22 06 2009 : :
Press Release: Mekong Citizens to Hand 16,000 Signature “Save the Mekong” Petition to Thai PM
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Press Release Mekong Citizens to Hand 16,000 Signature “Save the Mekong” Petition to Thai PM
In
a bold outpouring of public concern for Southeast Asia’s Mekong River,
more than 16,000 people from within the six-country Mekong region and
around the world have signed a “Save the Mekong” petition urging
governments to abandon plans for hydropower development along the
river’s mainstream. The petition – written in seven languages - will be
hand-delivered to Thailand’s Prime Minister H.E. Abhisit Vejjajiva on
18 June in Bangkok, and sent to other government leaders within the
region.
Despite strong government backing for dam building
on the Mekong River, over 11,000 people from within the Mekong region
have signed the petition addressed to the Prime Ministers of Cambodia,
Lao PDR, Thailand and Vietnam urging them to keep the river flowing
freely and to pursue less damaging electricity options. The petition is
signed by fishers and farmers living along the river’s mainstream and
tributaries, as well as by monks, students, city-folk and even some of
the region’s well-known celebrities. Another 5,000 people around the
world signed the postcards and an online petition.
Most postcard signatories wrote personal messages to the region’s leaders:
“Don’t let hydropower dams block our children's future!” Wang Dezhi, Yunnan, China
“Don’t
build the Mekong dams. The existing dams in Thailand already make
brothers and sisters fight against each other!” Mak Vangdokmai, Roi et,
Thailand
“I love my country. I don’t want to see some people
destroy my home country for greed. So I would like to do my best to
protect our Mekong!” Sneampay, Vientiane, Laos
“If the dams happen, where will all of us go to live?” Villager, Stung Treng province, Cambodia.
“Saving us, saving our resources! Electricity is not everything!” Nguyen Thanh Hang, Hanoi, Vietnam
“I
have traveled the Mekong River from Laos to Thailand to Cambodia and
dams will destroy the river, environment and tourism.” M. Higgs,
London, England
In the lead-up to this week’s Save the Mekong
launch, citizens groups have organized a number of events over the past
few months to rally public support for the river:
• Bangkok’s Central World department store, Thailand, March 2009: An
exhibition by award-winning Thai photographer Suthep Kritsanavarin
highlighted the threat to Mekong fishing from the Don Sahong dam
planned for Southern Lao PDR. The exhibition prompted thousands of
Bangkokians to sign the petition postcard. • Phnom Penh, Hun Sen Park, Cambodia, June 2009: A
stall at the World Environment Week’s eco-festival in Phnom Penh
highlighted the risks from the mainstream dams to Cambodia’s fisheries
and urged hundreds of concerned citizens to add their signatures to the
Save the Mekong on-line petition.
• Ubon Ratchathani province, Thailand, June 2009: Local
groups, students, academics and photographers organized a series of
public events, dubbed “the Mekong weeks”, and collected over 4,000
petition signatures. The events highlighted the value and natural
beauty of the “Three Thousand Wells” stretch of the Mekong River, where
it forms the border between northeast Thailand and Lao PDR. The area is
an increasingly popular ecotourism destination that is now threatened
by the proposed Ban Koum dam.
• Phnom Penh, Cambodia, June 2009 Local
groups and fishing community leaders organized a national workshop
about the importance of the Mekong’s fisheries for local livelihoods
and the environment, and to discuss the food security impacts that the
Don Sahong mainstream dam could have on Cambodians.
Mekong
fisheries provide a critical source of food and income for millions of
people along the river. Recent official estimates place the annual
value of the river’s wild capture fisheries to be worth up to US$3
billion. Mainstream dams will block the massive fish migrations that
count for up to 70% of the river’s commercial fish catch and that
ensure regional food security. Experience around the world demonstrates
that there is no way to mitigate the fisheries impacts of such large
dams.
Civil society groups in the Mekong region and
internationally have been sounding the alarm about plans to build
eleven hydro dams on the Lower Mekong mainstream for many years, in
what is often described as an uphill battle.
