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Youths embark on ‘Africa Climate March’, demand global action

The fourth day of the ongoing Africa Climate Week took a different swing as hundreds of African youths representing the Youth Wing of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) took to the streets of Accra, Ghana for the Africa Climate March.

Africa Climate March
The Africa Climate March

The march, held on Thursday, March 21, 2019, begun at the Holy Spirit Cathedral, Accra around 09.35AM and ended at the Accra International Conference Centre, venue of the conference.

Leading the march, Joseph Amponsem, the Executive Director of Green Africa Youth Organisation, said: “Africa has had enough of strategies, workshops and conferences. This Africa Climate March is our way of emphasising that policy makers and the government should drive implementation to stop climate change in Africa. We also ask for youth inclusion and new projects that cater to the needs of young people.”

The youth contact person for Pan African Climate Justice Alliance (PACJA), Mr. Dickson Kithinji, stressed the need for African youths within the climate discuss to truly groomed capacity-wise to birth climate solutions.

A climate March statement issued by Maria Auma on behalf of the group reads: “Everyday, youth around the world are gearing up to demand for climate justice and climate action. The growing movement is now in Africa, with young people taking to the streets in peaceful demonstrations to place pressure on their governments to increase ambition.

“But it is not just about increasing Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) or sitting in boardrooms in front of policymakers to talk about our continental Adaptation Plans. It is about securing our future, protecting our livelihoods and saving the one planet that we call home.

“We walk on the streets to demand for change. We walk on the streets to put a face to this terror. climate change is no longer a myth. It is that dark monster knocking at our doorsteps in broad daylight telling us that maybe tomorrow the homes of our brothers and sisters in small island developing states may get washed away by rising sea levels. It is that looming drought scourge that extends for more than two months and threatens the food baskets of Africa. It is the abnormal rising temperatures in the night and in the day that result in heat strokes for babies and increase the spread of diseases.

“Are we going to sit back and do nothing? Or will we push back and say enough is enough! No more do we want to stand on the sidelines and watch our governments negotiate text of what our future will look like without including us. In this age of digital technology, globalisation and multilateralism, we are demanding to be heard, demanding to be included, demanding for real action. We need our leaders to pay more attention to adaptation and loss and damage, to take responsibility and ownership at home within our national budgets and the private sector so that we can implement strategies towards climate neutrality.

“National dialogues must meaningfully involve young people, otherwise what is a stakeholder consultation, when the key stakeholders that matter are absent from the room? We are tired of the status-quo, of being locked out of meeting rooms where decisions are made. It is ever so easy to bracket and delete crucial texts on contentious issues that appear too difficult to deliberate on. Gone are the days when contexts like financing, carbon pricing and clean development mechanisms were left for those older than us to demystify. We are an informed and educated generation with innovative ideas and solutions that work. Listen to us! Support us! We are a youthful generation and we make up nearly half of the world’s population.

“Now is the time to take the needed steps that will ensure we remain within the 1.5 degrees target by 2030. During this Africa Climate Week, when all countries from the continent have convened to talk, let us instead use this opportunity to create pathways for green jobs, to power Africa with renewable and affordable energy and to place women, children and youth in the center of policy processes, instead of ushering them to the back seat.

“Now is the time to commit to contributing to the Adaptation Fund, to take financial responsibility like grown adults should and put a price tag to climate change. Now is the time to become guardians of our continent to believe that we can achieve climate neutrality together. Like Nelson Mandela said, ‘It always seems impossible until it’s done’. So, as we march let us join forces towards a green and sustainable Africa.”

By ‘Seyifunmi Adebote, Accra, Ghana

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