UN seeks to help children battling climate change in court
Send a link to a friend
[August 28, 2023]
By Emma Farge
GENEVA (Reuters) - A United Nations body on Monday updated a key treaty
designed to protect children's rights to strengthen their hand in
fighting climate change, as they emerge at the forefront of the battle
to protect the planet.
From wildfires in Portugal to fossil fuel projects in the U.S. state of
Montana, young plaintiffs have been taking the lead in a burgeoning
number of lawsuits seeking more government action on climate change.
In the document, the U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child calls
environmental degradation, including the climate crisis, "a form of
structural violence against children".
It says that states should provide access to justice for children,
including through "removing barriers for children to initiate
proceedings themselves".
"This could definitely strengthen their hand because now there's a fully
articulated set of guidance that pulls everything together in one
place," said Ann Skelton, chair of the committee and a South African
lawyer, adding that she also hoped businesses and policy makers would
draw on the document.
Some 16,000 children across more than 100 countries were consulted as
part of a broader dialogue during the two-year drafting period for the
guidelines. Tânia dos Santos Maia, a 14-year-old from Brazil, said she
expected the U.N. document to make children and adolescents more aware
of their rights.
The guidance was broadly welcomed, however, some say it does not go far
enough. Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg asked the committee "to
be more vigorous and somewhat bolder" during consultations, U.N.
committee member Philip Jaffé told Reuters. Thunberg was not immediately
available for comment via a spokesperson.
[to top of second column]
|
The United Nations building is pictured
ahead of a General Assembly meeting to mark one year since Russia
invaded Ukraine and to consider the adoption of a resolution on
Ukraine, in New York City, New York, U.S., February 23, 2023.
REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo
Lawyers representing six young people from Portugal, who are taking
32 countries before the European Court of Human Rights for what they
see as government inaction over climate change, said they think it
will reinforce their case.
All U.N. countries, barring the United States, have ratified the
1989 child rights convention, which addresses environmental matters
but needed updating, given the pace of climate change. The
committee's guidance on the convention is often cited by lawyers,
and sometimes by courts in rulings.
Thunberg's delegation was not alone in calling for more ambition.
"I think this was such a missed opportunity – it's an exercise in
incrementalism instead of taking quantum leap forward," said Kelly
Matheson, deputy director of Global Climate Litigation at Our
Children's Trust which represented youths in a case where a state
judge found against the U.S. state of Montana this month.
She said the U.N. body's guidance limits itself to the 2015 Paris
warming target of 1.5 degrees Celsius -- a rise she says is already
dangerous for children.
Skelton said the U.N. had to balance its actions as some states were
already saying it went too far.
(Additional reporting by Catarina Demony in Lisbon and Clark Mindock
in New York; Editing by Sharon Singleton)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |