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Climate Crisis declared a critical threat to Pacific health Featured

Ratu Epeli Nailatikau and Takeshi Kasai at the 5th Asia-Pacific Parliamentarian Forum on Global Health. Photo: Parliament of Fiji Ratu Epeli Nailatikau and Takeshi Kasai at the 5th Asia-Pacific Parliamentarian Forum on Global Health. Photo: Parliament of Fiji

27 August, 2019. Parliamentarians from 20 Asian and Pacific nations have declared the climate crisis a critical threat to human health in the region.

A forum on global health hosted by Fiji's Parliament last week made the statement as part of the 'Nadi Communique'.

Fiji's Speaker, Ratu Epeli Nailatikau, chaired the meeting and said climate change was one of the greatest threats to health with immense implications for societies and economies.

Increasingly frequent and severe weather events mean there are more injuries and deaths, higher rates of infectious and mosquito-borne diseases, as well as food and nutrition insecurity, Ratu Epeli said.

The climate crisis is also a threat to safe drinking water, housing, and employment opportunities and has an impact people's mental health, he said.

The Western Pacific regional director for the World Health Organisation, Takeshi Kasai, stressed the need for widespread climate action policies.

"Climate change is not just a scientific argument, it is a real threat to people," Dr Kasai said.

The issues are complex but time is running out to take action on present and future health threats, he said.

Dr Kasai called for politicians to drive positive policy change because "without health, we have nothing", he said.

The 5th Asia-Pacific Parliamentarian Forum on Global Health included lawmakers from Cambodia, Cook Islands, Fiji, Federated States of Micronesia, Japan, Kiribati, Laos, Malaysia, New Zealand, Niue, Palau, Philippines, Republic of Korea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Thailand, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu and Viet Nam.

The forum said it noted "with alarm" that global warming of 1.5 degrees celsius was expected to threaten the very existence of low-lying island nations because of sea-level rise and climate-related disasters.

- RNZI

2 comments

  • Spencer W. Folau
    Spencer W. Folau Friday, 06 September 2019 14:45 Comment Link

    Hey scientists, please tell me how many hurricanes will swing by in the next hurricane season thru' Tonga. How many will be in the pacific? How come you did not tell me Dorian five years ago? even two years will be great. Ahh you can tell me what happen in 10 years time but you can't predict the hurricane next week, even the one right now. Hoi

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  • Sione A. Mokofisi
    Sione A. Mokofisi Wednesday, 28 August 2019 09:36 Comment Link

    "CLIMATE CHANGE" OR "CLIMATE CRY-WOLF?" The Big Monster called "global warming" is going to sink the islands! But how many millions of years have these islands been rising and sinking? Ice Ages and Planet Warmings, volcano eruptions, and islands sinking and rising due to earthquakes, geological shifts in the earth's plate tectonics. Or just complaining about the climate?
    Well the icebergs in the North and South poles are melting to sink the islands. But can we stop the rain falling in the ocean to raise sea level? Why haven't the islands sunk at the end of the last Ice Age when icebergs melted?
    Now fossil fuel has been blamed. Why are these Climate Change representatives still flying around in airplanes driven by fossil fuel called jet fuel, and drive combustion engines automobile? Hympcrites, or fearmongerings?

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