15 July 2014
Under the guise of fighting "climate change," United Nations and World Bank "carbon" programs in Africa are leading to,
Now, a coalition of activist organizations is demanding an end to the controversial UN-linked plots that are devastating communities while endangering indigenous peoples and cultures already at risk of extinction.
Criticism surrounding the ongoing promotion of "carbon credits" is also escalating worldwide from across the political spectrum.
The latest accusations of terror and brutality perpetrated against innocent civilians to supposedly battle "global warming" - on "pause" for 18 years and counting, according to undisputed temperature data - come from Kenya.
While the United Nations-linked forced evictions are not new, they are accelerating.
Just last year, the UN also unveiled a massive eugenics program for the East African nation aimed at slashing the population. Whether the ruthless carbon-dioxide machinations by the UN and the World Bank are related remains unclear.
The victims in the most recent abuses are the Sengwer communities in Kenya's Embobut forest and Cherangany Hills.
According to reports by the Forest Peoples Program, a U.K.-based non-profit organization that supports the rights of forest dwellers, more than one thousand Sengwer homes were torched by World Bank-funded authorities earlier this year as the Kenyan government works to evict some 15,000 members from their ancestral lands.
Inaccurately referring to the indigenous peoples as "squatters," officials claim the effort is aimed at promoting "sustainability."
The group also interviewed some of the locals whose communities were being razed to the ground by the World Bank-funded Kenyan Forest Service.
She also said there was no consultation with locals or compensation for the seizure of property.
In a letter denouncing what a coalition of more than 65 global non-profit groups referred to as "genocide," a spokesman for the Sengwer, Yator Kiptum, blasted as a "disaster" the property destruction, brutalization, and forced evictions.
The letter also points out that the schemes are a violation of Kenyan law, the constitution, international human rights agreements, and various court orders.
Also this year, the group Survival International, a charity that works with tribal peoples around the world, documented similar government atrocities in Kenya's Mau forest. There, rampaging government officials backed by globalist outfits have been persecuting and forcibly evicting members of the Ogiek, described as one of Africa's last remaining hunter-gather tribes.
The tribes may disappear entirely if measures are not taken to restrain authorities and their "carbon" scams. Reports suggest that people involved in resisting the forced Ogiek evictions are being targeted by authorities for extrajudicial execution, too.
Apparently, Kenyan politicians and their cronies are also getting wealthy on the land-grab schemes - at the expense of the poor indigenous peoples whose communities are being burned to the ground.
Beyond local corruption, though, the scope of the problem reaches deep into the UN, the World Bank, the global establishment, and various international "climate" schemes.
In fact, the evictions underway in Kenya are "a direct result" of a World Bank plot and are "effectively funded by the World Bank," according to a formal Sengwer complaint filed with the infamous global organization. Much of the program in question, meanwhile, stems from the UN's "Reducing Emissions From Deforestation and Forest Degradation," or REDD for short.
Under that global scheme, the purchase of "carbon credits" - supposedly aimed at reducing CO2 emissions to stop "global warming" - are linked to the amount of carbon contained in forests.
Despite being absurdly demonized by UN as "pollution," CO2 is exhaled by humans and described by scientists as the "gas of life."
Land, apparently, that has been ethnically cleansed of all its previous native inhabitants.
The brutalization of Kenyans and the massive land grabs began accelerating in 2007, when the Kenyan Forest Service began a deeply controversial partnership with the World Bank to implement a so-called "Natural Resource Management" project. Since then, activists report that Sengwer homes have been under virtual non-stop attack by authorities aiming to uproot the indigenous peoples.
Once the joint World Bank-Kenyan government plot was approved without any input from the Sengwer, the communities suddenly learned that their centuries-old ancestral homelands were inside a "forest reserve" and subject to destruction and seizure.
In a statement, the World Bank attempted to distance itself from the atrocities, saying it was not involved and that it was "concerned" about the reports.
The bank also claimed it was investigating.
Among critics, though, the semi-denial prompted a furious backlash.
Most disturbing about the World Bank response, the network said, was the outfit's offer to help the Kenyan government in matters of "involuntary" resettlement.
The No REDD network also named the developments "carbon colonialism."
The organization also argued that the UN scheme was,
The letter, signed by over 300 human-rights activists and over five-dozen international organizations, also offered a list of demands to Kenyan authorities, planetary entities involved in the schemes, and more.
Even international officials involved in the UN's REDD machinations expressed outrage over the developments.
As reported, the atrocities in Kenya are hardly the first time that Western "carbon offset" scams by the UN, the European Union, and other international entities have come under fire for brutalizing people and destroying entire communities in Third World nations.
In Uganda, for example, tens of thousands of innocent farmers had their villages burned to the ground so international institutions could plant "carbon-credit" trees on the land.
Reports of children murdered and brutal beatings also grabbed headlines. Dozens of Honduran murders in 2011 were also linked to United Nations-backed land grabs and "carbon" schemes.
Other gargantuan land grabs backed by multiple globalist outfits are taking place worldwide, some, ironically, under the guise of protecting the rights of indigenous peoples under UN treaties. In Brazil, for example, whole towns were recently evicted at gunpoint by federal troops wearing UN logos using the easily debunked pretext of "returning" land to a handful of Indians who had never even lived in the area.
With accusations of cultural genocide in Kenya now in the headlines of major Western media outlets, outrage is growing quickly against peddlers of "carbon offset" scams:
...and various other international outfits.
However, even as the theories underpinning the climate alarmism crumble, it has become clear that without a massive outcry, the atrocities and land grabs around the globe will continue under virtually any pretext.
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