Google – AFP, 17 October 2013
Wellington
— A Pacific islander is seeking recognition as the world's first climate change
refugee in New Zealand as rising seas threaten his low-lying homeland, the
man's lawyer said on Thursday.
Ioane
Teitiota, 37, launched an appeal this week against a decision by New Zealand
immigration authorities to refuse him refugee status and deport him to Kiribati
in the central Pacific, lawyer Michael Kitt said.
Kitt
acknowledged Teitiota's New Zealand visa had expired but said he should not
face deportation because of the difficulties he would encounter in Kiribati --
which consists of more than 30 coral atolls, most only a few metres (feet)
above sea level.
He said
rising seas had already swamped parts of Kiribati, destroying crops and
contaminating water supplies.
![]() |
This file
photo shows Tarawa atoll, capital
of the vast archipelago nation of Kiribati,
pictured on September 11, 2001.
(AFP/File, Torsten Blackwood)
|
He said
Teitiota's case had the potential to set an international precedent, not only
for Kiribati's 100,000 residents but for all populations threatened by man-made
climate change.
If his
appeal is successful Teitiota would become the world's first climate refugee,
Kitt said.
As the
environmental problem worsened a new class of refugee was emerging that was not
properly covered by existing international protocols, he added.
"It's
a fluid situation, eventually the courts and legislatures are going to have to
make a decision on how we deal with this."
Kiribati is
among a number of island states -- including Tuvalu, Tokelau and the Maldives
-- the UN Human Rights Commission is concerned could become
"stateless" due to climate change.
Kiribati
government's has raised the prospect of relocating the entire population or
building man-made islands to rehouse them if predictions the sea will rise by
one metre (3.25 feet) by the end of the century prove accurate.
It has also
moved to buy 2,000 hectares (5,000 acres) of land in Fiji to act as a farm for
Kiribati if salt-water pollution means the islands in the former British colony
can no longer produce crops.
Kitt said
deporting Teitiota was like forcing a gay person to return to a country where
they faced persecution, or a domestic violence victim to go to a nation where
women's rights were not protected.
In refusing
Teitiota's application earlier this year, immigration authorities argued that
the Kiribati man could not be considered a refugee because no one in his
homeland was threatening his life if he returned.
Kitt
countered by arguing that the environment in Kiribati effectively poses a
threat to Teitiota and the three children he fathered in New Zealand, who will
have to return with him if he is deported.
"Mr
Teitiota is being persecuted passively by the circumstances in which he's
living, which the Kiribati government has no ability to ameliorate," he
said.
Kiribati
joined a number of other Pacific states last month in signing the "Majuro
declaration" on climate change, which calls for urgent action on an issue
where small countries are bearing the brunt of impacts caused by major
polluters.
A judge in
the Auckland High Court reserved a decision on Teitiota's appeal on Wednesday
and the judgement is expected to be released by the end of the month.


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