On Monday (7) morning, a high -level meeting of the United Nations on human security and weather justice began in Belem. The inauguration of the event was the Supreme Court Minister (STF) and Louis Edson Fachin, who defended the “care righteous” of Amazon’s active listening and the weather crisis. The meeting will be held at Maria Silvia Noons Theater at Dock Station and promoted by the Latin American Permanent Committee for Crime Prevention (Coplad), in partnership with Para (MPPA) United Nations Meeting on Climate Change of 2025 (COP 30)It will be headquartered in Belem in November 2025.
In his speech, Fachin points out that “the traditional partitions between the centro and the edges should be recovered” and warned about the danger of not consenting with climate goals internationally. The Minister stressed the concern with gas emissions, which is almost half -cut by 2030 and that it is the main component of COP 30. “As we know, the challenge is great, because the warming should still be 2.5%. And this meeting is the last to assess this goal for Cap 30,” he said.
The minister stressed that emergency and comprehensive measures are needed for the extreme weather events already experienced in Brazil. “The preservation of the forest is fundamental to the nation’s atmosphere, as well as development and production. We must listen to the reverse population. We all call it to this responsibility,” he said.
Fachin points to the interaction between climate, social and security crises in the Amazon region. “Crimes in the area, caught in the area, timber, exploitation mining, drugs, weapons and people, high suicides, homicides, femininity, sexual exploitation, racism, armed struggles and a test of the genocide of the traditional population,” he said.
When it comes to indigenous leader David Kopenawa, Fachin argues that the earth is a creature. For him, it is essential to collect the knowledge of forest people, science and organizations in dealing with the weather crisis. He concluded, “Plant care righteousness so we can get the future.”