[{"_id":"project-settings","settings":{"translateMetaTags":true,"translateAriaLabels":true,"translateTitle":true,"showWidget":true,"isFeedbackEnabled":false,"fv":1,"customWidget":{"theme":"dark","font":"rgb(255,255,255)","header":"rgb(0,0,0)","background":"rgba(0,0,0,0.8)","position":"right","positionVertical":"bottom","border":"","borderRequired":false,"widgetCompact":true,"isWidgetPositionRelative":false},"widgetLanguages":[],"activeLanguages":{"es":"Español","en":"English"},"enabledLanguages":["en","es"],"debugInfo":false,"displayBranding":true,"displayBrandingName":true,"localizeImages":false,"localizeUrls":false,"localizeImagesLimit":true,"localizeUrlsLimit":true,"localizeAudio":false,"localizeAudioLimit":true,"localizeDates":false,"disabledPages":[],"regexPhrases":[],"allowComplexCssSelectors":false,"blockedClasses":false,"blockedIds":false,"phraseDetection":true,"customDomainSettings":[],"seoSetting":[],"translateSource":false,"overage":false,"detectPhraseFromAllLanguage":false,"googleAnalytics":false,"mixpanel":false,"heap":false,"disableDateLocalization":false,"ignoreCurrencyInTranslation":false,"blockedComplexSelectors":[]},"version":6971},{"_id":"en","source":"en","pluralFn":"return n != 1 ? 1 : 0;","pluralForm":2,"dictionary":{},"version":6971},{"_id":"outdated","outdated":{"#La investigación de Corporate Accountability sugiere que, a pesar de las reformas en curso, los Mercados Voluntarios de Carbono siguen fracasando en gran medida.":1,"#Nuevo reporte propone que los Mercados Voluntarios de Carbono estarían retrasando la acción climática en lugar de impulsarla":1,"#November 4, 2025":1,"#In the same realm, Wells Fargo has a history of being among the top sponsors, funders and board members for police foundations of multiple major cities, including sponsoring police foundations in Charlotte, Sacramento, and Seattle, Atlanta y Charlotte. Police foundations are private organizations dedicated to raising money for police departments as well as supplying them with weaponry and surveillance technology. Their private status enables these foundations to add millions of dollars to police budgets with very little public oversight or approval. Police foundations have been known to supply departments with K-9s and police horses, both used as a means to harm black people and protestors. The surveillance technology these foundations provide to police departments are highly controversial and disproportionately “tested and targeted in Black, Brown and Indigneous communities”. In response to the calls to defund the police that arose in the general public during Summer 2020, the police foundations for NYC, Washington D.C, Seattle and Philadelphia removed information on their websites regarding partner organizations and board members. A shameful act intended to limit the public’s knowledge and to protect donating corporations, like Wells Fargo, from public outrage. In this year of 2022, a senior leader from Wells Fargo is listed on the Atlanta Police Foundations’ Board of Trustees, giving ample reason to believe that their efforts to fund state-sanctioned violence against Black Americans isn’t stopping anytime soon.":1,"#While Wells Fargo was founded in 1852, it acquired Wachovia in 2008, thus intertwining itself with a very dark history. Wachovia was founded in 1879, descended from the Georgia Railroad and Banking Company, the Bank of Charleston y Atlanta’s Fourth National Bank. All of these companies had deep ties to the mistreatment of black people. As part of their banking practices, the Georgia Railroad and Banking Company accepted slaves as collateral on mortaged properties or loans. They owned at least 162 slaves during their time. The Bank of Charleston had similar practices, accepting minimum 529 slaves as collateral for loans and mortagaged properties. When slaveowners defaulted on their payments, the Bank would seize ownership of some slaves.":1,"#Explore the Black Collective’s framework!":1,"#Pacific Business News":1,"#Lahaina News":1,"#Hawaii Reporter.com":1,"#Hawaii Herald":1,"#North Shore News":1,"#MidWeek":1,"#Voice of Kapolei":1,"#Honolulu Civil Beat":1,"#Honolulu Star Advertiser":1,"#HawaiiStar.com":1,"#Publications that will receive your letter":1,"#Searching for closest publications...":1,"#1326b Alexa Drive, Winter Park, Florida 32789, United States":1,"#1326 Alewa Drive, Honolulu, Hawaii 96817, United States":1,"#The street address field is required. The city field is required. The postal code field is required.":1,"#Your message has not been edited.":1,"#4 of 25 actions taken":1,"#Expose Big Polluters’ political meddling and false solutions. Submit a Letter to the Editor.":1,"#Launch your own campaign now.":1,"#Powered by New/Mode":1,"#From U.S. to U.N., we can stop Big Polluters from hijacking the planet - Corporate Accountability":1,"#Subject":1,"#To":1,"#Target lookup":1,"#Message preview":1,"#Submit your letter":1,"#Corporate Accountability hosts this campaign and will keep you informed about it and others. Corporate Accountability will protect your privacy.":1,"#Here is the message we will send":1,"#Zipcode":1,"#Street address":1,"#Be the first to take action!":1,"#At the same time, they’re pushing false solutions, like carbon markets. Our recent report revealed that millions of carbon credits used in 2024 likely didn’t lead to real emissions, and caused harm in the process. That means, when your airline or cute clothing corporation asks you to pay extra to “go green,” they’re actually asking you to throw money to their greenwashing while they continue hurting people and communities.