China’s dam
construction on the Upper Mekong mainstream (Lancang) has already
caused serious environmental problems, in the form of declining fish
stocks, riverbank erosion, and hazardous water level fluctuations in
downstream Burma, northern Thailand and northern Lao PDR. The Save the
Mekong coalition and those that signed the petition are very concerned
that similarly severe cross-border impacts could create cross-border
disputes.
When meeting Prime Minister H.E. Abhisit Vejjajiva,
the Save the Mekong coalition representatives will present him with the
Save the Mekong petition and ask him to work with regional leaders to
protect the Mekong River. Thai representatives will raise their
concerns with the Prime Minister about the Thai-Laos Ban Koum and Pak
Chom dams and ask for clarification on the government’s position on
these projects.
Thailand’s Minister of Energy recently spent
60 million baht on a feasibility study for the Pak Chom dam and a
feasibility study for the Ban Koum dam study has been prepared by
Italian-Thai Company. In addition, in Lao PDR, Thailand’s Chor
Khanchang company and Charoen Energy and Water Asia company are the
lead developers of the Xayaboury and Lat Sua mainstream dams
respectively. Much of the mainstream dams’ hydroelectricity is
anticipated to feed into Thailand’s power grid.
The largely
donor-backed inter-governmental Mekong River Commission, meanwhile, has
failed to disclose its assessment of the Don Sahong dam, prepared in
2007, despite repeated requests from civil society groups, and is now
positioning itself as a “facilitator” among the region’s hydro
developers. The MRC has skirted some of the most critical issues,
including on ensuring transparency and public participation, and
protecting regional food security.
Despite the limited space for
public debate, the Save the Mekong petition aims to make heard the
people’s voices for protecting the Mekong as a giant food chain and
cultural lifeline for millions of people.
-------------------------------------------------------------------- Schedule details
Meeting with H.E. Abhisit Vejjajeva, Prime Minister of Thailand Representatives
from civil society groups from the Mekong countries will meet H.E.
Abhisit Vejjajeva, Thailand’s Prime Minister and hand him the Save the
Mekong postcard petition at 8 am, 18th June at Parliament House,
Bangkok.
Press conference A press conference will
be held at 1:30 pm, 18th June at the Foreign Correspondents Club of
Thailand (FCCT) with Mekong Region and international representatives
from the Save the Mekong coalition. They will announce the number of
petition postcards collected and discuss the topic “Fisheries, Food
Security, and Livelihoods: Why the Mekong River Should Remain
Free-flowing.”
Trip to Ban Koum dam site (self support) Travel
by overnight VIP tour bus for a field trip to visit the villages close
to the proposed Ban Koum mainstream dam site. For those interested, a
trip can be arranged (for journalists only) to the current protest at
the Rasri Salai dam, Srisakhet province where thousands of people have
gathered to call on the government to solve the project’s outstanding
problems and for future projects planned under the Khong-Chi-Mun
mega-irrigation scheme to be abandoned.
Journalists are
invited to join the press conference and trip to Ban Koum and are
requested to register at mekong@savethemekong.org or by contacting:
Premrudee
Daoroung and Chonticha Tangvoramongkhol, Towards Ecological Recovery
and Regional Alliance (TERRA) Tel. +66 2-691-0718-20, +66 81-4342334,
+66 87 553 9689 email: fer@terraper.org ; www.terraper.org
Carl Middleton, International Rivers, Tel: +66 84-6815332 Email: carl@internationalrivers.org; www.internationalrivers.org
Tonn
Kunthel and Ame Trandem, NGO Forum on Cambodia, Tel: +855 23 214 429,
email kunthel@ngoforum.org.kh and ame@ngoforum.org.kh ;
www.ngoforum.org.kh
More information on the Save the Mekong
initiative and government-backed plans to dam the Mekong is available
in English, Burmese, Chinese, Khmer, Lao, Thai and Vietnamese on the
coalition’s web site www.SavetheMekong.org.

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