NOBEL WINNER MAATHAI SOUNDS ALARM OVER PLANET

By Inger Sethov
Reuters / Common Dreams
December 10, 2004

OSLO - Saying the planet is at risk from human activity, Kenyan environmentalist Wangari Maathai urged democratic reforms and an end to
corporate greed when she collected the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday.

Maathai, Kenya's deputy environment minister and the first African woman to
win the Peace Prize, said sweeping changes were needed to restore a "world
of beauty and wonder" by overcoming challenges ranging from AIDS to climate
instability.

"Activities that devastate the environment and societies continue unabated,"
Maathai, founder of a campaign to plant 30 million trees across Africa to slow deforestation, said in an acceptance speech at the ceremony in Oslo City Hall.

"Today we are faced with a challenge that calls for a shift in our thinking, so that humanity stops threatening its life-support system," Maathai, 64, told an audience of about 1,000 people including Norway's King Harald and Queen Sonja.

"I call on leaders, especially in Africa, to expand democratic space and build fair and just societies," she said.

"Further, industry and global institutions must appreciate that ensuring economic justice, equity and ecological integrity are of greater value than
profits at any cost," she said.

Grassroots citizens' movements should be encouraged.
Maathai collected a gold Nobel medal and a diploma to a standing ovation from 1,000 guests. She will separately receive a check for 10 million Swedish crowns ($1.48 million). She will use the cash to expand her Green Belt Movement around the world.

HEAL EARTH
"We are called to assist the Earth to heal her wounds and in the process heal our own," she said. The Nobel Prizes were set up in the 1895 will of Swedish philanthropist Alfred Nobel, 10 years before Norway won independence from Sweden.

Her tree-planting movement, led mostly by women, aims to produce firewood,
building materials and also to slow desertification. It also works for women's rights, democracy and peace.

Maathai said a stream where she used to see frogs and tadpoles as a child 50
years ago had dried up. "The challenge is to restore the home of the tadpoles and give back to our children a world of beauty and wonder," she said.

Maathai also said the environment was a barometer of a nation's health. Some
critics have said environmentalism has too little to do with peace to warrant the Nobel accolade.

"The state of any country's environment is a reflection of the kind of governance in place, and without good governance there can be no peace," she
said.

She said the world was facing a "litany of woes" including corruption, violence against women and children and diseases like AIDS or malaria. In an interview with Reuters, she brushed aside questions about her past suggestions that the deadly AIDS virus might have been the result of a laboratory experiment gone awry.

"I really don't know. I really don't have any idea. I'm not an expert in this field," she said. She has also denied suggestions that scientists might have created the virus as a biological weapon against Africans.

Maathai also urged peoples of the world to plant trees at Easter, when Christians believe Christ rose from the dead after being crucified on a wooden cross.

Prizes for physics, chemistry, medicine, literature and economics will be
handed out in Stockholm on Friday.

Posted by proutist-universal on December 13, 2004 02:30 PM
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