That’s why our team is on the ground at COP30 in Belém, Brazil right now, challenging these polluters and the governments in their pockets who push profit-driven, planet-burning agendas.

Now, we’re kicking into high gear: submit your Letter to the Editor to expose how Big Polluters undermine climate policy and push false climate solutions from the U.S. to the U.N., all so they can keep extracting, polluting, and profiting — while blocking real solutions.

Submit a Letter to the Editor and expose these schemes in your local media.":1,"#The Kick Big Polluters Out coalition's recently-released research covered in The Guardian makes it crystal clear: fossil fuel corporations — many of the same ones benefitting from the Trump regime’s actions — have overrun the UN climate action process, and we know this is all to delay real action for decades.":1,"#From Big Tech to Big Polluters, corporations are fueling, propping up, and profiting from the fascist power grab in the U.S. But it’s not just happening here.":1,"#Test Mode":1,"#From U.S. to U.N., we can stop Big Polluters from hijacking the planet":1,"#Insert/edit link":1,"#Italic":1,"#Bold":1,"#Redo":1,"#Undo":1,"#276 words":1,"#Press the Up and Down arrow keys to resize the editor.":1,"#todas las donaciones realizadas desde ahora hasta la medianoche del 30 de noviembre se TRIPLICARÁN, hasta un máximo de 100.000 dólares.":1,"#I met Deputy Campaigns Director John Stewart in 2015 at a Generación de Recursos conference. [Resource Generation organizes young people with financial wealth to leverage resources and privilege for social change.] At the conference, there was a lot of analysis around racial justice, gender justice, environmental justice, but there wasn’t as much discussion about corporate power — which is funny, right, because the families of so many people there had become wealthy thanks to the rise of corporate power. Mine certainly had.":1,"#Not Betsy? Click here.":1,"#Welcome back, Betsy!":1,"#Para":1,"#Zikora Ibeh, board member, wears a blue and orange top with intricate flower prints and gold hoop earrings.":1,"#Zikora Ibeh":1,"#The Monk & Robot series by Becky Chambers brings me joy. This new cli-fi (climate fiction) series is a tender, delightful, hope-filled exploration of a future founded on kindness, abundance, and community.
