{"id":18072,"date":"2013-06-06T13:51:44","date_gmt":"2013-06-06T11:51:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.zeus.aegee.org\/magazine\/?p=18072"},"modified":"2013-06-16T15:19:43","modified_gmt":"2013-06-16T13:19:43","slug":"environmental-destruction-must-become-a-crime-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.zeus.aegee.org\/magazine\/2013\/06\/06\/environmental-destruction-must-become-a-crime-2\/","title":{"rendered":"\u201cEnvironmental destruction must become a crime\u201d"},"content":{"rendered":"
Do you remember the workshop of the Environmental Working Group (EnWG) about Ending Ecocide or the speech in the closing plenary of Agora Budapest by Polly Higgins? <\/strong>At this Spring Agora Rhein-Neckar, Prisca Merz from AEGEE-Passau and Director of End Ecocide in Europe was the person who reminded us that the main idea of their initiative is intriguingly simple: Environmental destruction must become a crime. The following interview was conducted by Laia Garcia Montufo, PR of the EnWG, during the Agora Rhein Neckar.<\/strong><\/strong><\/p>\n \u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n Laia Garcia: You just spoke about ecocide in the plenary and in the AEGEE Inspire at Agora Rhein-Neckar. Can you tell us a bit about these sessions?<\/strong><\/p>\n Prisca Merz<\/strong>: First of all I would like to thank AEGEE for giving me the opportunity to use the Agora to inform AEGEE members of this project which I believe is extremely important for anyone in our generation.<\/p>\n Both sessions were great, in the plenary I just presented the idea briefly while Inspire AEGEE gave me the opportunity to give it a more personal approach and include more of my own motivations and ideas.<\/p>\n Actually, it is partially because of AEGEE that I\u2019m involved in the European Citizens\u2019 Initiative now. Due to AEGEE, I did become more European and also built a network that I can now rely on to find volunteers to help us with anything, from translations to the creation of promo materials.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Laia: How did you get involved in AEGEE and why did you become so active in the Ending Ecocide project?<\/strong><\/p>\n Prisca Merz<\/strong>: I joined AEGEE back in 2006 right when I started university. I went to an information session on AEGEE and never left. I loved the idea and the people and I got very involved in AEGEE, the two biggest projects probably being Beyond Europe, the flagship project 2010-11, and managing ES1 Passau in 2012.<\/p>\n End Ecocide in Europe was actually my idea. I met Polly at a conference in April 2012 (co-sponsored by AEGEE) where she talked about making ecocide a crime and I immediately thought that this was such a powerful idea that it must happen. So I suggested to organize a European Citizens\u2019 Initiative \u2013 and Polly liked this idea very much. So then I started organizing it, finding a team (with many AEGEE oldies by the way), writing a proposal, submitting it and waiting \u2013 until the day we got the happy news that it was accepted by the European Collection and that we could start collecting signatures.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Laia: Members have<\/strong>\u00a0<\/strong>heard about ecocide in AEGEE and specially in the EnWG, but how would you explain it? <\/strong><\/p>\n Prisca Merz<\/strong>: Eco-cide derives from the Greek \u201coikos\u201d, meaning \u201chouse\u201d or \u201chome\u201d, and the Latin \u201ccaedere\u201d meaning \u201cstike down, demolish, kill\u201d. It is literally translated as “killing our home”. Defined as the extensive damage to, destruction or loss of ecosystems, it encompasses all major environmental disasters. Fukushima, Bhopal, Seveso or the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico; deforestation, fracking, biodiversity loss or tar sands \u2013 all of these are potential ecocides and committing such ecocides could become a crime for which those responsible can be held accountable.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n