Yahoo – AFP,
October 24, 2017
Tegucigalpa (AFP) - Nobel Peace Prize laureate Tawakkul Karman proposed in Honduras on Tuesday the creation of a global tribunal to prosecute executives of multinational firms who damage the earth.
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Yemeni Nobel Peace Prize laureate Tawakkol Karman calls for a global tribunal to prosecute executives of multinational corporations who damage the environment (AFP Photo/Orlando SIERRA) |
Tegucigalpa (AFP) - Nobel Peace Prize laureate Tawakkul Karman proposed in Honduras on Tuesday the creation of a global tribunal to prosecute executives of multinational firms who damage the earth.
Karman, of
Yemen, made the suggestion in the Central American country that Amnesty
International last year described -- along with its neighbor Guatemala -- as
the most dangerous in the world for environmentalists.
"A
world court should be created that could punish all these multinational
corporations" that damage the environment and contribute to climate
change, Karman said through a translator.
She spoke
at a press conference with Shirin Ebadi of Iran, a fellow Nobel laureate who
won the peace prize in 2003.
As part of
the Nobel Women's Initiative, they aimed "to gather a first-hand account
of the ongoing violence against women land defenders" in Honduras and in
Guatemala, where they travelled later Tuesday, the group's website says.
The murder
of Berta Caceres, 45, gunned down last year, highlighted the threat to Honduran
activists and sparked international outrage.
Caceres
opposed plans by the company Desarrollos Energeticos to build a hydroelectric
dam across a river on which indigenous communities depended.
Rachel
Vincent, advocacy and media director for the Nobel Women's Initiative, said
Honduras has the world's highest rate of murders for human rights and land
defenders.
Since 2009,
123 activists have been killed, she said.
In comments
to AFP, Karman said a special international court is needed "to fight
against corruption and money laundering and against all those involved in
destroying the environment and exploiting the climate in a damaging way."
She said
such a tribunal could be similar to The Hague-based International Criminal
Court which investigates and tries people charged with genocide, war crimes and
crimes against humanity.
Karman said
the court she proposes would handle cases in which human rights and
environmental activists or anti-corruption fighters are "found dead."
She also
said the investigation of Caceres's murder must be deepened "to discover
all those who benefited from this crime."
Eight
people were arrested, among them an employee of Desarrollos Energeticos.
The Nobel
laureates met Austra Berta Flores, the mother of Caceres, on Saturday.
In
Guatemala, they are to join two other Nobel Peace Prize winners, Guatemala's
Rigoberta Menchu and Jody Williams of the United States.
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