Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2008-09-23-Speech-2-423"
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"en.20080923.40.2-423"2
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"Mr President, tropical timber tonight, the financial crisis this week, major pandemics, migration, the food crisis… it all leads us to the same conclusion: the major political issues of today are global and require a global political response.
Of course, in principle no one is contesting the permanent sovereignty of Indonesia over its tropical forests and its right to plant palm trees to produce palm oil, just as Brazil has the right to replace its forest with cattle, just like Gabon. However, it appears that the exercise of territorial sovereignty has negative consequences outside the sovereign territory. Deforestation, poverty, the threatened extinction of fauna and flora and cheap timber all cause damage on a global scale. Therefore, it is not a question of saying, ‘people who harm others must make amends for the problems they cause.’ It is a question of addressing these issues at a legal level. How do we tackle this problem? Where do we start? In Europe, by labelling timber, certifying it as a sort of ‘fair-trade’ timber, in the same way as we do with fair-trade coffee, with bilateral trade agreements? No doubt this is an essential first step, but the solution must be global. We need much more than a multilateral agreement on timber because people in the Communities, because Africans, Latinos and Asians, are also entitled to be rewarded for the various functions that they perform. This is why, Mr President, we need to look at these problems politically, at a global level, and find concepts and models to enable life on our planet to continue."@en1
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