Women
raise their voices in three continents
Vast areas of land
where diverse and rich ecosystems predominate are being replaced
with large scale tree plantations in the South. These plantations
–whether eucalyptus, pines, rubber, oil palm or other- are resulting
in serious impacts on local communities, who see their ecosystems
and livelihoods destroyed to make way to industrial tree plantations.
Apart from affecting communities as a whole, they result in specific
and differentiated impacts on women which translate in their disempowerment.
What most people in
Europe are unaware of is that the European Union is a major actor
in the promotion of such plantations in the South, and is therefore
playing a role in disempowering women in the South. While
the EU has signed a number of treaties and conventions and developed
a major body of legislation aimed at achieving gender equality in
the European Union, the issue of gender justice seems to lose its
importance for the EU outside its borders.
The articles below
are the result of three workshops conducted in late 2008 in Papua
New Guinea, Nigeria and Brazil within the framework of a joint project
between Friends of the Earth International and the World Rainforest
Movement.
In the case of Papua
New Guinea the workshop was carried out in collaboration with the
local organization CELCOR/Friends of the Earth-PNG. It refers to
oil palm plantations that are being mainly promoted to feed the
European market with palm oil (used in products such as cosmetics,
soap, vegetable oil and foodstuffs) as well as for the production
of agrofuels.
The second case is
that of Nigeria –organized in collaboration with Environmental Rights
Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria- which is about rubber plantations
established on the lands of a local community by the France-based
Michelin company for producing rubber used in the manufacture of
tyres.
And finally the Brazilian
case –in collaboration with NAT/Friends of the Earth Brazil- is
about eucalyptus plantations set up by three companies -the Swedish-Finnish
Stora Enso, Aracruz Celulose and Votorantim- for producing pulp
for export to Europe for converting it there into paper.
The main aim of this
collaborative effort is to support the struggle of these and many
other women facing similar situations throughout the countries of
the South. At the same, we aim at raising awareness among EU citizens
–women and men- about how their governments are promoting policies
that favour corporate investments in the South and on how those
investments impact on communities in general and on women in particular.
As a result of increased awareness, we hope that EU citizens and
their organizations will join in the effort to create a socially
equitable and environmentally sustainable world –North and South-
where gender justice can become a reality for all. The voices of
Southern women are becoming louder.
The full report is
available at;
http://www.wrm.org.uy/subjects/women/fullreport.pdf
and the summarized version at:
http://www.wrm.org.uy/subjects/women/summaryreport.pdf