Posted on Sustainabilitank.info on November 27th, 2009
by Pincas Jawetz (PJ@SustainabiliTank.com)
WE POST THE FOLLOWING BECAUSE IT VINDICATES www.SustainabiliTank.info completely in context of our position vis-a-vis the UN Department of Public Information that just did not want to accept the fact that CLIMATE CHANGE IS A MAIN REASON OF THE WARFARE GOING ON IN AFRICA. We brought the subject up four and five years ago – the days that Sashi Tharoor – now member of the Indian Parliament and a Secretary of State in the Indian Foreign Ministry – at that time he was UN Under Secretary-General for Information under UNSG Kofi Annan. With the Coming in of UNSG Ban Ki-moon and the departure of Sashi Tharoor, Messrs. Ahmad Fawzi, Director, News and Media Division, and the then official Gary Fowlie thought that asking inquisitive questions at the DPI controlled PRESS CONFERENCES turns the questioner into an NGO, and NGOs are not allowed to ask questions that may bring out the truth that is hidden by partisan UN employees.
We found that behavior atrocious, and also the fact that no representative to the UN is ready to speak up against this sort of suppression of free speech and the minimum obligation of a free PRESS.
But you just cannot hold truth down by eliminating one inquisitive member of the PRESS – you get eventually the FREE PRESS in some other corner of the world go after that same question. You can only delay the truth coming out – that is it. Gary Fowlie is now gone, but seemingly Ahmad Fawzi still thinks that mentioning climate change and renewable energy harms the interest of the oil interests. So be it – but really do not expect much in regard of such matters from the censored information as dished out at the UN PRESS CONFERENCES. The UN is a very important institution, but we will not get the money worth for supporting it if we do not voice our criticism of its leadership.
Our above comments can be seconded by quite a few journalists active at the UN, and backed up by the records from those PRESS CONFERENCES Q & A sections.
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Climate ‘is a major cause’ of conflict in Africa.
By Richard Black
Environment correspondent, BBC News website, November 24, 2009.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/natur…

Climate has been cited as a factor behind civil conflict in Darfur
Climate has been a major driver of armed conflict in Africa, research shows – and future warming is likely to increase the number of deaths from war.
US researchers found that across the continent, conflict was about 50% more likely in unusually warm years.
Writing in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), they suggest strife arises when the food supply is scarce in warm conditions.
Climatic factors have been cited as a reason for several recent conflicts.
One is the fighting in Darfur in Sudan that according to UN figures has killed 200,000 people and forced two million more from their homes.
We need to do something around climate change, but more fundamentally we need to resolve the conflicts in the first place
Professor Nana Poku
Bradford University
Are you worried by climate change?
Previous research has shown an association between lack of rain and conflict, but this is thought to be the first clear evidence of a temperature link.
The researchers used databases of temperatures across sub-Saharan Africa for the period between 1981 and 2002, and looked for correlations between above average warmth and civil conflict in the same country that left at least 1,000 people dead.
Warm years increased the likelihood of conflict by about 50% – and food seems to be the reason why.
“Studies show that crop yields in the region are really sensitive to small shifts in temperature, even of half a degree (Celsius) or so,” research leader Marshall Burke, from the University of California at Berkeley, told BBC News. “If the sub-Saharan climate continues to warm and little is done to help its countries better adapt to high temperatures, the human costs are likely to be staggering.”
Conflicting outcomes: If temperatures rise across the continent as computer models project, future conflicts are likely to become more common, researchers suggest.

Northwestern Kenya’s drought has brought conflict between pastoralists
Their study shows an increase of about 50% over the next 20 years.
When projections of social trends such as population increase and economic development were included in their model of a future Africa, temperature rise still emerged as a likely major cause of increasing armed conflict.
“We were very surprised to find that when you put things like economic growth and better governance into the mix, the temperature effect remains strong,” said Dr Burke.
At next month’s UN climate summit in Copenhagen, governments are due to debate how much money to put into helping African countries prepare for and adapt to impacts of climate change.
“Our findings provide strong impetus to ramp up investments in African adaptation to climate change by such steps as developing crop varieties less sensitive to extreme heat and promoting insurance plans to help protect farmers from adverse effects of the hotter climate,” said Dr Burke.
Nana Poku, Professor of African Studies at the UK’s Bradford University, suggested that it also pointed up the need to improve mechanisms for avoiding and resolving conflict in the continent.
“I think it strengthens the argument for ensuring we compensate the developing world for climate change, especially Africa, and to begin looking at how we link environmental issues to governance,” he said.
“If the argument is that the trend towards rising temperatures will increase conflict, then yes we need to do something around climate change, but more fundamentally we need to resolve the conflicts in the first place.”

















