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Insight, debate and campaigning news from ActionAid

The Big IF London – will you be there?

Ema Jackson's picture Posted by Ema JacksonCampaigns Assistant
 

I am so excited about going to the Big IF rally in Hyde Park, London on Saturday!

What's happening at the Big IF rally

When you arrive in Hyde Park, along with thousands of others, you will have the chance to plant a spinning flower as part of a breath-taking art installation that will be the size of a football field! This huge visual petition will represent the 2 million children’s lives lost each year due to hunger, sending the G8 leaders a message that they cannot ignore. You can make your personalised spinning flower on the day, or even better bring one that you have made at home. Download your instructions for making the spinning flowers. 

Hear inspiring speeches from humanitarian and wife of Nelson Mandela, Graca Machel, philanthropist Bill Gates, former Archbishop of Canterbury and Chair of Christian Aid Rowan Williams, broadcaster Natasha Kaplinsky and Alvin Mosioma, Director of Tax Justice Network Africa. The event will be hosted by Gethin Jones and Myleene Klass and will also include exclusive appearances from a number of campaign supporters including Grammy Award winning singer Angelique Kidjo.

Then we will make a huge noise (feel free to bring pots to bang, whistles and vuvuzelas to blow, rattles to shake etc!) to demand change, making sure that G8 leaders go to Northern Ireland with our demands ringing in their ears. Because IF we make enough noise, they won’t be able to ignore us.

There will also be a children’s area, a blogger area, a youth area, a picnic area and much more.

And if all that hasn’t inspired you to come then read a message from Eddie Izzard asking you to be there. It is going to be an amazing day – see you there!

Join ActionAid in Hyde Park

Come and find us at the ActionAid stall where you can claim your free T-shirt to say thank you for all your amazing campaigning this year! 

We are on stall number 2 in the Campaigns Zone, next door to Oxfam. We’ll have some giant ActionAid flags and 5ft ActionAid balloons so you shouldn’t be able to miss us, either at the stall or in the crowd. You can also call our Campaign Officer Caroline Jones if you can’t find us, on 075 3344 7618. The nearest tube stations to the rally are Knightsbridge and South Kensington.

We’ll be ready to welcome you from 1.30pm to give you your free ActionAid/IF tshirt, placard and noisemaker for the rally. The Campaign Zone will be ready for to public to explore from 12pm, and to avoid the queues it’s best to arrive as early as possible to plant your flower as part of the mass visual petition. We’ll also be holding workshops where you can find out more about what we’re calling for and hear from Elly and Joy, ActionAid campaigners from Tanzania and Kenya.

Stewards will be on hand to help guide you from one area to the other.
 

Any questions email campaign@actionaid.org and register your place.

Sod the poor, go offshore! Welcome to Tax Heaven…

Chris Jordan's picture Posted by Chris Jordan Tax Justice Campaigner
 
Sod the poor, go offshore

The secret’s out. Nearly half of all investment in developing countries goes through tax havens, making it easy for companies to avoid tax bills in the world’s poorest countries. Ridiculous, right?

Yesterday, ActionAid UK unearthed conclusive proof of the lunacy of tax havens. This website might seem unreal, but the facts and stories are shockingly true. See it and share it here >> www.taxheaven.org.uk

Putting up with this situation is crazy when developing countries are losing 3 times more to tax havens than they receive in aid each year. But we have a huge opportunity to make David Cameron bring an end to tax havens at the G8 summit.

Together thousands of us have taken action calling for tax justice, and the pressure is mounting. Last week, George Osborne declared tax avoidance would take centre stage, after our tweets and calls flooded his office.

Now, we have only a few weeks to act together to end to tax havens – and make sure poor countries see the benefits immediately. That means as many people as possible seeing the absurdity behind the tax haven scandal, and demanding change.

Take action today:  Please sign the petition on Tax Heaven and share the site with your friends and family, by Facebook, Twitter or email.

