Anjal Prakash from SaciWATERs, Hyderabad report on the theme, 'Knowledge, Education and Capacity Development Strategies'.
Coordinated by UNESCO , IHE with about 24 other institutions around the world, the session focused on the issues related to knowledge management and development. This is with in the context of sharing newly gained knowledge through appropriate systems. In particular, the session addressed the need of strengthening the role of education, knowledge and capacity development in sustainable use and management of water resources. Friday witnessed the deliberations of the main theses in three parts , knowledge management and development, institutional capacity building and empowering organizations and people. In his opening remark, Richard Meganck, head of UNESCO , IHE and Kusum of NetWater & WfWp stressed the need to energized actors outside traditional water sector. They called for bridges divides between theoretical and political boundaries. "The capacity building needs go beyond training to develop talent and it starts where training ends"said Ms Athukurala.
Providing the key note address Lidia Brito of Euado Monalake University, Mozambique called for local action to influence global process. She stressed that the goal of capacity building mean critically analyzing the existing policies and to come out with alternate policies. She stressed that capacity building means providing people with multiple choices. Apart from the other speakers, the session witnessed the dramatic dialogue between three IWRM capacity building networks from three continents, South America (Concentrations), South Asia (Crossing Boundaries) and South and eastern Africa (Water Net). The dialogue showed how mainstream masculine water knowledge alienates people including the concerns of women and marginalized. They called for processes that are inclusive within the present knowledge systems. South to South Networking was seen as an alternative for knowledge sharing that was mediated through interdisciplinary knowledge generation framework. The three sub-sessions called for developing capacities and competencies of stakeholders and finding efficient, sustainable, economically attainable and socially equitable solutions. Dealt in a participatory way where participants engaged in a dialogue with specific groups, the outcome of the sessions borders on responding to the grass root demand and needs of stakeholders, collaboration and exchange of knowledge between scientists and practitioners for having more impact of capacity development in the water sector.
Discussion on Managing and Protecting Water Resources and their Supply Systems to meet Human and Environmental Needs
The discussions during the Forum on this theme debated the Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) paradigm in managing and protecting water. The freshwater resources on our planet are limited. We have to therefore try to increase water supply for food, that creates pressures on freshwater resources through contamination and results in diseases. The supply of adequate water is needed and vital for development. However, climate change and global warming will make it harder to supply adequate water for everyone. On the other hand, we have the threat of pollution over existing water resources. Improvements in managing existing water systems and better governance will play a big role in securing water for the future. The Third World Forum discussed good and poor practices about management and cooperation for IWRM, the key actions needed to ensure the future and what was needed to plan at the national, regional and global levels, as well as the changes needed in planning priorities and the legal framework.The preservation of natural ecosystems, land use and planning are integral parts of our development plans. Taking into consideration the priorities of human development is the topic for this theme, that got the largest number of contributions and the most interest, different points of view and discussions. Hosan Ozlu, Turkish Hydraulic Works, said all international partners had helped in developing Theme 3 in various ways. "We are talking about managing and protecting water supply and sources. Human needs have to be balanced with other needs as there are no other planets with available water resources. We need to find a way and I believe there will be a time when humans can manage the hydrological cycle. Human development and water infrastructure are closely related. Water supply, dams and waste water treatment are vital to a country's development and only countries in advanced stages of development can manage their water resources properly." The discussions will help develop management information systems, planning and innovative tools. IWRM is a vital issue but there are only a few success stories from the larger river basins. IWRM should be developed further to achieve more successful results and water resources have to be kept unpolluted and governed and managed better. We need the contribution of all stakeholders and therefore your contributions are valuable, he said. Karen Krchnak, Nature Conservancy, said we need to remember water for the environment is water for development, when we talk about water for growth and development; they were not separate things. This conference was about technical solutions as much as policy solutions. Therefore, people responsible for policy had to speak to each other. In devising policy on water for humans and the environment, we had to consider the impact of the economic crisis that had become severe. We have to take of solutions within the economic crisis as the figure for addressing water issues is estimated at USD 100 billion, that has to be viewed against the money spent on bailing out companies. She said there were four topics to be considered:
1. Basin management and transboundary cooperation
2. Adequate water storage facilities 3. Agricultural needs of water 4. Managing and protecting surface, ground and rainwater
