Country for PR: Hong Kong
Contributor: PR Newswire Asia (Hong Kong)
Tuesday, March 16 2021 - 15:13
AsiaNet
The Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law Takes Action to Protect Human Rights from Environmental Risks
JAKARTA, Indonesia, March 16, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

The Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian 
Law(RWI)[https://rwi.or.id/] calls for environmental degradation to be treated 
as a human rights issue. This comes after the Sweden-based institution's 
reports found that problems such as air pollution and climate change-linked 
disasters have increasingly impacted people's livelihoods.

RWI's recent publication series titled 'Prosperous and Green in the 
Anthropocene: The human right to a healthy environment in Southeast Asia'[ 
https://rwi.or.id/publications/post/prosperous-and-green-anthropocene-human-right-healthy-environment-southeast-asia] 
found that the Association of Southeast Asian Nations(ASEAN) is seriously 
affected by the impacts of climate change and natural resource depletion. 

It is found that 39% of the population relies on solid biomass, such as 
fuelwood, charcoal, and agricultural residue for household cooking - an 
overreliance resulting in 3.8 million deaths each year due to indoor air 
pollution caused by solid biomass burning, and an increase in lung cancer rates 
in women.

"Worsening natural disasters and increasing pollution are more pronounced in 
Southeast Asia. We launched this publication series to address the 
unprecedented social-ecological challenges, the importance of human rights and 
gender equality so we can join forces to tackle these challenges," said Victor 
Bernard, Programme Officer at RWI.

Together with ASEAN, countries in the region are applying new policy 
frameworks, comprising of clean air, water and sanitation, a safe climate, 
sustainable food systems, non-toxic environments, healthy ecosystems, and 
biodiversity, to minimize the environmental impact on individuals, especially 
vulnerable groups.

Southeast Asian countries have begun taking essential steps to protect human 
rights and gender equality in the face of environmental dangers. For example, 
introducing measures and legislative systems to protect women, children, 
indigenous peoples, and disabled community, who are more exposed to 
environmental risks. Yet, more can be done.

On top of these policy frameworks, RWI's reports - written by 11 lawyers and 
policy researchers - call for a wider variety of measures, including increased 
direct engagement with communities to tackle environmental issues through 
online advocacy and social media.

Leading by example, RWI[https://www.instagram.com/rwi_jakarta/] is currently 
running an environmental awareness campaign in collaboration with the 
Indonesian Ministry of Law and Human Rights.

The campaign involves regional influencers Martin 
Anugrah[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GC4pWzrhpAs], Hessel 
Steven[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0cH1H8mSGxk] and Wilda Octaviana, who 
virtually invite younger generations to protect human rights and enhance 
sustainability through every day practices.  

Access the Publication Series HERE[https://rwi.or.id/publications]

Media Contact:

Yudha-Pratama
yudha.pratama@rwi.lu.se
+6227092823

Victor-Bernard
victor.bernard@rwi.lu.se
+6227092823

SOURCE Raoul Wallenberg Institute

Image Attachments Links:

   Link: https://iop.asianetnews.net/view-attachment?attach-id=386654

   Caption: Prosperous and Green in the Anthropocene: The human right to a 
healthy environment in Southeast Asia

Translations

Japanese