Greta Thunberg and children's group hit back at attempt to throw out climate case
Source: The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/may/05/greta-thunberg-and-childrens-group-hit-back-at-attempt-to-throw-out-climate-case#img-1
Greta Thunberg and a group of other children have pushed forward their legal complaint at the UN against countries they accuse of endangering childrens wellbeing through the climate crisis, despite attempts to have it thrown out.
The 16 children, including the Swedish environmental activist, lodged a legal case with the UN committee on the rights of the child against Argentina, Brazil, France, Germany and Turkey last September.
They alleged that the countries which are legally obliged to protect children under the UN convention on the rights of the child breached those obligations by failing to protect them from the direct, imminent and foreseeable risk to their health and wellbeing posed by the climate crisis.
Three countries Brazil, France and Germany have replied to the petition, saying it should not be admissible by the committee.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/may/05/greta-thunberg-and-childrens-group-hit-back-at-attempt-to-throw-out-climate-case
-snip-
The lawsuit joins a growing number of attempts to bring climate cases to court, alleging that government or businesses have flouted the law or failed in their international obligations. One of the most successful has been in the Netherlands, in the Urgenda case, in which judges found the government must change its policies to tackle emissions and the climate crisis.
In the UK, campaigners brought a successful legal challenge that found the government was wrong to allow the expansion of Heathrow airport without taking into account its obligations under the Paris agreement. The ruling will have implications for other government plans likely to raise emissions, such as road-building schemes.
More than 1,300 legal actions have been brought around the world to try to force governments to confront the climate crisis. More than 1,000 are in the US; the highest profile case there, the Juliana case, was dismissed by judges earlier this year. There are similar cases ongoing in 28 countries including Ireland, Australia, Spain and New Zealand.
ancianita
(36,160 posts)Cherry picking which humans have standing and which don't. Disgusting. Uncivilized.
Barbarism under capitalism's legalese that holds that children are legal property.
virgogal
(10,178 posts)SheltieLover
(57,073 posts)JudyM
(29,294 posts)(from the cited article in the OP)
In response to the objections raised by Brazil, France and Germany, the children said they had been directly and foreseeably injured by the greenhouse gas emissions that those governments had allowed to change the climate.
They have submitted new scientific research on how the countries are failing in their obligations, and said it would be futile to argue their case in separate domestic lawsuits in each country, as that would not provide the type of far-reaching international relief needed to reverse climate change.
The world is rooting for you, Greta!