1. Brian Richter of the Nature Conservancy
2. Basin Management and Transboundary Cooperation.
3. Ensuring Adequate Water Resources and Storage Infrastructure to Meet Agricultural, Energy and Urban Needs.
4. Preserving Natural Ecosystems:
5. Managing and Protecting Surface, Groundwater and Rainwater.
A seven-day focus on the world's water crunch wound up Sunday with a pledge by more than 100 countries to strive for clean water and sanitation for billions in need and fight drought and flood. But some countries criticised the cornerstone outcome of the fifth World Water Forum as flawed while activists dismissed the event itself as a "trade show." The declaration, coinciding with World Water Day, was issued at the end of a three-day ministerial meeting, climaxing the biggest-ever conference on the planet's freshwater crisis. "The world is facing rapid and unprecedented global changes, including population growth, migration, urbanisation, climate change, desertification, drought, degradation and land use, economic and diet changes," the statement said. It set out a roster of non-binding recommendations, including greater cooperation to ease disputes over water, measures to address floods and water scarcity, better management of resources and curbing pollution of rivers, lakes and aquifers. Some countries tried to beef up the statement so that it recognised access to safe drinking water and sanitation as "a basic human right," rather than a "basic human need," which was the final text. They were blocked by Brazil, Egypt and the United States, delegates said. Around 20 dissenting countries signed on to a separate statement to spell out their position after the conference's close. A Venezuelan delegate said they included Bangladesh, South Africa and Spain.
The textual difference, which has political and legal ramifications, is being debated under the UN Convention on Human Rights. Numerous countries, led by Latin America, have already enshrined access to water as a right in their constitution. The World Water Forum is held every three years, and has gained in importance as a meeting place for debating the globe's amplifying problems of freshwater. At least 25,000 policymakers, water specialists and grassroots workers took part in this year's event, a record attendance. Campaigners representing the rural poor, the environment and organised labour on Saturday attacked the Forum as a vehicle for water privatisation and called it for to be placed under the UN flag. "We demand that the allocation of water be decided in an open, transparent and democratic forum rather than in a trade show for the world's large corporations," said Maude Barlow, senior advisor to the president of the UN General Assembly. The Forum is staged by the World Water Council, a French-based organisation whose funding comes in large part from the water industry. Providing access to drinking water and sewerage, conserving resources and building reservoirs and dikes to cope with water stress and water excess would cost rich countries alone around 200 billion dollars per year, according to estimates. "Mobilising the resources... is likely to be one of the greatest challenges we face," said US delegate Alonzo Fulgham. The ministers said they would "promote effective use of financial resources from all sources" but did not state a preference for whether water should be in public or private hands. This is a thorny issue, because campaign groups say utilities that are in private hands ramp up tariffs, hitting the poor especially. However, the ministers said they "acknowledge" that the costs of recovering water investment had to be "fair, equitable and sustainable." Around 880 million people do not have access to decent sources of drinking water, while 2.5 billion people do not have access to proper sanitation, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) said in a report on Tuesday. By 2030, the number of people living under severe water stress is expected to rise to 3.9 billion, a tally that does not include the impacts of global warming, according to the OECD. The world's current population of more than 6.5 billion is growing at the rate of 80 million a year. By 2050, there is expected to be nine billion people. Feeding them -- and growing crops for biofuels -- will spur even greater demands from agriculture, which already takes up 70 percent of available freshwater.
The following post from the World Social Forum 2009 presents an alternate view on the just concluded World Water Forum at Istanbul.
