"US
politicians cannot keep mouthing morality without learning the morality associated with
global cooperation and coexistence. There is no doubt that we need and should be
fighting for good and sound global rules. But the civil society in the US should be
working together with those in other nations to get such rules. More importantly, it
should be fighting its own politicians to respect international rules. When will mega
environmental groups like the IUCN, WWF, Environment Defence Fund or Sierra Club wake up
to this responsibility?"Editors
page, Down To Earth, December 15, 1996
"Ideally I wouldnt like to see
Greenpeace operating in India. Indians should develop their own environmental
NGOs. But Greenpeaces coming to india shows up a major failing of the Indian NGO
movement. Indian environmentalists are generally quite good on resource management issues
because they are not so technically complex. But they are weak on pollution issues. And
given the state of our pollution control boards, a lot of threats being posed by
industrial development are going unnoticed."
Editors page, Down To Earth,
December 31, 1996
"It is time Indian environmentalists start
thinking upstream. Industrial and agricultural development in Haryana is taking
place at the cost of the health of millions in Delhi. And Delhi is urbanising and
industrialising at the cost of Mathura and Agra. A tale of 'who cares'?"
Homicide by Pesticide, CSE, 1997
"Corruption destroys the environment.
It encourages the loot of the natural estate. When people see corruption around them and
realise state regulations are meaningless, they too join in the plunder. Thus, plundering
air, water, forests and other common lands become a way of life."
Down To Earth, October 31, 1998
"Sorry to say this, Mr Sen, but I think the
challenge we face is quite different than the simplistic one you have put forward.
Amartya Sen made his mark by pointing out that people often die of hunger not due to a
shortage of food but often because they lack entitlements. He therefore talks
of welfare systems to create social security safety nets. The problem is this
analysis can explore and explain economic poverty, a phenomenon Sens
professional colleagues namely, economists love to study. It completely
ignores what I would like to call ecological poverty. Why are economists
unable to fathom it, including our sensitive Nobel Prize winner?"
Down To Earth, April 30, 1999
"Global environment negotiations may seem
currently far removed from local and more immediate Southern concerns, but ignoring them
in these early stages, when the rules are being set for future global governance, would be
tantamount to the people of the developing world giving up their rights as global
citizens. The world faces an enormous challenge in the coming century
learning to live as one interdependent world. As yet our leaders have shown little vision
and even little graciousness to build a caring and sharing world. But the worlds
civil society and its public will have the capacity to turn around the politicians and the
bureaucrats. It is only this idealism and vision that will secure our common
future."
Green Politics, Global Environmental
Negotiations-1, CSE, 2000
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