After years of enduring oppression in the Pacific, one truth becomes undeniable: when you strip a person of their land, you strip them of their spirit.
On August 15, we hosted a public forum on the intersections between resource extraction, militarism, climate change, and forced displacement in the Pacific. The forum was entitled “Lessons from Pacific Intersections: Climate Action, Migrant Rights, Anti-Imperialism, and the Fight Against Extractive Industries.” This public forum followed an Advocates’ Roundtable held two weeks prior. Both events were capstone projects with students from the International School on Climate Mobilities.
This post was written by Maria San Miguel, and the capstone students who helped put on these events also included Abdul Mufeez Shaheed, Daniela Alba, Luz Adriana Hernandez Orozco, Maya Gibbs, Rauf Aslanov, and Xiaonuo Lian.
During the forum, the panellists discussed various questions and provided insightful answers, unpacking the importance of collective support for systemic change and the need for better enforcement of international law within domestic contexts. They stressed the importance of ending the long and ongoing legacy of colonisation and the dominance of certain countries like the U.S and France, and emphasised the significance of listening to Indigenous voices and including them in the policy-making process.
A common theme that arose among the different examples across the Pacific was the colonial logic of harm perpetrated being “for the good of mankind,” whether it was the U.S.’s nuclear weapons testing program in the Marshall Islands or the UK, New Zealand, and Australia’s decimation of Banaba for agricultural phosphate mining. Beyond the damage to the land and seas, this logic was also employed to justify the forced relocation of communities.
The matrix of domination (particularly white supremacy and capitalism) underpin this logic and explain why it worked for some communities and not others. We see this logic in many examples of environmental racism, including in the U.S., where poor and/ or communities of colour are sacrificed as sites for dumping toxic waste or building pipelines resulting in public health crises and environmental degradation.
People-powered movements have been making change in the region for centuries. We can look to the student-led ICJ Advisory Opinion campaign, the winning Nuclear Free Pacific campaign, the regional solidarity against extractive industry in Bougainville, and the decolonial independence movements of the past and present, to name a few.
Joey Tau from the Pacific Network on Globalisation shared about the call for a moratorium on deep sea mining inviting everyone to sign the petition to protect the future of our oceans. He reminded us of the campaign line from the Marshall Islands Student Association at the University of the South Pacific: “my fish is your fish.” What happens in your part of the world will also impact what happens in my part of the world.
Meet the Panellists
Read more about the panellists below and subscribe to our newsletter to hear about future events.
Itinterunga Rae Bainteiti
Climate Justice Campaigner, Rabi, Fiji
Desmond Narain Doulatram
Nuclear Justice Advocate, RMI
Reverend Billy Wetewea
Kanaky New Caledonia
We are connected to the air through the fregate bird,
We are connected to the land through the lezard,
We are connected to the vegetal realm through the red cordyline plant,
Those are my clan totem who relate us to the cosmos,
We belong to the TAKEDJI Clan, the WETEWEA family, from the tribe of Gossanah in Iaai Island in Kanaky, the Land of the Standing Man, well known through its colonial name, New Caledonia.
We are the ATSAI people, people of the sea…
That is my cultural identity to whom I belong and I honnor in introducing myself to you, as I carry them with me everywhere I go…. That is why I am using the pronoun “WE” to introduce myself.
My name is Billy, I am a pastor serving God and its people in the Protestant Church of Kanaky New Caledonia. I also teach Biblical Studies and Pastoral Ministry in our Theological School. I work as well with our youth in terms of capacity building and self-determination.I am also working with the Pacific Conference of Churches with their Self-Determination desk and as a translator… Oleti gan hmâ