Inter-American body for landmark hearing on extractive industries, human rights

On October 26, 2021, at 2:00 pm (EST), the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights will hold a landmark virtual hearing on The Impact of Extractive Industries on Human Rights and Climate Change in the Caribbean and two civil society activists from Guyana will participate.

The hearing was requested by Malene Alleyne, Jamaican human rights lawyer and Founder of Freedom Imaginaries, and Esther Figueroa, Jamaican environmental filmmaker supported by nearly ninety organizations and individuals across the Caribbean who co-signed the request.

A release from the two groups said that the hearing will focus on the impact of the mining and fossil fuels industries on the economic, social, cultural and environmental rights of women, Indigenous, Afro-descendent, and rural communities in the Caribbean.

“The urgency of this hearing cannot be overstated. Extractive industries are fueling ecocide and widespread human rights violations in the Caribbean with little to no accountability. Major threats include the climate crisis, the contamination of ecosystems, the erosion of food and water security, and the devastation of rural livelihoods and traditional ways of being. We urgently need rights-based, earth-centered alternatives for post-colonial development in the region,” says Alleyne.

“We need to try all available strategies to stop extraction in the Caribbean. On the ground resistance by communities is crucial. Constitutional legal challenges and appeals to international human rights mechanisms like the IACHR are also important methodologies to pursue. If we help create legal and moral precedence, that will be great”, says Figueroa.

In addition to Alleyne and Figueroa from Jamaica, the delegation also includes Immaculata Casimero and Janette Bulkan from Guyana, Samuel Nesner from Haiti, Gary Aboud and Diane Christian-Simmons from Trinidad and Tobago, and Kirk Murray from The Bahamas.

This hearing comes just weeks after the UN Human Rights Council, for the very first time, recognized that having a clean, healthy and sustainable environment is a human right and also established a Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Climate Change.

The public can follow the hearing live on the following IACHR platforms:

Zoom: https://cidh-org.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_SHyMdmj2SNSp0HAoOmw-7g

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CIDH.OEA/live

YouTube: http://youtube.com/ComisionIDH

Twitter: @CIDH

The IACHR is an autonomous organ of the Organization of American States whose objective is to promote and protect human rights in the American hemisphere.