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The Inuit Case
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| According to the
Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change, the impacts described on the
'Artic Impacts' page may
only be a foretaste of the destructive effects of climate change that will
be inflicted on the Arctic peoples. If global warming continues unchecked
it threatens to destroy their culture, render their land uninhabitable,
and rob them of their means of subsistence. The harm caused to their way
of life, largely by the United States, as biggest global contributor of
carbon dioxide emissions, is already serious enough so as to violate some
fundamental internationally recognised human rights. International human
rights, as recognised in the American
Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man, that are clearly
being undermined include: the right to life (Art. I), the right to residence
and movement (Art.VIII), the right to inviolability of the home (IX), the
right to preservation of health and to well-being (Art. XI), the rights
to benefits of culture (Art. XIII), and the right to work and to fair renumeration
(Art. XIV).
In December 2005, Ms. Sheila Watt-Cloutier, the elected Chair of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference (ICC), announced that a petition had been filed with the Washington, DC-based Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), one of two bodies within the Organization of American States authorized to oversee the operation of the OAS Inter-American Human Rights System. The petition sought relief from violations of the human rights of Inuit resulting from global warming caused by greenhouse gas emissions from the United States. (The announcement regarding the filing is available here). The IACHR rejected the petition without prejudice on November 16, 2006. In January 2007, the ICC requested a hearing with the IAHCR during the latter organization's February 26 - March 9 session, in order to assist the Commission in exploring and better understanding the relationship between global warming and human rights. On February 1, 2007, the IACHR invited representatives of CIEL, EarthJustice, and the ICC to provide testimony on the links between climate change and human rights. The results of this testimony by Ms. Watt-Cloutier, CIELSenior Attorney Donald Goldberg, and EarthJustice Managing Attorney Martin Wagner are available at the announcement Global Warming and Human Rights Gets a Hearing on the World Stage.
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