Heavy Rains, Floods in Guatemala

July 25, 2008

 Please read the following urgent appeal for support for the victims
 of heavy rains in eastern Guatemala, particularly La Union Zacapa, a
 Chorti Maya region near the border with Honduras. Over the past couple
 days, dozens of people have been killed by mudslides, immense damage
 has been done to crops and homes. Thousands have fled their houses,
 and are without food or homes. The rains continue with no sign of
 stopping.

 After several years straight of unusual rains, scientist have
 confirmed what Guatemalans suspected, this is not ‘normal’ weather,
 it is the result of global warming. This morning the first truck full
 of food for the shelters, sent by Rights Action through the
 Coordinator of Chorti Organizations, COMUNDICH, is reaching La Union.
 But when the rains finally stop, there will be a long hard road to
 recovery.

 Please donate to help these Refugees of Global Warming.
 <https://secure.groundspring.org/dn/index.php?aid=446>

 Please redistribute this information. If you want on or off this
 e-list, or have anything to say about this urgent action:
 info@rightsaction.org.

 With their road washed out and covered with fallen trees, families
 try to determine the safest route to evacuate their village.

 **Refugees of Global Warming**

 Eastern Guatemala Devastated by Floods and Mudslides

 Over 28 People Feared Dead in La Union Zacapa

 Over the past few days local organizations report that at least 28
 people have been killed in mud slides in La Union, Zacapa. Ten
 shelters have been created and villagers are fleeing the region.
 Mudslides and flooded rivers have destroyed homes and devastated
 crops. Dozens of villages are completely cut off from road access,
 provoking a crisis in access to food availability. Yesterday afternoon
 the President o Guatemala declared a State of Disaster.

 Similar conditions have been reported across eastern Guatemala,
 particularly in Camotan and Jocotan in Chiquimula, in Morales, Izabal,
 in Purula, Baja Verapaz, in Xenahu, Teleman, Panzos, La Tinta, Chisec,
 and Santa Cruz in Alta Verapaz. As news is only beginning to trickle
 out, there is not yet clarity as to the extent of the disaster.

 **Polar Bears Are Not the Only Victims**

 The image of a Polar bear stranded on a raft of the melting ice cap
 has become a symbol of the effects of global warming. Unfortunately
 images of poor families buried in mud should also become a popularly
 understood visual representation of global warming.

 A home in La Union covered in a mudslide. We hope the family got out,
 but no one knows for certain yet.

 **Global Warming Increases Tropical Rainfall**

 This week’s floods and mudslides are the effects of constant, heavy
 rains. Guatemalans have experienced heavier then normal rains over the
 past few years, some in the form of hurricanes, and they have provoked
 enormous damages. We are accustomed to hearing about massive
 destruction caused by hurricanes. But the damage this week in Eastern
 Guatemala is very similar to what happened during recent hurricanes.
 The massive damages and deaths in hurricanes Mitch and Stan were not
 caused by the force of the winds, the factor by which a storm is
 categorized as a hurricane, they were caused by the sheer quantity of
 rain they produced.

 The increase in tropical rainfall over the past few years is a
 reality, it is global warming, and it is every bit as much a disaster
 and an emergency as hurricanes. The world must respond.

 In August 2007 NASA scientists released a study which surveyed
 tropical rainfall levels over the past 27 years, and observed that the
 highest levels of rainfall happened over the last five years. They
 found that the level of rainfall on the planet as a whole has not
 changed, but the level in the tropics has changed considerably, an
 increase of 5%.

 The increased rainfall is not distributed evenly across the tropics like a
 blanket, how rainfall is distributed depends on climatic convection
 routes that channel rainfall along certain paths. Global warming
 provokes what some have ironically termed a ‘rich get richer and
 poor get poorer’ effect in which humid areas become more humid and dry
 areas become dryer.

 **The Poor Get Poorer**

 The climatic shift that is taking place is playing itself out
 economically, as if mimicking the global economic system, the
 climatic system is making the poor poorer. The massive flooding and
 the less dramatic but just as real droughts are causing millions of
 dollars worth of damages to crops in Guatemala alone.

