

Marta Schaaf
2.7K posts

@MartaSchaaf
DrPH; Director of the Program on Climate, Economic & Social Justice, and Corporate Accty @amnesty; parent; activist w/ @ClimateFamsNYC; 🏳️🌈 All views my own.









At a time of mounting US pushbacks against regulation of multinational companies, Big Tech and other actors, the EU must show leadership in the protection of human rights, the climate and the environment. We all want to live in a safe, clean and healthy environment. This requires laws with clear and firm human rights and climate protections. Yet last November @EU_Commission President @vonderleyen announced alarming plans to “simplify” three key pillars of the European Green Deal, including the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive, which obligates companies to conduct appropriate human rights and environmental due diligence around their operations, and those of their subsidiaries and parts of their value chain. This omnibus proposal is due to be published this Wednesday. Last month @Amnesty and 170 other organisations warned that this will create costly confusion and risk weakening vital protections for people and our planet: amnesty.org/en/documents/i… Information emerging about the draft proposal indicates severe watering down of key laws. @Amnesty calls on the EU Leadership and Member States to ensure that the process is fair, transparent, inclusive and avoids undermining the key protections contained in these crucial laws. No matter what corporate lobbyists say about efficiency, it is not in humanity’s best interests to let the planet burn in the name of “competitiveness” and “cutting red tape”. Sustainability regulations are essential if Europe is to meet its existing commitments on tackling the climate crisis. All eyes are on Europe. The EU should encourage a race to the top by setting high standards and promoting a level playing field for companies – all rooted in sustainability, human rights and the just transition we all need. The health and prosperity of future generations is dependent on today’s leaders putting the right guardrails in place.


In September, I went to #Haiti with a colleague. We spoke to 50+ children. Our @amnesty report on the gangs’ assault on childhood comes out next week.

🚨NEWS: The #AIActionSummit must center binding and enforceable regulation to curb AI-driven harms. With rising global backlash against human rights, world leaders must not give a carte blanche to tech companies, to operate without rules or guidelines. amnesty.org/en/latest/news…



“An abrupt collapse of USAID would put the rights of millions of people around the world at greater risk," said @dpaulobrien executive director, @amnestyusa. Full statement ⬇️ amnestyusa.org/press-releases…

The wildfires in California, USA are an UNnatural disaster made more likely and more dangerous by decades of government inaction on climate change and lying by fossil fuel companies.

WHO comments on United States announcement of intent to withdraw Geneva – The World Health Organization regrets the announcement that the United States of America intends to withdraw from the Organization. WHO plays a crucial role in protecting the health and security of the world’s people, including Americans, by addressing the root causes of disease, building stronger health systems, and detecting, preventing and responding to health emergencies, including disease outbreaks, often in dangerous places where others cannot go. The United States was a founding member of WHO in 1948 and has participated in shaping and governing WHO’s work ever since, alongside 193 other Member States, including through its active participation in the World Health Assembly and Executive Board. For over seven decades, WHO and the USA have saved countless lives and protected Americans and all people from health threats. Together, we ended smallpox, and together we have brought polio to the brink of eradication. American institutions have contributed to and benefited from membership in WHO. With the participation of the United States and other Member States, WHO has over the past 7 years implemented the largest set of reforms in its history, to transform our accountability, cost-effectiveness, and impact in countries. This work continues. We hope the United States will reconsider and we look forward to engaging in constructive dialogue to maintain the partnership between the USA and WHO, for the benefit of the health and well-being of millions of people around the globe.