Latifah Azlan":1,"#Board and staff members Tetet Lauron (left) and Shayda Naficy (right) in Paris, organizing for water justice, 2012.":1,"#Staff member Akili organizing with Cesar Chavez in 1977.":1,"#Board member Irene Reyes (left) and team member Hellen Neima (right) organizing at the global tobacco treaty negotiations in Geneva, Switzerland, 2018.":1,"#Below are photos of team members organizing around the world. And scroll down to read about some of our most memorable organizing moments, what inspires us, and what brings us joy.":1,"#Who are the people that carry out the work of challenging corporate power? Meet some of the Corporate Accountability team.":1,"#Team - Annual Report 2022":1,"#Corporate Accountability’s staff, team, and board members bring our passion for justice and our dedication to corporate campaigning to our work each day. We are an intergenerational, global team with a wide range of experiences and perspectives. Our years of organizing range from three to 50, and we’re located in 18 cities and eight countries around the world. We each lead from where we are to hold corporations accountable for the harms they cause and build a more just world together.":1,"#One of my most memorable organizing experiences is organizing with Cosecha and with the ACLU of Massachusetts on issues affecting immigrant communities in the U.S. This experience was very important to me because for many of the years I lived in the U.S., I felt sad to not be part of a community that understood my feelings and experiences as an immigrant Latina. But when I found out about Cosecha and started organizing with them, I again felt in my skin. It was fulfilling. I felt part of a multitude of people fighting for what was right and just—in our own languages and cultures—for what mattered to us every day and minute that we were in the U.S. That experience opened the door of my heart to painful social realities that to today have not changed, but also to powerful and meaningful organizing that is worthy to do so with all our energy and commitment. Through that experience I learned to organize with joy, with dance, with art, with color, with food! And even today I can feel and smell that time.":1,"#Latifah Azlan":1,"#The Monk & Robot series by Becky Chambers brings me joy. This new cli-fi (climate fiction) series is a tender, delightful, hope-filled exploration of a future founded on kindness, abundance, and community.":1,"#One of my most memorable organizing experiences was an action we and our allies held outside of the Gramercy Hotel where representatives from the fossil fuel industry held a private event with politicians and environmental groups. Not only did they hear us, but we also made sure they saw us too, with a large projection on the building demanding to make Big Polluters pay.":1,"#Daniel Dorado Torres":1,"#One of my most memorable organizing experiences was the most recent meetings of the global tobacco treaty. It was the first virtual Conference of the Parties due to the COVID-19 pandemic. And we, in partnership with our longtime allies, creatively and furiously organized to encourage government representatives to deliver their “conflict of interest declarations,” in keeping with the “maximizing transparency decision”—a unique milestone adopted in 2018 to keep the tobacco industry’s tentacles out of the negotiations.":1,"#Charlotte Bartter":1,"#Challenging corporate abuse in the day to day":1,"#Teamwork inspires me.":1,"#Gardening brings me joy.":1,"#Faiz Rahman-Sabean":1,"#Mobilizing people power and financial power to challenge some of the most powerful corporations in the world inspires me.":1,"#Fatimah Shaikh":1,"#My favorite part of organizing is being in community with folks from all walks of life. My most memorable organizing moment was joining Palestinian and Colombian communities and activists in the summer of 2021 to challenge state violence. Solidarity and showing up for each other across borders is how we win!":1,"#One of my most memorable organizing experiences is the day our water researcher discovered Veolia was abandoning its flagship water privatization model in the U.S.":1,"#Team":1,"#One of my most memorable organizing experiences is… marching with Nigerian water and labor rights activists through the streets of Lagos with boomboxes mounted on cars alongside, learning to join in on the exuberant chants for our water, our rights in multiple languages!":1,"#bring our passion for justice and our dedication to corporate campaigning to our work each day. We are an intergenerational, global team with a wide range of experiences and perspectives. Our years of organizing range from three to 50, and we’re located in 18 cities and eight countries around the world. We each lead from where we are to hold corporations accountable for the harms they cause and build a more just world together.":1,"#board members":1,"#Corporate Accountability’s staff, team, and":1,"#FY 2022":1,"#One of my most memorable organizing experiences is organizing with Cosecha and with the ACLU of Massachusetts on issues affecting immigrant communities in the U.S. This experience was very important to me because for many of the years I lived in the U.S., I felt sad to not be part of a community that understood my feelings and experiences as an immigrant Latina. But when I found out about Cosecha and started organizing with them, I again felt in my skin. It was fulfilling. I felt part of a multitude of people fighting for what was right and just—in our own languages and cultures—for what mattered to us every day and minute that we were in the U.S. That experience opened the door of my heart to painful social realities that to today have not changed, but also to powerful and meaningful organizing that is worthy to do so with all our energy and commitment. Through that experience I learned to organize with joy, with dance, with art, with color, with food! And even today I can feel and smell that time.
Nathalie Rengifo Alvarez":1,"#One of my most memorable organizing experiences was an action we and our allies held outside of the Gramercy Hotel where representatives from the fossil fuel industry held a private event with politicians and environmental groups. Not only did they hear us, but we also made sure they saw us too, with a large projection on the building demanding to make Big Polluters pay.
