Ecuador’s President calls for
“universal survival pact"
EFE Agency
Quito, October 17, 2007
Ecuadorian President Rafael
Correa, at the international
“Latin Climate” meeting today,
called for the assumption of a
“universal survival pact” to fight
climate change and environmental
damage in general.
The Head of State felt that a
change was needed in the concept
of development, because he
considered that the present one is
not sustainable and has seriously
harmed the environment.
"We must not only fight climate
change, but also find another
concept, another notion of
development. What we know today
as development is simply
impossible to universalize; it is
not sustainable,” Correa
emphasized on opening the
International Meeting on Climate
Change in Latin America.
The 44-year-old economist
criticized the world’s consumerism
and, paraphrasing the words of
Bolivian Foreign Minister David
Choquehuanca, maintained that we
must try to live well, rather than
merely seeking to live better.
Speaking at the opening ceremony
of the meeting, held in the Jesuit
Church in Quito’s historic city
center, President Correa lamented
that the global climate has been
“seriously altered.”
After listing several
environmental damages, which he
summarized in a “catalogue of the
earth’s apocalypses,” he asked for
“universal awareness” in order to
defend the environment.
Among the steps needed to cope
with environmental damages,
according to Correa, it is
necessary to curb the “unusual and
arbitrary levels of consumption of
the so-called most developed
countries.”
"We cannot continue to operate
within an economy driven by
competition and rapid gains in the
shortest possible time because it
is behind this mask that the most
serious damage is inflicted on the
environment,” he stressed.
For that reason, he called for
unity through a “universal
survival pact” and after
criticizing the position taken by
certain countries at the recent
United Nations General Assembly,
expressed his hope that the UN
would act more strongly in
defending the environment.
In this connection, the Ecuadorian
President stated that he would
like the UN to present a list of
“the countries that are putting an
end to our planet, of those
environmental terrorists that,
because of their ambition and
exaggerated consumerism, are going
to extinguish life on the planet
earth.”
Correa noted that his government
is advancing a project to refrain
from working the
Ishpingo-Tambococha-Tiputini
oilfield in the Yasuní ecological
reserve in the Amazon in exchange
for international compensation,
which he will wait for until June
2008.
The Head of State lamented the
“globalization of injustice
brought on by global warming, for
it is the poor countries, which
are not responsible for the
tragedy, that are those most
strongly affected by it because do
not have the capacity to deal with
such overwhelming challenges.”
Andean Community (CAN) Secretary
General, Ecuadorian citizen Freddy
Ehlers, revealed that tomorrow
Correa will be given 21 proposals
prepared by Latin American civil
society at the international
meeting, so that he can share them
among his colleagues in the region
for use as a standard at
international meetings.
After his address, Correa was
presented with a white muffler by
a Buddhist “so that he can lead
Latin America to peace.”
Oswaldo Canziani, who, together
with U.S. citizen Al Gore, won the
Nobel Peace Prize for his
environmental denunciations, urged
those attending “to start off by
giving their own resources their
proper value.”
"The division between science and
politics has had tragic results
for Latin America and what we must
do now is to unite the various
groups,” he pointed out in an
interview with EFE, stressing that
it is “necessary for people to
react” and for existing laws to be
enforced.
People "must recognize that the
resources belong to us, --as
Bolivia, for example, has done
with its oil-- not to those who
come and take it away. This is a
critical issue and one that is
difficult because our culture has
been altered by international
interests,” he noted, insisting
that “we must return to our
heritage.”
Canziani maintained that it is
“horrifying” that many Latin
Americans act as “figureheads” for
the interests of developed
countries that take advantage of
the resources of those that are
less developed. EFE