EEEEK! More evidence that the climate refugee campaign is on

Update December 7th:  Dire warnings of climate “refugees” opens the show in Copenhagen, here.  And, LOL!, Saudi Arabia is calling for an investigation into “climategate.”  Of course, they have a lot at stake besides the bucks they make from fossil fuels, they might be forced to open their borders to flooded Yemeni Shia Muslims (yuk!).

I assume after seeing my post on climate refugees yesterday the producer of a new documentary film entitled  (what else!),  “Climate Refugees,” has alerted us to plans to show the film (official UN screening no less) on December 14th in Copenhagen.  I guess it’s way too late for Refugees International to put the genie back in the bottle on the use of the word “refugee.”  But, can you blame the leftwing organizers of the latest scare-the-West campaign?   The word ‘refugees’ sure beats ‘environmentally displaced persons’ if one has to whip world leaders and other so-called smart people into a frenzy to demand new international laws.  Oh, and lest you are confused these won’t be laws to protect you from the third world hordes, these will be laws about all the stuff you evil Capitalists in the West will be giving the masses.

Open this and be greeted by a film marquee designed to frighten your pants off with this caption.

To the residents of America…

Within the next few years millions of people are going to have to leave their homes because changes in the world’s climate will destroy the basis of their livelihoods.

That’s right, and they will be coming to your town and helping themselves to your frig and probably your daughters too!

I shouldn’t be joking about this because the scariest part of all is that these people might actually succeed in further destroying any national sovereignty left in the world.  Although (LOL!) I challenge them to tell Saudi Arabia to open its borders to those evil Yemenis who will be swarming north out of Yemen as the Arabian Sea rises!

December 7th:  I want to be clear.  I do think hordes of third-worlders will be attempting to get into western countries in a very big way in coming years, but not because of global warming.  Failing Marxist and Muslim governments and high birth rates among those from places like Bangladesh, Yemen and Somalia will be to blame.  The politically correct won’t be able to give that real reason, so they have latched onto global warming so they can continue to blame first world countries.

Yes! A battle brewing over climate “refugees”

Update December 6th:  “Climate Refugee” documentary film to be shown in Copenhagen, here.

It is snowing like crazy here in Maryland today—very early in the season for us to have any measurable snow—and I’m enjoying a little laugh over the coming battle of two leftwing titans over the issue of refugees.  (I love it when leftwing causes collide!)  On the one hand are the humanitarians (neo-liberals really for the most part, that is what the head of the Communist Party USA calls them anyway) who have no desire to open any can of worms by revisiting the UN’s 1951 convention on refugees and risking diluting or diminishing protection for persecuted peoples. And, and on the other, we have the Marxist/open borders/redistributionists who are hell-bent on making the rich pay for that evil malady called global warming—not to mention that a climate crisis is the shortest route to a one-world government.

This article from the UK Guardian entitled, “UK should open borders to climate refugees, says Bangladeshi minister,” gives us a hint of what is in the offing.   Oh, and it’s not just the UK that should open its borders, rest assured they mean the US, Australia, New Zealand and the all of the  EU too!

Up to 20 million Bangladeshis [Muslims] may be forced to leave the country in the next 40 years because of climate change, one of the country’s most senior politicians has said. Abul Maal Abdul Muhith, Bangladesh’s finance minister, called on Britain and other wealthy countries to accept millions of displaced people.

In a clear signal to the US and Europe that developing countries are not prepared to accept a weak deal at next week’s Copenhagen climate summit, Abdul Muhith said Bangladesh wanted hosts for managed migration as people began to abandon flooded and storm-damaged coastal areas.

“Twenty million people could be displaced [in Bangladesh] by the middle of the century,” Abdul Muhith told the Guardian. “We are asking all our development partners to honour the natural right of persons to migrate. We can’t accommodate all these people – this is already the densest [populated] country in the world,” he said.

He called on the UN to redefine international law to give climate refugees the same protection as people fleeing political repression. “The convention on refugees could be revised to protect people. It’s been through other revisions, so this should be possible,” he said.

There it is, in that paragraph above, the crux of the problem that has got to be causing the present “refugee regime” to be shaking in its collective boots!

Worries of a backlash (no kidding!)

Douglas Alexander, the international development secretary, said: “As the largest international donor to Bangladesh, Britain has been urging the international community to provide extra money for climate change adaptation.” But Jean-Francois Durieux, who is in charge of climate migration at the UN refugee agency, cautioned against reworking the UN convention on refugees.

“The risk of mass migration needs to be managed. It’s absolutely legitimate for Bangladesh and the Maldives to make a lot of noise about the very real risk of climate migration – they hope it will make us come to their rescue. But reopening the 1951 convention would certainly result in a tightening of its protections.”

He said there was a danger of a backlash in rich countries. “The climate in Europe, North America and Australia is not conducive to a relaxed debate about increasing migration. There is a worry doors will shut if we start that discussion,” he said.

There is extreme sensitivity about adapting the UN convention on refugees. A UNHCR report in August warned: “In the current political environment, it could result in a lowering of protection standards for refugees and even undermine the international refugee protection regime altogether.”

Watching advocacy groups like Refugees International squirm!

What to do? What to do?  How about if we head this off by not calling the climate “refugees” refugees, and instead call for a NEW legal framework for climate displaced people—whew!  Here is a bit from yesterday’s Refugees International’s press release on protecting the “displaced” people:

Refugees International believes that discussions need to begin now on the creation of an international legal framework that will protect people displaced across international borders by climate change who are not eligible for refugee status under the 1951 Refugee Convention.

Conveniently, Refugees International is set to tap into this whole new market of people who need to be moved around the world (not to mention the potential for fundraising) since in August they set up the Ken and Darcy Bacon Center for the Study of Climate Displacement, here.

But whatever you do, do not call them “climate refugees!” says acting President Joel Charny:

The 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees defines a refugee as someone who is outside the country of her or his nationality “owing to well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion.” While in the succeeding decades fleeing conflict has become an accepted rationale for claiming international protection, flight from natural disasters has not. Thus, under international refugee law there can be no “climate refugees.”

Indeed, the term points to a gap in the global protection regime that will have to be addressed if climate change has anywhere near the profound impact currently projected. While a change in the Refugee Convention itself may not be warranted (or achievable), an agreed international framework recognizing that hundreds of thousands of people may need temporary protection in neighboring countries [Edit: Neighboring countries?  They are talking about permanent mass migration to first world countries halfway around the world!] as the result of large-scale climatic events will be necessary.

[…..]

… there is no easy solution to the muddle on terminology. What is the alternative to climate refugees? People displaced by climate change (PDCCs)? Climate displaced people (CDPs)? People affected by climatic events (PACEs)? Once again — as with internally displaced people (vs. the incorrect, misses the whole point “internal refugees”) — rigor gets in the way of directness. But Refugees International has no choice but to stand with the pedants and ban climate refugees from our style book.

You could say we (at RRW) are pedants too!  By insisting on continuing to use the phrase “climate refugees” we can further demonstrate how silly all this has become. It is only too bad more of the general public doesn’t understand that they could have hordes of Bangladeshis in their neighborhoods because supposedly the sea is rising by an inch per century (or whatever the latest prediction is!).

Climate refugee, climate, refugee, climate refugee!

See our category on CLIMATE REFUGEES here.  And, did I mention we have 12 posts in the CLIMATE REFUGEE category?

A little later on December 5th:  Here is a sensible article in a UN publication that says there won’t likely be any mass migration from climate change—any change will be slow IF there is global warming occurring.  The author says people will not move far from home and with the loss of a little land here or there will come the gain of a little land that previously was too cold to be productive.

Climate refugees, elephant in the living room in Copenhagen?

Since there is so much titillating news over the last few day about those leaked (or hacked) e-mails and documents calling into question the whole scientific underpinning of the so-called global warming (aka climate change) “crisis,” I thought this “elephant in the living room” reference was a bit overblown.  I suspect the real discussions will center around, not climate refugees, but, well now, how do we salvage this whole mess!

