Ecocide May Actually Become a Crime Soon
Ecocide May Actually Become a Crime Soon
Seventy five years ago last month, the Nuremberg trials convened in the aftermath of World War II in order to prosecute those accused of war crimes and atrocities in Nazi Germany. To coincide with the anniversary, a panel of thirteen international lawyers and environmental experts met to draft a legally robust, practical, and effective definition of ecocide that can be submitted as a statutory amendment at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.If adopted, ecocide would complement existing international offenses and crimes against humanity, such as those prosecuted at Nuremberg so long ago.The concept has been gaining support in recent years. Small island nations like Vanuatu and the Maldives, which are vulnerable to the effects of climate change and rising seas, asked for ecocide to be seriously considered as a crime at the ICC assembly last December. Supporters also include French President Emmanuel Macron, members of the Swedish parliament, and hundreds of young people who served as international delegates at a 140-country virtual summit called Mock COP26 recently.So, how would “ecocide” be defined, then? And why is it necessary to do so now, when it's so clear that the ship has already sailed, as far as avoiding many of the effects of climate change?Speaking to The Guardian, Jojo Mehta, the chair of the Stop Ecocide Foundation, said that ecocide “would have to involve mass, systematic or widespread destruction,” and would likely be committed by corporations, not individuals who chop “a single tree on a village green.” She notes that in order for the measure to be adopted by the ICC, it would have to be ratified by individual nations. This would give those nations more options when it comes to prosecuting ecocide within their borders. It's especially important, because right now there's a “legal vacuum” that results in “crimes against nature, against life... going unpunished,” according to Pablo Fajardo, the panel member and Ecuadorean lawyer leading litigation against Chevron for damage to the Amazon rainforest.France, however, isn't waiting for the ICC to act. Based upon the recommendations of the Citizens’ Climate Change Convention, a group of 150 randomly selected French citizens assembled by President Macron last year to vote on proposed measures to address the climate crisis, France is creating a new law that penalizes the offense of ecocide. Penalties would vary in severity based upon the intent of the offender, but extensive ecosystem damage could garner fines between €375,000 to €4.5million (about $455,000 to $5,460,000) or imprisonment for three to ten years.Justice Minister Éric Dupond-Moretti told the French newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche, “Yesterday, if you polluted, you would win. Tomorrow, if you pollute, you will pay up to 10 times the benefit you would get from throwing your rubbish into the river.”
Photo by Edward Kimmel, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. CC BY-SA 2.0
Sources:
International lawyers draft plan to criminalise ecosystem destruction
To End Impunity for 'Deliberate Destruction' of Planet, International Lawyers Drafting Plan to Criminalize Ecocide
Ecocide is a crime against peace, and it must be stopped
Young climate activists want jail terms for people who harm the planet
France is Making Ecocide Illegal, but What Does That Mean?
France introduces new ‘ecocide’ offence with €4.5m fine
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.