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29.08.2025 à 10:44

Valentin Engobo Lufia

Texte intégral (1721 mots)
People holding a banner in French that reads:" We are the forest, we are the solution."
Marking International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples in the village of Lokolama, Congo Basin forest, Democratic Republic of Congo. Banner reads: “We are the forest. We are the solution.” © Greenpeace Africa

Every year on August 9, the world briefly turns its gaze toward Indigenous People. Our cultures are celebrated, our songs and painted faces put on display. And then, silence returns. Behind the cliche, our communities remain marginalised, dispossessed, and forgotten. This must end.

I am Valentin Engobo Mufia, a son of Lokolama, a land nestled deep within the equatorial forest of the Democratic Republic of Congo. I have witnessed my people treated as strangers on their own ancestral lands. Our ancestral knowledge is dismissed, mocked, or exploited. My tribe, the Tshwa, has lived in harmony with the forest for generations. We know its plants, its spirits, its secrets. And yet, in the minds of many decision-makers, we are still seen as “sub-citizens,” obstacles to development, shadows in the trees.

Local man talking to children.
Greenpeace Africa joined local and Indigenous communities of Lokolama, Penzélé and Mbandaka in the village of Lokolama, Congo Basin forest, Democratic Republic of Congo in celebration of the International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples. © Greenpeace Africa

Indigenous communities challenging the status quo 

My grandfather was one of the first in our region to challenge this invisibility, refusing to accept the submissive role imposed by colonial powers and local elites. He opened a path. Today, I continue that fight. Not for myself, but so that my children and their children may one day walk in a living forest, with their heads held high.

Because it is not only our culture that is under threat. It is also your future. The peatlands we have protected for centuries are among the most vital carbon sinks on earth. They are a natural barrier against climate chaos. And yet, instead of listening to us, we are sidelined. We are denied land rights over territories we have safeguarded for generations. Destructive projects continue to be approved without our consent, sometimes even in our name, but without our presence.

People walking in the forest. Text on the T-shirt reads: "Greenpeace Africa. My forest, my future."
Greenpeace Africa joined local and Indigenous communities of Lokolama, Penzélé and Mbandaka in the Congo Basin forest to learn how they protect their environment and chart sustainable solutions for the future. © Greenpeace Africa

I have taken this fight to the highest levels, even filing a complaint against the World Bank for harmful policies imposed on our lands. This is more than a political battle. It is a fight for survival, for dignity, for the right to exist without having our identity erased or hijacked by others.

Today, we no longer accept symbolic gestures or hollow promises. We demand:

  • Clear, international legal recognition of our rights
  • Direct and structured access to climate finance
  • Training and education tailored to our context
  • And most importantly, full inclusion in all development policies and decisions

Indigenous People’s role in climate talks

Indigenous People will no longer be reduced to decorative roles in climate talks or NGO reports. We are not props in the environmental movement – we are its frontline defenders. And we demand to be respected and treated as such.

People holding a banner in French that reads: "Our forests, our lives."
In the Congo Basin forest village of Lokolama, celebrating the International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples. Banner reads: “Our forests, our lives.” © Greenpeace Africa

Yes, I fear that some actors will continue to speak on our behalf, capturing funds meant for us without ever involving us. But I still believe in the prophecy that has long circulated among our people: “The people of the forest will reclaim their voice and light the way for others.”

Aerial shot of Lokolama, Congo Basin forest, Democratic Republic of Congo. © Greenpeace Africa
Lokolama, Congo Basin forest, Democratic Republic of Congo. © Greenpeace Africa

Protecting the forest doesn’t mean locking it away. It means using it with reverence and responsibility. We have always done that. Now it’s time for public policies and international institutions to do the same. It’s time for leaders to support projects born within our communities, to truly protect our ancestral lands, and to regulate the ruthless exploitation of natural resources.

Because in the end, we are one with the forest. And as long as we stand, we will fight for it, for ourselves, for you, for the future.

Valentin Engobo Lufia is representative of the Tshwa Indigenous People of Lokolama, DRC.

Guest authors work with Greenpeace to share their personal experiences and perspectives and are responsible for their own content.

Take action now to protect the Congo Basin.