Istanbul, March 19, 2009
After Mexico City 2006
, which was an important milestone of the continuous work of the global movement for water justice, we have now gathered in Istanbul to mobilize against the 5th World Water Forum. We are here to delegitimize this false, corporate driven World Water Forum and to give voice to the positive agenda of the global water justice movements! Given that we are in Turkey, we cannot ignore that this country provides a powerful example of the devastating impacts of destructive water management policies. The Turkish government has pushed for the privatization of both water services, watersheds and has plans to dam every river in the country. Four specific cases of destructive and risky dams in Turkey, include the Ilisu, Yusufeli, Munzur and Yortanli dams. For ten years, affected people have intensively opposed these projects, in particular, the Ilisu dam which is part of a larger irrigation and energy production project known as the South East Anatolia Projects, or GAP. The Ilisu dam , one of the most criticized dam projects worldwide , is particularly compex and troubling because of its implications on international policy in the Middle East. The dam is situated in the Kurdish-settled region where there are ongoing human rights violations related to the unsolved Kurdish question. The Turkish government is using GAP to negatively impact the livelihood of the Kurdish people and to suppress their cultural and political rights.We, as a movement, are here to offer solutions to the water crisis, and to demand that the UN General Assembly organize the next global forum on water. The participation of important United Nations officials and representatives in our meeting is evidence that something has changed. There is a tangible and symbolic shift of legitimacy: from the official Forum organized by private interests and by the World Water Council to the Peoples Water Forum, organized by global civil society including, farmers, indigenous peoples, activists, social movements, trade unions, non-governmental organizations and networks that struggle throughout the world in the defense of water and territory and for the commons. We call on the United Nations and its member states to accept its obligation, as the legitimate global convener of multilateral forums, and to formally commit to hosting a forum on water that is linked to state obligations and is accountable to the global community. We call upon all organizations and governments at this 5th World Water Forum, to commit to making it the last corporate-controlled water forum. The world needs the launch of a legitimate, accountable, transparent, democratic forum on water emerging from within the UN processes supported by its member states. Confirming once again the illegitimacy of the World Water Forum, we denounce the Ministerial Statement because it does not recognize water as a universal human right nor exclude it from global trade agreements. In addition the draft resolution ignores the failure of privatization to guarantee the access to water for all, and does not take into account those positive recommendations proposed by the insufficient European Parliamentary Resolution. Finally, the statement promotes the use of water to produce energy from hydroelectric dams and the increased production of fuel from crops, both of which lead to further inequity and injustice. We reaffirm and strengthen all the principles and commitments expressed in the 2006 Mexico City declaration: we uphold water as the basic element of all life on the planet, as a fundamental and inalienable human right; we insist that solidarity between present and future generations should be guaranteed; we reject all forms of privatization and declare that the management and control of water must be public, social, cooperative, participatory, equitable, and not for profit; we call for the democratic and sustainable management of ecosystems and to preserve the integrity of the water cycle through the protection and proper management of watersheds and environment. We oppose the dominant economic and financial model that prescribes the privatization, commercialization and corporatization of public water and sanitation services. We will counter this type of destructive and non-participatory public sector reform, having seen the outcomes for poor people as a result of rigid cost-recovery practices and the use of pre-paid meters. Since 2006, in Mexico, the global water justice movement has continued to challenge corporate control of water for profit. Some of our achievements include: reclaiming public utilities that had been privatized; fostering and implementing public , public partnerships; forcing the bottled water industry into a loss of revenue; and coming together in collective simultaneous activities during Blue October and the Global Action Week. We celebrate our achievements highlighted by the recognition of the human right to water in several constitutions and laws. At the same time we need to address the economic and ecological crises. We will not pay for your crisis! We will not rescue this flawed and unsustainable model, which has transformed: unaccountable private spending into enormous public debt, which has transformed water and the commons into merchandise, which has transformed the whole of Nature into a preserve of raw materials and into an open-air dump. The basic interdependence between water and climate change is recognized by the scientific community and is underlined also by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Therefore, we must not accept responses to climate chaos in the energy sector that follow the same logic that caused the crisis in the first place. This is a logic that jeopardizes the quantity and quality of water and of life that is based on dams, nuclear power plants, and agro-fuel plantations. In December 2009, we will bring our concerns and proposals to the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen. Further, the dominant model of intensive industrial agriculture, contaminates and destroys water resources, impoverishes agricultural soils, and devastates food sovereignty. This has enormous impact on lives and public health. From the fruitful experience of the Belem World Social Forum, we are committed to strengthening the strategic alliance between water movements and those for land, food and climate. We also commit to continue building networks and new social alliances, and to involve both local authorities and Parliamentarians who are determined to defend water as a common good and to reaffirm the right to fresh water for all human beings and nature. We are also encouraging all public water utilities to get together, establishing national associations and regional networks. We celebrate our achievements and we look forward for our continued collaboration across countries and continents!
Access the article online here:
Peoples Water Forum Declaration, Istanbul, Turkey
Call to include Right to Water in ministerial statement
Activists and water practitioners made a strong call to include the Right to Water (RTW) in the Istanbul ministerial declaration. Speaking at a press conference, the Senior Advisor on Water Issues by the President of the 63rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly, Maude Barlow, said, "We are running out of fresh water owing to climate change. Our lifestyles are destroying water resources and causing more conflicts."
