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Wednesday 26 May 2010

Helping to turn Copenhagen into Hopenhagen- The NGOs’ mobilization

Céline Tougeron (Brussels)This article aims to provide information about the civil society’s communication and actions before and during the United Nations Climate Change Conference that took place in December 2009 in the Danish capital of Copenhagen. It will not deal with their participation in working groups before the summit or during the negotiation phase, but only with those actions led by environmental NGOs to increase public awareness.
On the way to Copenhagen
Loyal to the motto "Unity is strength", scores of environmental NGOs forgot their diverging opinions and joined their forces using a large panel of tools or slogans. Many of us probably received Facebook invitations to participate in events or to support various causes as they launched a large amount of campaigns via social networks, online votes and petitions. 
Strategic names were used in order to increase their visibility (for instance, the French Ultimatum coalition chose www.copenhague-2009.com as web address so that they went on the top of search engines). A large video mobilization mainly via Youtube was launched, involving political personalities, scientists, actors and even children to simplify the message. Some examples are the Tck Tck Tck campaign launched by Kofi Annan during the Global Humanitarian Forum; the cover version of  Midnight Oil Beds are burning sang by 60 artists which was a hit in Copenhagen with its simple lyrics; satirical campaigns such as the  Who pays the bill? German video; the WWF campaign and the Act Now video. They also used more common instruments such as concerts, strikes or flashmobs in main cities around the world and led actions like Greenpeace’s intrusion into the French Assemblée Nationale or the European Council.
Even if it is difficult to assess the real impact of these campaigns, the large amount of material provided gave a chance to reach and sensitize many citizens with the issue at stake: Global Warming. The media coverage of this last action was finally emphasized by chartering a train from Tokyo to Copenhagen where passengers attended conferences and had a chance to network.
And once there?
No less than 15,000 members of NGOs, 5,000 journalists or 500 bloggers were counted in the city, which really lived to the beat of the conference. All over the place, exhibitions, demonstrations and marches proliferated… almost to the point asphyxiation.
A global civil society counterpart to the UN conference called Klimaforum 2009 was also organized in the city center [1]. The concept initially launched by 4 young people from Copenhagen was attended by about 50,000 people (citizens, environmental NGOs, grassroots movements and organizations from all over the world).
Equating a base camp for numerous participants who tried to stand up and be counted, its organization was notable: no registration process, no security checks and still high level debates or conferences led alternatively by Nobel Prices such as Wangari Maathai (a Kenyan environmental and political activist), experts (such as Vandana Shiva about the green revolution in India), political personalities and NGOs. Its diversity a simplicity contrasted with the official summit outside the city!
Among various demonstrations organized in Copenhagen, a large march on December 12th calling for a global agreement on climate gathered between 30,000 and 100,000 people from all around the world walking from the Klimatforum place to the Bella Center. I was really impressed by the good mood and the energy exhibited during that cold Danish afternoon.
Despite expectations that the Copenhagen summit would produce a legally binding treaty, the Copenhagen Accord reached at the end is not legally enforceable. After December's euphoria, the challenge for these NGOs is now to keep the public (not only those already convinced) sensitive to the issue of climate change and to prepare the following meetings in Bonn and Mexico in 2010.
Notes:
[1] Evaluation report Klimaforum 2009 – People’s climate forum.
Images: Entrance to the underground in the center of Copenhagen (up), demonstration on the morning of saturday 12th (middle) and arrival at the Bella Centre (down) (Céline Tougeron).

Sunday 9 May 2010

Wave of emotion after the Polish presidential plane crash in Smolensk kills national leadership



Eva Bertrand (Brussels)
· Facts. On the 10th of April, while Polish President Lech Kaczynski and a large part of Polish elite were going to Russia in order to attend the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre, their plane crashes. None of the 96 passengers survive. The causes of the accident are likely to be multiple : bad meteorological conditions, a mechanical problem, an old plane Tupolev Tu-154 that the Polish government should have replaced, a pilot who ignored warnings not to attempt the landing. A judiciary investigation led by the Russian and Polish services is in progress in order to understand what happened. 
· A political and military elite beheaded. Besides President Lech Kaczynski, the list of victims includes his wife, Maria, and a number of senior officials, political and historical Polish figures, such as the Army Chief of Staff Gen Franciszek Gagor, Central Bank Governor Slawomir Skrzypek and Deputy Foreign Minister Andrzej Kremer. The last Polish president in exile, Ryszard Kaczorowski, was also on board, together with Anna Walentynowicz, former prominent member of the trade union Solidarity.
 · Katyn. This powerful Polish delegation was flying in from Warsaw to commemorate the Katyn massacre of thousands of Poles officers by Soviet forces during WWII.  In the Spring of 1940, Soviet forces, following orders given by Stalin, killed a large part of the Polish elite in the Katyn Forest in order to weaken and control their enemy neighbor. The number of victims was estimated at about 22,000 including officers, doctors, professors, public servants, lawyers and priests. It was a tragedy for the Polish intelligentsia. For more than 40 years, the Soviet regime has refused to admit its responsibility for the massacre, instead accusing Nazi forces of the crime. The commemoration in 2010 was held in order to move on from that political past, yet some observers continue to evoke the accident as a ‘second Katyn tragedy’ in spite of Russian demonstration of solidarity.


· Funerals. The Polish presidential couple was buried on the 18th of April in the Wawel Cathedral, the resting place of Polish kings, during an emotional funeral service marked by solemnity. The choice of such a symbolic place was criticized by some Polish political figures, as was badly felt the absence at the ceremony of many foreign leaders. Ultimately, Polish leaders had to face their sorrow alone, as the block of European airspace caused by a volcanic ash cloud had prevented numerous foreign leaders from attending the funerals. Among the absentees were the President of the United States Barack Obama, the Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel, the Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, the President of France Nicolas Sarkozy, and the King of Spain Juan Carlos. On the contrary, the presence of the Russian President, Dmitry Medvedev, was felt as a strong force of conciliation between Warsaw and Moscow. A day of national mourning was declared in Russia in honor of Polish victims, which is quite outstanding for foreign citizens. According to some observers, not since the attacks on New York on September 11th 2001 has Russia responded with such respect for another country.

Reactions


· Around Europe. Beyond official reactions of top international leaders, the death of Polish President Lech Kaczynski and many other senior Polish figures has provoked a strong emotional wave around Europe. In each country of the Euroforum network the pain has been strong…


· In Poland. About 100,000 people pay their last respects to the body of the Polish president, Lech Kaczynski.


 · In Armenia, members of the government remembered with a minute of silence the Polish President Lech Kaczynski, his wife and other delegation members killed in a presidential plane crash.


· In Azerbaijan, President Ilham Aliyev expressed his condolences to acting President of Poland Bronislaw Komorowski.



· In Belarus, despite the official refusal to declare a national day of mourning in honor of Polish victims, the Belarusian civil society actively expressed its solidarity with Poland. Many people have come to the Polish embassy to lay flowers.

· In France, about 1,000 people attended religious celebrations organized by the Polish embassy. Numerous public figures such as French Minister of Justice, Michele Alliot-Marie, and French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, paid homage to Polish victims.

· In Georgia, President Mikheil Saakashvili called Kaczynski one of his closest friends and many people manifested their sorrow in front of the Polish Embassy.