People in a village.
Lokolama, Congo Basin forest, Democratic Republic of Congo. © Greenpeace Africa

This story was originally published by Greenpeace Africa for the International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples (9 August). More stories from the Congo Basin forest available on Greenpeace Africa’s ‘travel diary from the Congo Basin’ blog series.

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29.08.2025 à 03:37

Greenpeace International

Texte intégral (4118 mots)

From an air pollution protest in South Africa to a blockade in New Zealand, to a garbage mountain protest in Germany, here are a few of our favourite images from Greenpeace’s work around the world this week.


🇿🇦 South Africa -Greenpeace activists and communities living in some of South Africa’s most polluted regions staged a powerful peaceful protest outside the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE) in Pretoria to denounce South Africa’s deadly air pollution crisis and demand urgent governmental action.


🇩🇪 Germany – Greenpeace activists stage an impressive image for more environmental protection. A kayak disguised as the Titanic heads straight for an iceberg of packaging waste around three meters high in the harbour basin of Muenster. The scene is accompanied by activists on stand-up paddleboards with banners. The action is part of a campaign for a municipal packaging tax and is intended to send a strong signal for more environmental and resource protection.


In front of the Ministry of Defence, Greenpeace Youth protests with a five-square-metre banner reading ‘We don't want to march into our future’, together with the German Peace Society – United War Resisters (DFG-VK) against the foreseeable reintroduction of compulsory military service. © Paul Lovis Wagner / Greenpeac
© Paul Lovis Wagner / Greenpeac

🇩🇪 Germany – In front of the Ministry of Defence, Greenpeace Youth protests with a five-square-metre banner reading ‘We don’t want to march into our future’, together with the German Peace Society – United War Resisters (DFG-VK), against the foreseeable reintroduction of compulsory military service.


🇳🇿 New Zealand – During the second day of the meeting of the Global Ocean Treaty Preparatory Commission, Greenpeace held an event at the United Nations Headquarters in partnership with activists, scientists and indigenous community members. Together, they made the case for large new protected areas of the high seas in the Atlantic and across the globe, which could help to reach the 30 by 30 target. The event, featuring panellists from Bermuda, Nigeria, and Canada, demanded integrity in recognising and empowering local and Indigenous rights, allowing for co-governance rooted in both scientific and traditional knowledge. This grounded, inclusive approach will ensure these Marine Protected Areas are both ecologically robust and socially just.


"Amazonia" travelling letters projection show at Gustaf-Adolfs Square in Gothenburg. Greenpeace brings the Amazon to the heart of Europe through a powerful street-level action: giant AMAZONIA letters touring major cities. Through emotional messages, video projections, and Indigenous voices, the action calls for urgent climate justice and forest protection — ahead of the historic COP30 in Belém. © Will Rose / Greenpeace
© Will Rose / Greenpeace

🇸🇪 Sweden – “Amazonia” travelling letters projection show at Gustaf-Adolfs Square in Gothenburg.

Greenpeace brings the Amazon to the heart of Europe through a powerful street-level action: giant AMAZONIA letters touring major cities. Through emotional messages, video projections, and Indigenous voices, the action calls for urgent climate justice and forest protection — ahead of the historic COP30 in Belém.


Greenpeace has been a pioneer of photo activism for more than 50 years, and remains committed to bearing witness and exposing environmental injustice through the images we capture.

To see more Greenpeace photos and videos, please visit our Media Library.

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27.08.2025 à 11:55

Jackie Zamora

Texte intégral (1357 mots)

Ever tried planning a trip across Europe and wondered: why are flights so cheap while trains cost a fortune? It’s not unusual to find a €15 flight and a €300 train ticket for the same day, same destination. How does that make any sense? If trains are the greener option, why are we basically being punished for choosing them?

The difference in prices isn’t a coincidence, it’s the result of a transport system that rewards pollution. We analysed 142 routes across 31 countries and the result shows that for a majority of cross-border trips, rail remains far more expensive than air. Here are 3 key reasons why: 

1. Aviation enjoys unfair tax privileges

You might have heard colourful slogans from low-cost airlines like “Nothing beats a cheap-flight holiday!” but the reality is the planet is paying the extra cost of cheap flight tickets. Polluting air travel is subsidised and it’s the biggest contributor to transport emissions. Aviation fuel remains untaxed across most of Europe. This mode of transport enjoys several financial benefits like:

Paris-Charles De Gaulle (CDG) Airport, France. © Lorraine Turci / Greenpeace
Air France aircrafts parks at Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport. © Lorraine Turci / Greenpeace

2. Green travel gets penalised

Train trips can cost up to 26 times more than flights, as the most extreme example found shows: Barcelona to London costs just €14.99 by plane, compared to €389 by train. The current system is making climate-friendly travel harder. Unlike aviation, rail operators are charged with:

  • Energy taxes
  • VAT in many countries
  • High infrastructure fees
  • Track access fees

The problems don’t stop at pricing, for people with reduced mobility, train travel can be even more inaccessible as rail networks are left with crumbling infrastructure and fewer connections because of underfunding and neglect.

Public Transport 9 Euro Ticket Starts in Hamburg. © Gesche Jäger / Greenpeace
In June, July and August 2022, everyone can use local public transport throughout Germany for 9 euros a month. The 9-Euro-Ticket is valid on all means of public transport (such as RB, RE, U-Bahn, S-Bahn, bus, streetcar). Passengers at Hamburg Central Station.
© Gesche Jäger / Greenpeace

3. Tax and climate injustice 

When you have to decide between a €15 flight and a €300 train ticket for the same day journey, it’s not a fair choice. What may seem like consumer freedom or cost preferences is a system of distorted prices, tax injustice, and political inaction. Most people are inclined to choose flights not because they want to, but because they’re being steered to that option by a system that has quietly made green travel the more expensive and inaccessible option.

What needs to change

As the world grapples with record wildfires, droughts and heatwaves, aligning transport pricing with climate objectives is essential. Governments need to stop rewarding pollution. We are calling for climate tickets, fair pricing and a tax on the super-rich to fund better rail services.

We need a transport system that puts people and the planet first. Train travel is the greener choice and it shouldn’t come with a higher price tag.

Action to Block Heliport Lago ahead of WEF, Davos. © Daniel Müller / Greenpeace
Davos, 20 January 2025 – Greenpeace activists from various countries blocked the arrivals of the participants of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland at the heliport Lago. The Greenpeace International peaceful protest aimed to hold polluting elites accountable and call on governments to tax the super-rich to fund climate, environmental and social action.
© Daniel Müller / Greenpeace
Activists Block Heliport Lago ahead of WEF, Davos. © Miriam Künzli / Greenpeace
Tax the super-rich

Together, let’s urge governments to tax the super-rich and fund a green and fair future.

Add your name

Jackie Zamora is European social economic engagement lead for Greenpeace’s Fair Share campaign.

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26.08.2025 à 19:48

Tsering Lama

Texte intégral (1391 mots)

This August, as we highlight and celebrate Indigenous Peoples Month, we are fortunate to have three powerful messages of defiance and hope from the three great tropical forests of the world. These messages are profound in themselves, but altogether, they represent the growing transnational movement of Indigenous solidarity and leadership that can inspire and guide us all. This is a movement grounded in ancestral knowledge and shaped by a vision that extends far beyond the present moment. 

As pessimism dampens our collective sights, we can and must turn to such perspectives —  perspectives based in a longer history and the deepest values of kinship and community. As the illogic of capitalism and colonialism fails everyone but the elite, we must learn from Indigenous ways of seeing, being, knowing, and doing.  

West Papua

Hand Over Customary Area Knasaimos in Southwest Papua. © Jurnasyanto Sukarno / Greenpeace
The Knasaimos Indigenous Peoples, residing in Indonesia’s Southwest Papua province have fought for decades to protect their lands from exploitation. © Jurnasyanto Sukarno / Greenpeace

“If you ask me what my vision is for West Papua, in particular the land belonging to the Knasaimos Indigenous people, I will tell you that nature must be preserved for generations to come. That in hundreds of years hence, Indigenous people must still be able to enjoy our forests and rivers, and breathe fresh air, just as we can now.”

