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April 2007 - An Irish
farmer jailed for his work in opposing Shell Oil's gas
pipeline through his land and an Icelandic entrepreneur saving
North Atlantic wild salmon by brokering innovative fishing
rights buyouts are among the winners of this year's
prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize.
"This year's Prize recipients have succeeded in combating some
of the most important environmental challenges we face today,"
said Goldman Prize founder Richard Goldman. "Their commitment
in the face of great personal risk inspires us all to think
more critically about what ordinary people can do to make a
difference."
The $125,000 Goldman Environmental Prize, now in its 18th
year, is awarded annually to six grassroots environmental
heroes and is the largest award of its kind in the world.
The winners were awarded the Prize at an invitation-only
ceremony Monday at the San Francisco Opera House. They will
also be honored at a smaller ceremony on Wednesday at the
National Geographic Society headquarters in Washington, DC.
This year's winners are:
North America: Sophia Rabliauskas, 47, Canada: Working on
behalf of the Poplar River First Nation, Rabliauskas succeeded
in securing interim protection for a portion of the boreal
forest of Manitoba, effectively preventing destructive logging
and hydro-power development while calling on government and
international agencies to permanently protect the region.
Africa: Hammerskjoeld Simwinga, 45, Zambia: In Zambia's North
Luangwa Valley, where rampant illegal wildlife poaching
decimated the wild elephant population and left villagers
living in extreme poverty, Simwinga created an innovative
sustainable community development program that successfully
restored wildlife and transformed this poverty-stricken area.
Asia: Tsetsegee Munkhbayar, 40, Mongolia: Munkhbayar
successfully worked with government and grassroots
organizations to shut down destructive mining operations along
Mongolia's scarce waterways. Through public education and
political lobbying, Munkhbayar has effectively protected
Mongolia's precious water resources from additional
unregulated mining.
South and Central America: Julio Cusurichi Palacios, 36, Peru:
In the remote Peruvian Amazon, Cusurichi secured a national
reserve to protect both senvironment newsitive rainforest ecosystems and
the rights of indigenous peoples living in voluntary isolation
from the devastating effects of logging and mining.
Europe: Willie Corduff, 53, Ireland: In the small farming
community of Rossport, Corduff and a group of fellow local
residents and landowners successfully forced Shell Oil to halt
construction on an illegally-approved pipeline through their
land.
Islands and Island Nations: Orri Vigfússon, 64, Iceland: With
business savvy and an unwavering commitment to reverse the
near-extinction of wild North Atlantic salmon, Vigfússon
brokered huge international fishing rights buyouts with
governments and commercial interests, helping bring to an end
destructive commercial salmon fishing in the region.
The Goldman Environmental Prize was established in 1990 by San
Francisco civic leader and philanthropist Richard Goldman and
his late wife, Rhoda Goldman. It has been awarded to 119
people from 70 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 challenges, 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 the rBGH
hormone into the US 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 Goldman Prize winner for Africa, Wangari Maathai, won the
2004 Nobel Peace Prize.
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