Eric Johnson":1,"#One of my most memorable organizing experiences was the most recent meetings of the global tobacco treaty. It was the first virtual Conference of the Parties due to the COVID-19 pandemic. And we, in partnership with our longtime allies, creatively and furiously organized to encourage government representatives to deliver their “conflict of interest declarations,” in keeping with the “maximizing transparency decision”—a unique milestone adopted in 2018 to keep the tobacco industry’s tentacles out of the negotiations.
Daniel Dorado Torres":1,"#Teamwork inspires me.
Charlotte Bartter":1,"#Gardening brings me joy.
Corinne Jager":1,"#Mobilizing people power and financial power to challenge some of the most powerful corporations in the world inspires me.
Faiz Rahman-Sabean":1,"#My favorite part of organizing is being in community with folks from all walks of life. My most memorable organizing moment was joining Palestinian and Colombian communities and activists in the summer of 2021 to challenge state violence. Solidarity and showing up for each other across borders is how we win!
Fatimah Shaikh":1,"#One of my most memorable organizing experiences is the day our water researcher discovered Veolia was abandoning its flagship water privatization model in the U.S.
Ari Rubenstein":1,"#One of my most memorable organizing experiences is… marching with Nigerian water and labor rights activists through the streets of Lagos with boomboxes mounted on cars alongside, learning to join in on the exuberant chants for our water, our rights in multiple languages!
Shayda Naficy":1,"#Staff member Marcia Whitehead challenging McDonald’s in San Francisco, 2010.":1,"#Staff member Lizzie McQuillan challenging Philip Morris International in New York, 2018.":1,"#Staff, board, and former staff members organizing at the global tobacco meetings, in Moscow, 2014. From left to right: Ari Rubenstein, Bobby Ramakant, Jesse Bragg, Cloe Franko, Shuo Peskoe-Yang, and Hannah Freedberg.":1,"#Staff member Martha Denton (front left) organizing for fossil fuel divestment at Harvard University in 2021.":1,"#Staff, volunteer, and former staff members organizing in New York, 2019. From left to right: Neil Gupta, Stacia Brezinski, Michél Legendre, Taylor Billings, and Keltie Vance.":1,"#By daniel dorado":1,"#Tetet Nera-LauronSecretario de la Junta":1,"#Misión":1,"#Letra":1,"#Gracias":1,"#Gastos":1,"#bígaro":1,"#amarillo":1,"#Programa":1,"#Subsidios":1,"#Para Pablo, la fuerza y la energía para enfrentar el abuso corporativo provienen de la tierra, las generaciones de miembros de la comunidad que han cuidado la tierra y la sabiduría cultivada por los movimientos de base. Con UDAPT, participante fundador de la Semana Anti-Chevron, tiene la misión de hacer de la Amazonia un lugar donde los pueblos indígenas tengan el derecho humano a vivir una vida digna.":1,"#Perfil":1,"#Comunidad":1,"#Reflejos":1,"#Akinbode OluwafemiPresidente de la Junta":1,"#Included PMI’s claims that Uruguay´s regulations were arbitrary and constitute an expropriation of trademarks.":1,"#The Arbitrators from the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes of the World Bank , that addressed the legal case rejected ALL PMI claims.":1,"#Thankfully, in 2016, Uruguay won! But the lawsuit delayed implementation of new public health measures for about 5 years.":1,"#In 2010, Philip Morris International – I’m assuming not operating from its publicly stated concern for public health- decided to launch a lawsuit against Uruguay.":1,"#Since 2005 Uruguay decided to implement the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control -the FCTC- , and got significantly decreased the smoking prevalence and became an international tobacco control leader.":1,"#Uruguay, a very small country with less than 3.5 million inhabitants had the highest lung cancer death rates in men as well as the highest Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary diseases prevalence in the Latin America´s region, both conditions highly related to tobacco.":1,"#“Good Morning, my name is Eduardo Bianco. I´m a cardiologist based in Uruguay working on tobacco control for over 20 years, and serving as Framework Convention Alliance for Tobacco Control Regional Coordinator for the Americas.":1,"#Note: Eduardo Bianco was unable to deliver this question at the Philip Morris International annual meeting. Below is what Eduardo intended to ask.":1,"#Note: Eduardo Bianco was unable to deliver this question at the Philip Morris International annual meeting. Below is what Eduardo intended to ask. “Good Morning, my