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A quiet recognition of Black soldiers in South Africa, and new rights in Ecuador

Ecuador’s Constitutional Court ruled that marine ecosystems have rights

The court’s decision expanded a 2008 constitutional provision, then the first of its kind in the world, that granted nature legal rights but thus far had been applied only to terrestrial ecosystems and mangroves.

In 2020, a group of industrial fishers filed a lawsuit alleging that the government’s restriction on an 8-nautical-mile-long zone was unconstitutional. The court rejected this assertion, arguing that the law was necessary to protect the environment and had increased fish populations.

Why We Wrote This

In our progress roundup, recognition for the voiceless: Researchers uncovered the ignored history of South Africa’s World War I Black servicemen, and a court in Ecuador grants legal rights to marine life.

Marine ecosystems have “intrinsic value,” and the government has a constitutional mandate to “build a new form of citizen coexistence, in diversity and harmony with nature,” the judges wrote.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff/File

Local fishers sell their catch where they tie up their boats in Puerto Ayora, Santa Cruz, Galápagos Islands.


Hugo Echeverria, a lawyer who filed a brief supporting the government, said that others will likely use the decision as precedent to challenge the constitutionality of activities such as oil and gas drilling.
Source: Inside Climate News

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