 The two groups in Istanbul, the World Water Forum (WWF) and the Alternative Water Forum (AWF), represent two different schools of thought. Ms. Barlow said WWF treated water as a commodity, favouring corporate control and pricing of water. On the other hand, AWF treated water as a global managed commons that could not be denied to anybody on the basis of their inability to pay.
 She said the United Nations was considering a covenant on RTW that would help people take up water a human right with the own governments. Water should be available for human needs, ecosystem health and food production in that order, and this could be incorporated into the legal reforms under the RTW. "The global water crisis has made it necessary to develop new instruments to manage water as soon as possible."
 In 2008, companies sold more than 200 billion litres of packaged water, she said. These were sold in plastic bottles which were not recycled.
 Uruguay and other Latin American governments are attempting to bring RTW back onto the WWF's agenda, said the Director, Water and Sanitation, Uruguay, Jose Luis Genta. He was hopeful WWF would arrive at a consensus on the right to water.
 The state should finance water utilities to provide water to all and we must question the kind of development policies being followed, Oscar Oliviera from Cochabamba, Bolivia, who spearheaded the agitation against privatization of the water supply system in that city. There is a need for social control of water instead of control by the government or private companies.
 Rajendra Singh, President of Tarun Bharat Sangh, India, said, "When communities realize their ownership of natural resources, especially water, no government or company can take it away from them."Citing the example of the Arvari river in Alwar, Rajasthan, he said people living there realized the only way to improve their quality of life was to enhance the water available.
 They did this through community-driven watershed management and in the process, revived a system of seven rivers; these were dead rivers a few years ago and now have become perennial. When the government wanted to allot fishing rights to private contractors in the villagers' reservoirs, the people resisted and formed a parliament to take up larger issues.
 This demonstrates the power of community involvement in making the right to water a reality. The people of the watershed have decided the water in the region is their's by right and will not let any 'outside' agency deprive them of this right, Mr. Singh said.
 Water service delivery: Can PUPs make the govt efficient?
 The public sector can deliver water efficiently in India, but needs to work more closely with communities to achieve this, said the Secretary, Department of Drinking Water Supply, Ministry of Rural Development, Government of India, Shantha Sheela Nair.
 Speaking at a session on Implementing the Right to Water: Democratisation and PUPs, she said water delivery in India in villages was the responsibility of Panchayati Raj Institutions under the 73rd Constitutional Amendment. The government had been requesting a transfer of assets created for water supply to the village panchayats, but the latter has been reluctant to take them over.
 "This is because these assets were created solely from the engineering point of view and are usually too expensive for communities to afford,"Ms. Nair said. Therefore, before implementing any PUP project, capacity building is very important. This was best done through inter-personal communication and demonstrations. This bridging the divide was key to capacity building as a prerequisite for successful PUPs.
 As much as 90% of the water supplied in the world is through public sector utilities, said V Suresh, Centre of Law, Policy and Human Rights Studies. For better service delivery, a change of governance was needed, not financial mechanisms.
 He said PUPs were a new idea that envisioned an egalitarian partnership on issues of common concerns; redefined relationships of knowledge expertise and sharing on a non-profit basis and; reshaped the public sector to become more inclusive and transparent. There were three pillars of PUPs , institutional cooperation, participation between public sector and citizens and partnerships between individuals and groups.
 The Government of India had cleared a proposal to set up water operator's platforms across India following the PUP model on 24 February, 2009. Mr. Suresh said he was hopeful of replicating the model in other south Asian countries soon.
UNESCO's third World Water Development Report launched
Istanbul, 18 March, 2009: The Director-General of UNESCO, KoÑ—chiro Matsuura, launched the Third World Water Development Report (WWDR-3), outlining actions to address future water challenges. Speaking at the launch, he highlighted the Report's key messages, including the need to involve water specialists in decision making; the significant impact that decisions to address climate change in the energy sector have for water use; the importance of monitoring and assessment for sound water management; and the need to strengthen capacity in developing countries.
Ali BackoÄŸlu, Deputy Governor of Istanbul, encouraged enhancing collaboration among countries, sectors and stakeholders. Emomali Rahmon, President of Tajikistan, said the Report will help policy makers to apply the most advanced approaches and technologies to water management.