name is Eduardo Bianco. I´m a cardiologist based in Uruguay working on tobacco control for over 20 years, and serving as Framework Convention Alliance for Tobacco Control Regional Coordinator ...":1,"#STATEMENT: Eduardo Bianco's planned question at Philip Morris International annual meeting - Corporate Accountability":1,"#The question remains, when will your corporation cease its intimidation and litigation of countries that are simply trying to implement common-sense and evidence based public health measures?”":1,"#As well as recognized that Uruguay´s measures were reasonable and evidence-based.":1,"#STATEMENT: Eduardo Bianco’s planned question at Philip Morris International annual meeting":1,"#May 6, 2020":1,"#But while Wells Fargo paying reparations will help mitigate some of the harm done, the systems that allowed these actions to unfold must also change. Systemic harms also require systemic solutions, which is why Corporate Accountability supports H.R.40, the congressional bill to develop and implement a comprehensive study focused on “the effects of slavery…and recommend appropriate remedies including reparations”. Action at the national level is necessary to repair the historic crime of kidnapping and slavery, and the ongoing exploitation of Black Americans from the forced labor of the convict leasing and prison systems, and discriminatory mortgage lending policies. Please join us and our allies at the Instituto del Mundo Negro Siglo XXI in supporting H.R. 40 by calling on your congressional representatives to cosponsor this bill today! You can learn more about H.R.40 on the Congress website.":1,"#Member spotlight: Sam Jacobs - Corporate Accountability":1,"#Sam Jacobs is an educator, funder of anti-racist movements and movements challenging corporate power, and part of Corporate Accountability's Giving Circle":1,"#Clearly, what we are doing works — keeping a steady pressure on these corporations. We have to make it difficult, unpleasant, and embarrassing for them to do what they do.":1,"#The movement requires all of our bodies and all of our minds. A lot of wealthy people doing activism feel like they need to hide privilege or keep it to themselves. But if we are excited about social justice, we need to go and get our people. We need lean into our role as organizers, just as much as people who are directly impacted by oppression do every day on the ground. It’s hard work. Organizing is always tough, whether you’re doing donor organizing or you’re doing grassroots work. But as a wealthy person I feel it’s my responsibility to do it.":1,"#Even though PMI is widely regarded as a corporate villain, its shareholders’ meeting is still a place where executives can go and brag about their accomplishments. And people sit there and clap, because it’s going straight to their pocket books. It’s mind-boggling.":1,"#It’s not about the traditional values of legacy, or impact, or any of those donor-centric values. It’s about decentering the funders, redistributing power.":1,"#I think the ultimate goal of philanthropy needs to be to put ourselves out of business. I don’t want to live in a world where access to health care, access to food and water, or a healthy climate is based on the largess of a couple individuals who got wealthy through a rigged, corrupt system. I want those things to be publicly provisioned; I want them to be democratically allocated.":1,"#So I had to take the opportunity to go into the belly of the beast.":1,"#Tell us about the Corporate Accountability Giving Circle. What does that work entail? How did you get involved?":1,"#When I spoke, PMI chairman Louis Camilleri looked at me and said, “I don’t even know why you’re a shareholder, your question doesn’t deserve an answer, and please sit down.” I had clearly gotten under his skin. I didn’t take it personally, but I was glad that he felt like he was under pressure.":1,"#So a number of us who had become members of Corporate Accountability came together to not only educate ourselves about the campaigns, but also to deepen our analysis of corporate power. Right now, we are looking at how to use this group to support not just Corporate Accountability but also the whole movement to challenge corporate power more broadly.":1,"#Sam Jacobs is an educator and a funder of anti-racist movements and movements challenging corporate power.":1,"#This year you attended the Phillip Morris International (PMI) shareholders’ meeting this year with Corporate Accountability. What was it like? Why did you want to be involved with this action?":1,"#The incredible resilience of our