 The vast majority of these damages are to the crops of small
 producers, subsistence farmers who due to the history of
 internationally sponsored violent repression of land and social reform
 movements plant small tracts of marginal land most vulnerable to the
 effects of the climate, such as steep inclines. For similar historic
 reasons, these farmers have no safety net, no insurance, and whatever
 government programs are created to help bail out producers is
 generally monopolized by large plantations with political influence.

 Mudslides affect steep inclines which are farmed for lack of access to
 more level ground.

 **Global Warming Refugees**

 The logical consequence that this has produced is environmental
 refugees, refugees not only in the moment they are temporarily housed
 in shelters and resettlement camps, but refugees who months later,
 once international aid (if they were lucky enough to have received any)
 has petered out, and they have no food since their crops were
 destroyed, are forced to migrate, literally risking their lives to
 work as undocumented workers in the United States sending money home
 to feed their broken families.

 The roads are filled with families fleeing their homes to move into
 temporary shelters.

 **Environmental Impunity: Blaming the Victim, Rewarding the Culprit**

 When the world was first learning about global warming, the popular
 understanding was that poor people were the cause of global warming.
 Images of massive deforestation in the Amazon were explained away as
 the result of poverty; that the poor people were moving in and cutting
 dawn rainforests.

 Today general public is beginning to understand that that is not the
 case; that Carbon emissions in industrialized countries are the
 principal agents of global warming, and that global deforestation has
 been principally provoked by transnational logging companies
 satisfying demand for tropical hardwoods in wealthier nations.

 Even if we are beginning to better understand the causes, we have not
 been implementing solutions. The only major international mechanism to
 combat Global Warming is the Carbon Credits Mechanism. Not only is it
 not enough, it is possibly having a negative impact, allowing polluters to
 keep on polluting by buying credits, credits which are sometimes issued
 for activities of questionable value, such as hydroelectric dams and
 industrial forestry.

 **Real Alternatives Exist**

 The problems seem overwhelming, but there is no end to the
 possibilities for positive, impactful actions. Rights Action is
 supporting a few of the many alternative proposals, helping
 communities’ carryout activities they propose that both resolve the
 communities’ needs and reforest.

 Following Hurricane Stan in 2005, Rights Action responded to the call
 for support thirteen villages in Santa Catarina Ixtuahcan, Solola
 which were permanently displaced to resettlement villages, abandoning
 their agricultural lands and villages that were in a danger zone.
 Though no longer threatened by annual mudslides, the resettled
 villagers no longer had any agricultural lands or any way to make a
 living. The communities created tree nurseries with a mixture of fruit
 trees and wood trees that they planted in the lands they abandoned.
 The tree project will stabilize the soil to prevent mudslides, provide
 a sustainable source of income to the communities, and combat carbon
 emissions.

 In Northern Baja Verapaz and Southeastern Quiche, along the basin of
 the Chixoy Dam, the communities who were displaced by the massive
 hydroelectric project built in 1982, are seeking to establish
 extensions of fruit and forest trees in an over 40,000 acre region
 that has been deforested since Colonial times. The dam flooded out the
 agricultural lands of the communities, leaving them displaced and in
 extreme poverty for years. Reforestation of the marginal, historically
 degraded lands around the dam basin could generate sustainable
 livelihood for the communities and help stop global warming. Often
 thought of as a source of clean energy, large hydro electric dams
 deforest often vast areas and generate significant levels of carbon
 emissions from the rotting vegetation flooded out.

 **What To Do**

 Read Up – Keep track of what’s going on and tell people about it.

 Dream and Act – Envision new ways of living that keep our planet
 healthy and respects the rights of our global neighbors.

 Demand Changes – Fight for policies that can force polluters to
 stop, provide incentives for truly environmentally friendly
 activities.

 Give – Donate for the global warming refugees in their moment of
 crisis and support them as they rebuild a way of life and production
 that helps us all by combating climate change.

   <https://secure.groundspring.org/dn/index.php?aid=446>

 To join our e-list or mailing list, email info@rightsaction.org

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