In any case, here is just a bit from one of the latest alarmist screeds on “climate refugees,” a subject that is not expected to be formally addressed in Copenhagen to the chagrin of these authors.

According to this Australian on-line journal, millions upon millions of “climate refugees,” that I notice are quietly being called “environmental refugees,” are expected to be swarming the planet by by 2050.

Until there is a significant movement calling for recognition of climate refugees – under the UN climate convention or another international governance instrument – the issue will continue to be swept under the carpet. This will not make the problem go away. Estimates of likely displacement continue to grow. Professor Norman Myers, who has been researching the topic for decades, suggests that, without serious action to reduce greenhouse emissions, we could be facing the prospect of perhaps 200 million climate refugees by mid century.

Check out this new verbiage we can all expect to see creeping into the mainstream lexicon.

…..campaigns for climate justice for those most threatened by environmental changes.

Climate justice—don’t you just love it!   And then, note that they have recognized the hole they dug with the “global warming” mumbo-jumbo and they then went to “climate change” and now its just “environmental change” we in wealthy countries are responsible for!

Unbelievable gobbledegook regarding climate change: Global warming will bring more prostitution

This story was on Drudge yesterday and although most of it has nothing to do with the supposed millions of new refugees being created by global warming and the whole new push at the United Nations to recognize them as refugees who will need to be resettled (see our Climate Refugee category), I couldn’t resist posting this to show how nutty all this has become.

Entitled, ‘Climate change pushes poor women to prostitution, dangerous work,’ it begins:

The effects of climate change have driven women in communities in coastal areas in poor countries like the Philippines into dangerous work, and sometimes even the flesh trade, a United Nations official said.

Suneeta Mukherjee, country representative of the United Nations Food Population Fund (UNFPA), said women in the Philippines are the most vulnerable to the effects of climate change in the country.

“Climate change could reduce income from farming and fishing, possibly driving some women into sex work and thereby increase HIV infection,” Mukherjee said during the Wednesday launch of the UNFPA annual State of World Population Report in Pasay City.

In the Philippines, small brothels usually pop up near the coastal areas where many women perform sexual services for transient seafarers. Often, these prostitutes are ferried to bigger ships by their pimps.

At the end of the article, there is a mention of the eagerly anticipated increased migration of refugees, and the UNFPA makes the following recommendation:

Improve sex-disaggregation of date related to migration flows that are influenced by environmental factors and prepare now for increases in population movements resulting from climate change.

Right!  As soon as we figure out what “Improve sex-disaggregation of date” is, we will get right on it!  Does it have something to do with more prostitutes?

Australia: working all the angles to get in

Here is an informative piece from Australia a country which is going through some serious national soul searching about that ship being held at sea with 70 plus Sri Lankan (maybe Tamil Tigers) “refugees” on board, at least I think the standoff is continuing.

From the Sydney Morning Herald:

On a trip to Pakistan earlier this year, I was amazed at how sophisticated the knowledge of Western migration rules was among the locals. One postgraduate student regaled me with the minute details of the Canadian points system, which he felt was more relaxed than Australia’s.

A taxi driver lamented the growing barriers to entering Britain, which was once seen as a relatively easy option. A considerable number asked about gaining entry by claiming political asylum. Australia was universally seen as highly desirable but difficult to enter. New Zealand was often seen as the gateway country.

It is a pattern is likely to be repeated throughout Asia and an indication of how desperate many people are to reach the developed world. It’s also an indication that as soon as there is a perception of a weak spot in the migration rules, you can bet knowledge of it spreads like wildfire.

The two biggest news stories relating to immigration this year relate to international students and asylum seekers.

Check out the many angles the desparate are using to get into a first world country, but place this scary prospect in the back of your mind as the Copenhagan global warming conference approaches.

If even modest predictions regarding climate change come to light, the debate over what constitutes an environmental refugee will also heat up, possibly further extending the category.

Environmental refugees!  Ahhhhhh!