social movements. Movements are happening whether or not philanthropists are on board, whether or not funders are around. They’re born out of the material conditions of the world we live in. I look to the struggle in Palestine; I look to the struggle here for racial justice and to hold police accountable. I look to Corporate Accountability: every day working to hold corporations accountable that otherwise would have no reason to be held accountable. They’d only be accountable to their shareholders. But thanks to the strong willed, creative, exciting organizing, the world doesn’t look like that. So that’s what’s keeping me going these days.":1,"#What gives you hope right now?":1,"#I met Deputy Campaigns Director John Stewart in 2015 at a Resource Generation conference. [Resource Generation organizes young people with financial wealth to leverage resources and privilege for social change.] At the conference, there was a lot of analysis around racial justice, gender justice, environmental justice, but there wasn’t as much discussion about corporate power — which is funny, right, because the families of so many people there had become wealthy thanks to the rise of corporate power. Mine certainly had.":1,"#Member spotlight: Sam Jacobs":1,"#How do you see the role of philanthropists in social justice work?":1,"#It’s been really exciting to learn about what’s happening in the world of food justice, water, tobacco, and climate. These issues don’t necessarily get a ton of air time in social justice spaces even though they’re so intimately connected to a lot of other issues that are at the front of people’s minds right now, like racial and economic justice.":1,"#November 8, 2018":1,"#un nuevo análisis de Corporate Accountability":1,"#púrpura":1,"#cal":1,"#naranja":1,"#Learn more and RSVP!":1,"#Join us for Take Back Power:
A night of costumes, trivia, and
action to challenge corporate villains":1,"#Aceptar":1,"#Para proteger tu seguridad al usar el Traductor de Google, no envíes información mediante este tipo de formulario.":1,"#No se admite este formulario":1,"#y en la MOP2 (sección 1.2.12) animando a todas las demás Partes a hacerlo, con el fin de proteger la integridad del tratado.":1,"#Y la región de las Américas emitió una declaración formal en la COP9 (sección 1.2.19)":1,"#Previo a la COP9 y MOP2, muchos gobiernos de todo el mundo, aunque no todos, presentaron sus declaraciones de intereses.":1,"#declaraciones de intereses":1,"#, las Partes decidieron reforzar el Artículo 5.3, aumentando la maximización de la transparencia en las negociaciones y protegiendo el tratado de la interferencia de la industria tabacalera, a través de la exigencia a las organizaciones observadoras, a los medios de comunicación y al público en general para que remitan sus":1,"#En la":1,"#OMS ha invitado sistemáticamente a los países a que eviten asociarse con la industria tabacalera":1,"#Esta es la razón por la cual la":1,"#, que contiene la obligación legal de las Partes de proteger la elaboración de políticas de salud pública de la influencia de la industria tabacalera.":1,"#sus directrices de aplicación":1,"#, complementada con":1,"#conocida como el Artículo 5.3":1,"#Por eso el CMCT incluye una disposición innovadora":1,"#pasar por miembros del público o de los medios de comunicación":1,"#, interfiriendo en las delegaciones y haciéndose":1,"#la infiltración en las reuniones del CMCT de la OMS":1,"#La industria tabacalera tiene un largo y bien documentado historial de injerencia en las políticas de salud pública de todo el mundo, incluida":1,"#en el Protocolo para la Eliminación del Comercio Ilícito de Productos de Tabaco, que se celebrará del 27 al 30 de noviembre de 2023; ambos en la ciudad de Panamá.":1,"#la Tercera Reunión de las Partes (MOP3)":1,"#del Convenio Marco de la Organización Mundial de la Salud para el Control del Tabaco (CMCT de la OMS) que se realizará del 20 al 25 de noviembre de 2023, y":1,"#Décima Conferencia de las Partes (COP1":1,"#Aquí encontrarán una variedad de recursos relacionados con cuestiones importantes en torno a la":1,"#Haga clic aquí para":1,"#Mientras tanto, los gobiernos de todos los niveles pueden utilizar la decisión de responsabilidad jurídica de la COP10, en caso de que se apruebe, así como el conjunto de herramientas y otros recursos para empezar a aplicar el artículo 19 y exigir la rendición de cuentas de la industria tabacalera en todo el mundo. De hecho, algunos gobiernos a nivel global han tenido litigios exitosos contra la industria tabacalera, y muchos más pueden hacerlo. Si está interesado en promover la