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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-05-09 11:17 AM
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Climate migration will grow as changes take hold - experts
Climate migration will grow as changes take hold - experts
05 Nov 2009 12:38:00 GMT
Written by: Laurie Goering

BARCELONA (AlertNet) - Seferino Cortes has lived his life at the foot of Illimani, one of Bolivia's tallest snow-capped peaks, tending cattle, fruit trees and fields of maize, beans and potatoes.

But in a few decades he and his family expect to have to abandon their land and move on. Illimani's glaciers, which provide his community's water, are shrinking fast as winter snowfall plummets, and are now expected to vanish within 40 years.

"We live from Illimani," said the soft-spoken 45-year-old farmer, who attended international negotiations in Barcelona this week aimed at creating a new global climate change pact.

"Without it, with what water will we irrigate our fields, wash ourselves and our clothes, water our animals?" he said. "If there is no water, we will have to leave our place. We will be forced to abandon our community, our culture and custom."

As the effects of climate change take hold around the world, countries, research institutions and international agencies are debating how to handle what is expected to become a trickle and perhaps eventually a flood of climate migrants.

More:
http://www.alertnet.org/db/an_art/60714/2009/10/5-123809-1.htm
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-05-09 11:24 AM
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1. Bolivia: water people of Andes face extinction
Bolivia: water people of Andes face extinction
Climate change robs Uru Chipaya of lifeline that had sustained them for millennia
Rory Carroll and Andres Schipani in Santa Ana de Chipaya
The Guardian, Friday 24 April 2009

Its members belong to what is thought to be the oldest surviving culture in the Andes, a tribe that has survived for 4,000 years on the barren plains of the Bolivian interior. But the Uru Chipaya, who outlasted the Inca empire and survived the Spanish conquest, are warning that they now face extinction through climate change.

The tribal chief, 62-year-old Felix Quispe, 62, says the river that has sustained them for millennia is drying up. His people cannot cope with the dramatic reduction in the Lauca, which has dwindled in recent decades amid erratic rainfall that has turned crops to dust and livestock to skin and bones.

"Over here used to be all water," he said, gesturing across an arid plain. "There were ducks, crabs, reeds growing in the water. I remember that. What are we going to do? We are water people."

The Uru Chipaya, who according to mythological origin are "water beings" rather than human beings, could soon be forced to abandon their settlements and go to the cities of Bolivia and Chile, said Quispe. "There is no pasture for animals, no rainfall. Nothing. Drought."

The tribe is renowned for surviving on the fringe of a salt desert, a harsh and eerie landscape which even the Incas avoided, by flushing the soil with river water. As the Lauca has dried, many members of the Uru Chipaya have migrated, leaving fewer than 2,000 in the village of Santa Ana and the surrounding settlements.

"We have nothing to eat. That's why our children are all leaving," said Vicenta Condori, 52, dressed in traditional skirt and shawl. She has two children in Chile.

More:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/apr/24/andes-tribe-threat-bolivia-climate-change
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