Just a few weeks to go! Together, we can put a stop to tax havens

Read more about tax havens and their effect on tax avoidance in developing countries in our report: How Tax Havens Plunder the Poor.

Tags: G8, tax heaven

Top 3 reasons why you have to be in Hyde Park on 8th June:

Ema Jackson's picture Posted by Ema JacksonCampaigns Assistant
 
Big IF London

There are loads of reasons to come to the Big IF London rally in Hyde Park, Saturday 8 June, but to help you decide I’ve picked my top three. 

1. Be part of the movement:

The IF Campaign is a massive movement with over 200 organisations participating and over 100,000 people taking action, but now the campaign has reached its most important moment – the G8 summit. And so we need thousands of people to come to the Big IF London rally in Hyde Park on Saturday 8 June to demand that the G8 leaders make 2013 the beginning of the end of global hunger. This is incredibly important in a world where one in eight people go to bed hungry every day.  

 

2. Make the G8 clamp down on tax havens: 

Poor countries loose three times as much money to tax havens as they receive in aid each year. The G8 leaders have the opportunity to change this, but they won’t do it unless we push them. That’s why we need as many people as possible to be at the Big IF London rally, so that together we can make a noise loud enough that the G8 leaders can’t ignore us.

 

3. Be part of a massive visual petition:

At the Big IF rally we will together be building a mass visual petition made up by each of the attendees planting a ‘spinning flower.’ You can find out more about the spinning flowers here. This incredible art installation will be the size of a football field and will create a breath-taking visual image that will go down in history and send the G8 leaders a message they can’t ignore. As well as the huge visual petition, there will be exciting speakers, such as Bill Gates and Rowan Williams, interactive areas such as a children’s area and much more. 

 

But none of this can happen without you. We need you, and as many people as you can bring along, to make this day be a huge success and have a real impact on the lives of people in developing countries. Sign up for Big IF London here.

Land rights activist from Tanzania Elly Ahimidiwe: "Join me at the Big IF rally!"

The Tour De Future bicycle tour in Denmark, to raise awareness of the impact of biofuels
The Tour De Future bicycle tour in Denmark, to raise awareness of the impact of biofuels
Photo: ActionAid Denmark

Hi! I’m Elly Ahimidiwe from Moshi, Tanzania.

I arrived yesterday in the UK after a one month Tour De Future bicycle tour in Denmark to raise awareness of the impact of biofuels along with Joy and 4 other Activistas from East Africa. In April, I joined Action Aid campaigners and supporters from across Europe to lobby MEPs in Brussels to reform European biofuels policy to stop it fuelling hunger. I’m excited about meeting you and sharing my experience of land rights and food production issues with you.

I’m a youth trainer and facilitator and set up the Activista network in Tanzania. I’ve been volunteering with Action Action Aid since 2011 in the Tanzania Office as a blogger and developing case studies. The issue of land grabs is really important to me as it is something my own community in Kilimanjaro have experienced and I have witnessed clashes between farmers and pastoralists fighting due to land shortages in the area.

In my work with Action Aid, I’ve worked with communities such as those in Kisarawe and Kilwa District, where a UK company took land the size of 11,000 football pitches to establish a jatropha plantation (a biofuels crop) leaving local people without land to feed their families.

Over the next few weeks I will be campaigning on Enough Food For Everyone IF and I’m really looking forward to meeting other young people who are making noise so that world leaders and policy makers hear us and act. I will be attending the Big IF rally in London on 8th June-Make sure you join me!

Looking forward to meeting you soon!
 

You can also meet Elly in:

 

 

Joy Mghoi from Kenya: campaigning to tackle hunger

Joy Mghoi's picture Posted by Joy MghoiYouth Campaigner
 
Joy Mghoi is a Social Worker and part of the ActionAid Activista network in Kenya
Joy Mghoi is a Social Worker and part of the ActionAid Activista network in Kenya
Photo: Jokob Dall

Hello! I’m Joy Mghoi from Voi, Kenya.

