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Six Grassroots
Environmentalists Win $750,000 Goldman Environmental Prize
Vietnam
Vet Fighting Pentagon Nerve Gas Incineration and Champion Of Native Forest
Dwellers Terrorized in Liberian Civil War Among Six Winners of World's Largest
Prize for Grassroots Environmentalists
By: Goldman Environmental Prize
Published: Apr 24, 2006 at 08:29
A Vietnam veteran fighting Pentagon plans to incinerate
chemical weapons stockpiles, a man who tipped the United Nations to illegal
logging in war-torn Liberia and the person behind the creation of the world's
largest area of protected tropical rainforest are among the winners of this
year's prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize.
"These six winners are among the most important people you have not heard
of before," said Goldman Prize founder Richard N. Goldman. "All of them have
fought, often alone and at great personal risk, to protect the environment
in their home countries. Their incredible achievements are an inspiration
to all of us."
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and Wangari Maathai, former Goldman Environmental
Prize winner and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, will address the audience at
the invitation-only ceremony tonight (Monday, April 24, 2006) at 5 p.m. at
the San Francisco Opera House.
The $750,000 Goldman Environmental Prize, now in its 17th year, is awarded
annually to six grassroots environmental heroes and is the largest award of
its kind in the world.
This year's winners are:
North America: Craig E. Williams, 58, Kentucky:
Williams convinced the Pentagon to stop plans to incinerate old chemical
weapons stockpiled around the United States and has built a nationwide grassroots
coalition to lobby for safe disposal solutions. Williams co-founded the
Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation, which won the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize
for its international campaign to ban landmines.
Africa: Silas Kpanan'Ayoung Siakor, 36, Liberia:
Siakor exposed evidence that former Liberia President Charles Taylor used
profits of unchecked, rampant logging to pay the costs of a brutal 14-year
war. Such evidence -- collected at great personal risk to Siakor -- led the
United Nations Security Council to ban the export of Liberian timber, part
of wider trade sanctions that remain in place today.
Asia: Yu Xiaogang, 55, China: Yu spent years
creating groundbreaking watershed management programs while researching and
documenting the socioeconomic impact of dams on Chinese communities. His
reports are considered a primary reason that the central government paid
additional restitution to villagers displaced by existing dams and now considers
social impact assessments for major dam developments.
South & Central America: Tarcisio Feitosa
da Silva, 35, Brazil: Feitosa led efforts to create the world's largest group
of protected tropical forest regions in a remote, lawless region in northern
Brazil threatened by illegal logging. Despite death threats, Feitosa worked
with local organizations to create protected lands for local residents and
exposed illegal logging activities to the Brazilian government.
Europe: Olya Melen, 26, Ukraine: Melen, a lawyer,
used legal channels to temporarily halt construction of a massive canal that
would have cut through the heart of the Danube Delta, one of the world's
most valuable wetlands. For her efforts, she was denounced by the notoriously
corrupt and lawless pre-Orange Revolution government.
Islands & Island Nations: Anne Kajir, 32,
Papua New Guinea: Kajir uncovered evidence of widespread corruption and
complicity in the Papua New Guinea government, which allowed rampant, illegal
logging that is destroying the largest remaining intact block of tropical
forest in the Asia Pacific region. In 1997, her first year practicing law,
Kajir successfully defended a precedent-setting appeal in the Supreme Court
of Papua New Guinea that forced the logging interests to pay damages to indigenous
land owners.
About the Goldman Environmental Prize
The Goldman Environmental Prize was established in 1990 by San Francisco
civic leader and philanthropist Richard N. Goldman and his late wife, Rhoda
H. Goldman. It has been awarded to 113 people from 67 countries.
Prize winners are selected by an international jury from confidential nominations
submitted by a worldwide network of environmental organizations and individuals.
Previous Prize winners have been at the center of some of the world's most
pressing environmental issues, including seeking justice for victims of environmental
disasters at Love Canal and Bhopal, India; leading the fight for dolphin-safe
tuna; fighting oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge; and exposing
Monsanto's role in introducing rBGH milk-stimulating hormone in the dairy
industry.
Since receiving a Goldman Prize, eight winners have been appointed or elected
to national office in their countries, including several who became ministers
of the environment. The 1991 Prize winner for Africa, Wangari Maathai, won
the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize.