an audience with pope francis
Stop Ecocide Advisory Board member Valérie Cabanes to speak with Pope Francis on the subject of ecocide
Valérie Cabanes, ecocide law advocate and member of Stop Ecocide’s Advisory Board, is due to have an audience with Pope Francis this Thursday 3rd September at the Vatican, invited as part of a special French eco-delegation including author Pablo Servigne, Jesuit scientist Gaël Giraud and actress Juliette Binoche. Ms Cabanes will deliver a request from Stop Ecocide urging the Pope to build on his 2019 call for recognition of ecocide as a “fifth category of crimes against peace”.
Pope Francis signalled a new direction for the Catholic church in 2015 with his encyclical Laudato Sí, a papal document released in nine languages which highlighted global warming and destruction of the environment as going hand-in-hand with irresponsible development, consumerism and a throwaway culture that fails to see the interconnectedness of all creation.
Last November, in a speech to the International Association of Penal Law, the Pope explicitly called for ecocide to be made a “fifth category of crimes against peace” at the International Criminal Court - precisely what the Stop Ecocide campaign advocates for.
Pope Francis’ focus on nature and his criticism of exploitative culture are aligned with the concerns of his 13th century namesake St Francis of Assisi. This criticism was echoed in his bulletin yesterday marking the church’s World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation.
Pope Francis said: “Today we hear the voice of creation admonishing us to return to our rightful place in the natural created order – to remember that we are part of this interconnected web of life, not its masters. The disintegration of biodiversity, spiralling climate disasters, and unjust impact of the current pandemic on the poor and vulnerable: all these are a wakeup call in the face of our rampant greed and consumption.”
The request being made by Ms Cabanes this week will be for Pope Francis to reiterate his call for ecocide crime, both with global leaders and with the Catholic community around the world, numbering over 1.2 billion people.
Jojo Mehta, co-founder of the international Stop Ecocide campaign, said: “It’s a fantastic opportunity for us to be able to directly appeal to Pope Francis. Calling for ecocide law is a practical way for the Pope to bring his spiritual influence to bear on the existential crisis being faced by the entire Earth community.
“The Catholic church has in its history plenty of greed, domination, persecution and distortion - some of it very recent. We are nonetheless aware that Pope Francis brings a new energy to the Vatican and is loved and respected by millions, both among and beyond those of Catholic faith. He is a bridge-builder with other faith leaders including indigenous wisdom keepers, promoting a holistic and inclusive spiritual outlook; and is of course in an exceptional position of influence within the huge global Catholic community as well as among world leaders. In this light, he has enormous potential to support establishing ecocide as an international crime. Let us trust he will realise that potential - we feel blessed to be able to address this directly via his audience with Valérie.”
There is growing support for the move to make ecocide an international crime: last December the small island states of Vanuatu and the Maldives called for serious consideration of ecocide crime at the International Criminal Court’s assembly; earlier this year the Swedish workers movement urged Sweden to lead on proposing it; in June President Macron of France promised to champion it on the international stage and in July the Belgian Eco-Green parties introduced a bill into parliament which is due to be discussed this month.