I’ve just arrived in the UK from Denmark where I have spent the last month with 5 other young Activistas from across Africa, taking part in a nationwide bicycle tour organised by ActionAid Denmark to raise awareness of the impact of biofuels.

I am a Social Worker and part of the Activista network in Kenya and am particularly interested in land rights after volunteering on Action Aid’s programme on women and land rights in Taita, Kenya. I have seen how communities have been affected by land grabs and hunger and have campaigned on local land justice through peaceful demonstrations.

In the run up to the G8 I will be at a number of Enough Food For Everyone IF events. Come and meet me this Wednesday at the London IF event where I will be talking about my experience of campaigning on land rights with fellow Activista Elly Kimaro and Luke Harman, Tax Justice campaigner. We will be talking about why we need to push world leaders to tackle the causes of hunger, and how we can make it happen. Join me for the event  'IF You Add Your Voice Against Hunger' on Wednesday 22 May, 6.30pm, Body & Soul.

I became an activist to be a voice for the less privileged and poor who don’t have a voice in society.

Make sure you add your voice and join me at the G8 Rally in London on 8th June. The fight against hunger has just begun and we need to take action now!

I look forward to campaigning with you over the next month and sharing my stories with you.

Shifting away from land-based biofuels

Tim Rice's picture Posted by Tim RiceBiofuel Policy Advisor
 

Understanding EU politics isn't easy at the best of times. But an important debate is on-going about the future of biofuels in Europe, and in member states.

Thanks in part to the efforts of ActionAid supporters, there is growing recognition that the use of food crops to fuel cars is having a range of negative impacts. They are driving food prices higher, fuelling land grabs in developing countries - and many of these biofuels will not reduce any greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions compared to fossil fuels they are replacing. Only industry remains largely in denial.

So the European Commission recommended that current food-to-fuel biofuels should be capped at 5%. Whilst there are many loopholes in this proposal - and ActionAid would like a cap set at 0% to cover all biofuels that are specifically grown on land - it is a step in the right direction. 

But the question remains, if we don’t want to use land-based biofuels, what are the alternatives? The UK is still obliged under EU legislation to find 10% of transport fuels from renewable energy by 2020. One option is electric vehicles – both vehicles and trains – always assuming they are powered by renewable electricity.

ActionAid commissioned the Institute for European Environmental Policy (IEEP) to also look into sustainable alternatives from more advanced biofuels that potentially could be available by 2020. These alternatives require a new technology and are not currently in commercial production. But one of their greatest advantages is that they can be produced from domestic wastes and residues, some of which is discarded. In short, these feedstocks do not directly use land or food crops.

Clearly, the UK needs to be producing a lot less waste; but there is potential for using, for example, food and other biological waste to produce biogas; and ethanol from agricultural straw as a substitute for petrol.

The IEEP report found that this domestic wastes could contribute over 3% of UK transport fuels in 2020. Under EU laws, they are allowed to count double (ie over 6%) towards the UKs 10% transport target. Together with electric vehicles, this could get us a long way towards the target.

This is always assuming they are produced sustainably, both in terms of volumes extracted and their environmental and social impact. Many of these wastes and residues already have existing and better uses; for example in the board or paper industries where effectively the carbon is locked away.

But the sustainability of these feedstocks is still not assured and ActionAid is demanding that the UK government undertakes a series of actions before we embark on greater use of wastes and residues. ActionAid is therefore not endorsing any particular advanced biofuel feedstock or technology.

But the upside of moving towards these sustainable biofuels is that they would create green jobs, potentially up to 10,000 by 2020. They have much better GHG savings compared to conventional biofuels, and they wouldn’t push up food prices or fuel land grabs because land and food are not directly involved.

Sustainable and domestic biofuels will always be in limited quantities. One of the most efficient and quickest ways to reduce our dependence on oil and save greenhouse gas emissions is to have much greater fuel efficiency in vehicles. But first we must wean developed nations off their thirst for food-to-fuel biofuels; the G8 in June is the next opportunity.