understanding the
importance of the environment and the linkage between the environment
and many of the problems that face us in this part of the world."
She
said she had grown up with a sense of spirituality that helped her
connect with the world around her.
"I
think it's very easy for me to see the sacredness of nature and the
environment and to want to do something about it. It's probably not a
specific religion but it is an inspiration from nature and the
environment."
Other candidates included
the whistle-blowing Russian environmental campaigner, Alexander
Nikitin, charged and acquitted of treason
for exposing nuclear pollution by the Russian navy, and the United
Nations (news
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web sites)'
International Atomic Energy Agency and its director-general, Mohamed
ElBaradei.
Lech
Walesa, Poland's former president and a
Nobel Peace Prize laureate, said he was surprised that the Nobel
committee honored an environmentalist.
"Until now it was great struggle for human rights, for liberation,"
Walesa said on the private TVN 24
television station. "Today, however, …
there is no communism and no apartheid," Walesa
added, so maybe the time had come "to fight for our Earth."
GREEN FUTURE
World Environment Day celebrations
• World Environment Day was established by
the United Nations General Assembly in 1972 to mark the opening of
the Stockholm Conference on Human Environment.
• The aim is to give a human face to
environmental issues; empower people to become active agents of
sustainable and equitable development; promote an understanding that
communities are pivotal to changing attitudes towards environmental
issues; and advocate partnerships to ensure all nations and peoples
enjoy a safer and more prosperous future.
• World Environment Day is a people event
and includes street rallies, bicycle parades, green concerts, essay
competitions and tree planting as well as recycling and clean-up
campaigns.
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