The 2014 Environmental Prize winners marking the 25th anniversary,
will be awarded April 28, 2014 during ceremonies held at the San
Francisco Opera House
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Desmond
D’Sa rallied south Durban’s diverse and disenfranchised communities to
successfully shut down a toxic waste dump that was exposing nearby
residents to dangerous chemicals and robbing them of their
constitutionally protected right to a safe and clean environment.
This Year's Winners are -
Africa -Desmond D'Sa of South Africa
Asia -Ramesh Agarwal of India
Europe -Suran Gazaryan of Russia
Island & Island Nations - Rudi Pudra of Indonesia
North America -Helen Slottje of USA
South & Central America -Ruth Buendia of Peru
With
a small internet café as his headquarters, Ramesh Agrawal organized
villagers to demand their right to information about industrial
development projects and succeeded in shutting down one of the largest
proposed coal mines in Chhattisgarh.
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An
internationally recognized bat expert and zoologist, Suren Gazaryan led
multiple campaigns exposing government corruption and illegal use of
federally protected forestland along Russia’s Black Sea coast.
A
biologist by training, Rudi Putra is dismantling illegal palm oil
plantations that are causing massive deforestation in northern Sumatra’s
Leuser Ecosystem, protecting the habitat of the critically endangered
Sumatran rhino.
Using a clause in the state constitution that gives municipalities the
right to make local land use decisions, Helen Slottje provided pro-bono
legal assistance, helping towns across New York defend themselves from
oil and gas companies by passing local bans on fracking
Overcoming
a history of traumatic violence, Ruth Buendía united the Asháninka
people in a powerful campaign against large-scale dams that would have
once again uprooted indigenous communities still recovering from Peru’s
civil war.
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