These are the words of Nabot Sreklefat, a leader and organizer among Indigenous youth in West Papua, home to the last tropical forests of Indonesia still standing. 

Sreklefat speaks passionately about how his people have stood up to illegal logging, transmigration, and palm oil expansion in the Knasaimos region. But the struggle has been years in the making and often boils down to the need to win recognition of their traditional rights and territory. 

Last year, “we received recognition of our customary territory from the Regent of South Sorong, after 17 years of fighting for recognition from both the regional and central governments. When we received the decree, we felt that the state had finally acknowledged us as an Iindigenous people. It was a truly remarkable event.” 

They now seek recognition from the central government. 

Sreklefat also speaks of learning from other Indigenous groups, including the recent inaugural World Congress of Indigenous People and Local Communities of Forest Basins

“When I returned to Knasaimos, I told our community that the struggle of Iindigenous peoples isn’t just in Papua, but throughout the world. So, don’t give up. If other places have already invested heavily and are being persuaded to accept it, that’s not the case. We must be strong in protecting our forests. From that meeting, I became even more convinced that the struggle of Indigenous peoples is crucial.”

Amazonia

“Politicians must respect the Constitution—it wasn’t written overnight. It came from our struggle. Now, they’re tearing it apart with laws that destroy our sacred land. They ignore Brazil’s future. I just want them to respect our constitutional rights. Simple as that.” 

These words belong to Dineva Maria Kayabi, a teacher, mother, and advocate for Indigenous peoples in the Amazon rainforest.

Kayabi describes her village on the banks of the Rio dos Peixes, where families grow their own food (bananas, yams, beans) in community gardens. Yet this idyllic home comes with a history of displacement and violence. Her community were forced to leave their homeland in Batelão to avoid being killed by cattle ranchers. Then her own mother was severely abused in Utiariti, a catechism center, before being forced to marry. 

From such deep suffering, Kayabi has forged a life of service and learning, earning a Master’s degree in Education to become a teacher and successfully bringing high school education to her territory. She now directs her efforts to coordinating with COIAB (Coordination of Indigenous Organizations of the Brazilian Amazon), the largest Indigenous organization in the Amazon, and traveling around the world to advocate for Indigenous peoples. 

Congo Basin

“My tribe, the Tshwa, has lived in harmony with the forest for generations. We know its plants, its spirits, its secrets. And yet, in the minds of many decision-makers, we are still seen as ‘sub-citizens,’ obstacles to development, shadows in the trees.” 

These words come from Valentin Engobo Mufia, a father and leader in his seventh decade of life. Hailing from Lokolama in the equatorial forest of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mufia speaks about the importance of protecting the forest

“The peatlands we have protected for centuries are among the most vital carbon sinks on Earth. They are a natural barrier against climate chaos. And yet, instead of listening to us, we are sidelined.”

Mufia says it’s long past the time for empty words and gestures. He shares his community’s demands:

  • Clear, international legal recognition of our rights
  • Direct and structured access to climate finance
  • Training and education tailored to our context
  • Full inclusion in all development policies and decisions

A Future Rooted in the Past

Hand Over Customary Area Knasaimos in Southwest Papua. © Jurnasyanto Sukarno / Greenpeace
The Knasaimos Indigenous Peoples, residing in Indonesia’s Southwest Papua province have fought for decades to protect their lands from exploitation. © Jurnasyanto Sukarno / Greenpeace

Each of the Indigenous Leaders speaks of their present struggles as well as their hope for the future. This is a hope rooted in prophecy, values, and ancient stories. Kayabi shares a particularly moving story: 

“This is what I learned from Ita Mait, my people’s shaman stone. Her home is at the top of the Salto Sagrado waterfall.  But one day, they stole her away. The white man who took her lost his hair, suffered pain, and died. She fell from the plane, crossed the sea, and my father-in-law, a shaman, sang every day: ‘She is coming back.’ Because, just like our culture, the stone finds its way back.”

Indigenous peoples have faced decades, if not centuries, of intersecting oppressions in every corner of the earth. Yet their resistance persists and is even growing. Through their messages, we can find hope in a wider vision and real solutions. 

Tsering Lama is a Storytelling Manager with Greenpeace International.

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