Alexander Müller, FAO, Hasan Zuhuri Sarikaya, Undersecretary of the Ministry of Environment and Forestry, Turkey, and Pasquale Steduto, UN-Water Chair / FAO, welcomed the launch of the report as a useful tool for the sustainable management of water resources. András Szöllözi-Nagy, UNESCO, emphasized that external factors impact water resources and that increased water storage capacity is essential for responding to climate change.
Olcay Ãœnver, World Water Assessment Programme, and William Cosgrove, WWDR-3, underscored the Report's paradigm shift from a water-specific focus to one that addresses the external drivers of water resource use, and the Report's linkages between water use and broader development objectives.
Kenneth Konga, Ministry of Energy and Water Development, Zambia, presented the Zambian case study from WWDR-3. Narcio-Rodrigues da Silveira, Vice President, Brazil, proposed the immediate constitution of a "World Water Parliament."
Yong-Joo Cho, Korea Institute of Construction Technology, outlined Korea's water management efforts in the context of climate change. Giorgio Sfara, Development Cooperation, Italy, highlighted the G8 Evian Plan and its enhanced implementation strategy in partnership with African countries.
From Himanshu Thakkar at SANDRP , www.sandrp.in
March 18, 2009
Press Statement: Indian Organisations Condemn Arrests at World Water Forum
We, the representatives of people's movements, civil society organizations and concerned individuals from India, condemn the arrest, deportation and repression of protestors at the World Water Forum (WWF), in progress at Istanbul, Turkey on March 16.
Outside the conference center just before the inaugural function of the World Water Forum riot police used water cannons and tear gas against 150 peaceful protestors who shouted "water for life, not for profit" in opposition to the WWF's agenda of water privatization and river destruction. Seventeen protestors were arrested.
As the opening ceremony of the WWF began, International Rivers' South Asia Director Ann-Kathrin Schneider and Climate Campaigner Payal Parekh unfurled a banner reading "No Risky Dams" in protest at the World Water Forum's promotion of destructive dams. They were arrested and are in jail since then.
The World Water Forum takes place every three years. It is organized by the World Water Council, a private organization whose most influential members are private water companies and some of the world's biggest dam construction companies, funders and government agencies.Â
We condemn the undemocratic nature of the World Water Forum and urge the World Water Council to respect and support the rights of all people to speak freely and protest peacefully.
The water and energy policies promoted by the WWF around the globe destroy communities and the environment. The past experience of mega dams in India and elsewhere points towards that. We call on the participants of the World Water Forum to embrace democratic, smarter and cleaner solutions and recognise Right to Water as a fundamental right and not to advance the agenda of privatization and commercialisation, with huge social and environmental costs. The World Water Forum should not be organised by the World Water Council, but by United Nations.
Amit Bhaduri, Professor Emeritus, JNU, New Delhi
Medha Patkar, Narmada Bachao Andolan, Madhya Pradesh
Himanshu Thakkar, SANDRP, New Delhi
Shripad Dharamadhikari, MANTHAN, Madhya Pradesh
Madhuresh Kumar, CACIM, New Delhi
Anil Varghese, Â New Delhi
Nimmi, Greenpeace, Bangalore
Satabdi Das, Association for India's Development, Bangalore Chapter
Pritpal Randhawa, Insitiute of Development Studies, University of Sussex , United Kingdom
Souparna Lahiri, NFFPFW, India
Anthony Tago, Arunachal Citizens Rights, India
Tone Mickrow, All Idu Mishmi Students Union, India
Testen Lepcha, Affected Citizens of Teesta, Sikkim
