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GLOBAL: Getting Ready for Youth
Summit |
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MEXICO CITY - Some 600 girls and boys
from 100 countries will take part in an international environmental
conference in July in the United States, where they will discuss
global problems, present proposals and demand answers from
the adult world.
"It will be the largest meeting of its kind ever," says Catalina
Saravia, spokeswoman for the non-governmental Organization
for Education and Environmental Protection of Colombia, which
alongside the Mexico-based regional office of the United Nations
Environment Program (UNEP), is promoting Latin American participation
in the event.
The kids will have five days, Jul. 19-23, in the northeastern
city of New London, to debate issues related to oceans, rivers
and wetlands, endangered flora and fauna, indigenous communities,
environmental practices and energy policy.
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ARGENTINA: No Sign of Environmental
Report |
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BUENOS AIRES - The Argentine Environment
and Natural Resources Foundation asked the government for
the official environmental report for 2003, which should have
been published in November but has yet to appear.
A source from the foundation told Tierramérica that it is
not charging that the report was never written, but an explanation
for the failure to publish it is needed.
The foundation admits it made the request to "put to the test"
the new law on public access to environmental information.
Although the details of the legislation have not been laid
out, the law is in force and recognizes anyone's right to
request and receive information from the state and even from
private companies that provide public services.
The responses must be made free of charge and within 30 days
of the request, or refused, but with a well-founded explanation.
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COLOMBIA: Proposals for Garbage
Crisis |
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BARANQUILLA, Colombia - The Regional
Autonomous Corporation, regional environmental authority for
the Colombian department Atlántico, proposed construction
of three landfills to remedy the crisis arising from poor
management of solid waste.
Thonny Palencia, director of the corporation, told Tierramérica
on May 17 that an adequate waste management policy requires
landfills to handle the garbage from the north of the department,
another for the central area, and a third for the south.
The agency reports that daily solid waste output in the department
reaches 2,200 tons, and 39 percent of it is not handled properly.
Nationwide, Colombia produces 26,000 tons of garbage a day.
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GUATEMALA: Military Guards Nature
Park |
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GUATEMALA CITY - Sixty soldiers from the Guatemalan army will
back 50 agents of the National Civil Police (PNC) in fighting
vandals and drug traffickers who threaten the Laguna del Tigre
National Park, located in the northern department of El Petén.
The military will provide support for the PNC, who belong
to the Nature Protection Service and are specialized in environmental
protection, police spokesman Faustino Sánchez told Tierramérica.
The contingent was dispatched on May 13, the day Congress
approved 625,000 dollars this year and 375,000 for the next
to protect the national park's resources, lawmaker Alfredo
Cojtí told Tierramérica.
Approval of the funds was decided after receiving numerous
reports that lumber and drug traffickers were destroying the
park, which covers 290,000 hectares and holds many endemic
species, and has been a protected area since 1990.
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PERU: A Call to Ban Asbestos Use
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LIMA - Three civil society groups asked
the Peruvian Congress on May 17 to ban the use of asbestos
in industrial processes after a press conference in which
they presented four former employees of an auto parts factory
who suffer asbestosis.
In the manufacture and use of asbestos -- a non-combustible
mineral fiber -- a dust can be produced that is carcinogenic
and cause of other diseases. The World Health Organization
recommends against the use of asbestos.
The Peruvian Ministry of Health bans asbestos use in tanks
or filters, but the fiber is a component of many other products.
The Association Against Asbestos, the Peruvian Consumers and
Users Association and the Citizens Forum for Life reported
91 recorded cases of people affected by asbestosis and 34
lung cancer cases among workers who handled asbestos.
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