Ankur 'Toby' Ganguly, Greenpeace, India
Ashish Fernandes, Greenpeace, India
Leo Saldanah, Environment Support Group, India
Bhargavi S Rao, Environment Support Group, India
Mallesh KR, Environment Support Group, India
Joe Athialy, Delhi Solidarity Group, New Delhi
Seejal Dand, ANANDI, Ahmedabad
Neeta Hardikar, ANANDI, Dahod
Hiren Gandhi, DARSHAN, Ahmedabad
Darshan, INSAF, Ahmedabad
Saroop Dhruv, DARSHAN, Ahmedabad
Vimal Bhai, Matu Jan Sangathan, New Delhi
Ghanshyam Shah, Â Ahmedabad
Mukta Srivastava, NAPM, Mumbai
Simpreet Singh, Ghar Bachao Ghar Banao Andolan, Mumbai
Rajendera Ravi, IDS, New Delhi
Bhupendera Singh Rawat, Jan Sangharsh Vahini, New Delhi
Ashok Chaudhari, NFFPFW, Saharanpur
Munnilal, NFFPFW, Dehradun
Harekrishna Debnath, National Fishworker's Forum, Kolkata
Puneet Minj, JMACC, Ranchi
Prem Piram, JAGAR UTTRAKHAND, Uttrakhand
Manju Gardia, Programme for Social Action, Raipur
Mamta Kujur, Adivasi Mahila Mahasabha, Chattisgarh
Tapan Kumar Padhi, National Institute for Development, Bhubneshwar, Orissa
Darshini Mahadevia, Â India
Jai Sen, CACIM, New Delhi
Maju Varghese, Shehr Vikas Manch, Mumbai
K.T. Suresh, YUVA, Mumbai
TSS Mani, PUCL, Tamil Nadu
Aryakrishnan, Bookport, Ernakulam, Kerala
Amarjeet Kaur, AITUC, New Delhi
Rakesh Sharma, Filmmaker,Â
Dunnu Roy, Hazards Centre, New Delhi
Dr. David. L. Gosling, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Shalini Sharma, International Campaign for Justice in Bhopal, New Delhi
Shaktiman Ghosh, National Hawkers Federation, Kolkata
Sudipto Moitra, Hawkers Sangram Committee, Kolkata
Sanjoy Ganguly, Jana Sanskrit Centre for Theatre of the Oppressed, Kolkata
Dr. Virendra Vidhrohi, Matsya Mewat shiksha Evam Vikas Sansthan, Alwar, Rajasthan
Noor Mohammad, Matsya Mewat shiksha Evam Vikas Sansthan, Alwar, Rajasthan
Bhoga Nanjuda, CIEDS Collective & Karnataka Social Forum, Karnataka
Prasad Chacko, Initiative on Human Rights and Policy Analysis, Ahmedabad, Gujarat
Naveen Chander, Progressive Students Union, New Delhi
Kalpana Mehta, Saheli Womens Resource Centre, New Delhi
Maitree Das Gupta, Greenpeace, Bangalore
Subhash Gatade, New Social Initiative, New Delhi
Jaya Mehta, Sandarbha Kendra, Indore
Vineet Tiwari, Progressive Writer's Association, Indore
Gautam Navlakha, People's Union for Democratic Rights, New Delhi
Shivani Chaudhary, Housing and Land Rights Network, New Delhi
Bipin Kumar, The Other Media, New Delhi
Benny Kuruvilla, Focus on Global South, New Delhi
Vasundhara Jairath, Inter Cultural Resources, New Delhi
Rohit Prajapati, People's Union for Civil Liberties, Gujarat
Trupti Shah, People's Union for Civil Liberties, Gujarat
Jose MJ, INSAF, Kerala Unit, Kerala
Ram Puniani, Ekta , Mumbai
Utkarsh Sinha, Centre For studies of contemporary studies and research, Lucknow
Selva Ganpathy, Indian Institute of Delhi, New Delhi
Molana Hanif, Matsya Mewat shiksha Evam Vikas Sansthan, Alwar, Rajasthan
Arun Raj, Association for India's Development, New Delhi
Darshan Mehra, Association for India's Development, New Delhi
Meena Menon, Focus on Global South, Mumbai
Datta Ishwalker, Girni Kamgar Sangatha, Mumbai
Jatin Desai, Peace Mumbai , Mumbai
Shakeel Ahmed, Nirbhaya Bano Andolan, Mumbai
Neetu Routela, Â New Delhi
Vijayan MJ, Delhi Forum, New Delhi
Jibin Robin, Delhi Solidarity Group, New Delhi
Satinath Sarangi, International Campaign for Justice in Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh
Nityanand Jayaraman, Vettiver Collective, Chennai
Sandeep Ekka, Delhi Solidarity Group, New Delhi
Sanat Acharya, Freedom Forum, Kathmandu, Nepal
Himanshu Upadhyay, Researcher, New Delhi
Munshi Khan, Matsya Mewat shiksha Evam Vikas Sansthan, Alwar, Rajasthan
Gabriela Dietrich, Pennurumai Iyyakum, Tamil Nadu
Adivasi Gothra Mahasabha, Kerala
Bargi Dam Visthapit Samiti, Madhya Pradesh
Sarsathali Project Affected People's Association, SPAPA, West Bengal
Janak, Â Mumbai Pani, Mumbai