responsabilidad en su país y desea ayuda, escribe a [email protected].":1,"#Si deseas conversar o tienes dudas sobre las formas de apoyar el impulso del artículo 19 antes o durante la COP10, escribe a [email protected]":1,"#“Corporate Accountability en compañía de sus aliados vigilarán la interferencia de la industria tabacalera durante las negociaciones de la COP10 y la MOP3. Si tiene conocimiento de intentos de obstaculización por parte de la industria antes o durante las reuniones, póngase en contacto con [email protected], así como con la Secretaría del CMCT de la OMS”.":1,"#Corporate Accountability, 2022.":1,"#“Dos industrias mortales, una solución audaz: Lograr que las empresas contaminantes y a la industria tabacalera se responsabilicen”":1,"#en todo el mundo.":1,"#de casos exitosos de litigios contra la industria tabacalera":1,"#Mapa":1,"#el mandato de la Secretaría":1,"#Texto completo de la decisión del Artículo 19, incluido":1,"#tabacaleras":1,"#Diplomáticos que hacen lobby para las compañías":1,"#vacunas":1,"#Adiós, PMI: el gigante tabacalero expulsado de la colaboración que sostenía con los canadiense en materia de":1,"#Las Partes deben mantener el tratado lejos de las grandes tabacaleras aplicando las decisiones de “maximizar la transparencia” y presentando declaraciones de intereses”":1,"#Boletín del CMCT Knowledge Hub, COP9: “":1,"#instando a los demás a presentar declaraciones de intereses y a aplicar plenamente las decisiones sobre la “maximización de la transparencia”.":1,"#Declaración de las Partes de la región de las Américas en la":1,"#para las Partes, en caso de que decidan utilizarlo. (Descargue el documento y desplácese hasta la página 6.)":1,"#Modelo de formulario de declaración de intereses":1,"#puedes encontrar la plantilla de formularios de declaración de intereses para los observadores, los medios de comunicación y el público en general.":1,"#Texto completo de la decisión “maximización de la transparencia”,":1,"#, y muchos más pueden hacerlo. Si está interesado en promover la responsabilidad en su país y desea ayuda, escribe a":1,"#algunos gobiernos a nivel global han tenido litigios exitosos contra la industria tabacalera":1,"#Mientras tanto, los gobiernos de todos los niveles pueden utilizar la decisión de responsabilidad jurídica de la COP10, en caso de que se apruebe, así como el conjunto de herramientas y otros recursos para empezar a aplicar el artículo 19 y exigir la rendición de cuentas de la industria tabacalera en todo el mundo. De hecho,":1,"#. En él se ofrece orientación a las Partes para avanzar en el Artículo 19. Las Partes deben seguir apoyando a la Secretaría en el cumplimiento de los acuerdos que se tomaron en COPs anteriores y que se relacionan con la creación de herramientas y recursos para ayudar a las Partes con el Artículo 19.":1,"#set de herramientas que está disponible en línea":1,"#Las Partes, la Secretaría y los expertos han creado un práctico":1,"#Si deseas conversar o tienes dudas sobre las formas de apoyar el impulso del artículo 19 antes o durante la COP10, escribe a":1,"#asegurándose de que se incluye en la agenda de la COP10.":1,"#La Secretaría tiene como tarea pendiente de COPs anteriores, crear herramientas y recursos para ayudar a las Partes a impulsar el Artículo 19. Las Partes pueden apoyar este":1,"#en los que han incurrido los gobiernos por los daños que los productos del tabaco han causado también al planeta, incluidas las colillas de cigarrillos, que se sabe que son el objeto más desechado de la Tierra.":1,"#los costes medioambientales":1,"#Seguir trabajando en la aprobación del Artículo 19 sobre responsabilidad no solo permite a las Partes responsabilizar jurídicamente a la industria tabacalera por sus abusos; también puede hacer avanzar todas las medidas del CMCT de la OMS que salvan vidas. Además, tiene el potencial de que los gobiernos recuperen los costes que han tenido por solventar el tratamiento de las enfermedades relacionadas con el tabaco al utilizar sus sistemas jurídicos para garantizar su derecho a hacerlo. Y puede ayudar a recuperar":1,"#y otros). En la COP10, las Partes tienen la oportunidad de reforzar y avanzar en la aplicación del Artículo 19 y, al hacerlo, catapultar el potencial que tiene el CMCT de salvar vidas.":1,"#medioambientales":1,"#(costes sanitarios,":1,"#a la industria tabacalera por los daños que ha ocasionado":1,"#Ahí es donde entra en juego el artículo 19 del CMCT. El Artículo 19 anima a las Partes a responsabilizar":1,"#instar a las Partes a avanzar en trasladar la responsabilidad jurídica a la industria":1,"#, obligarla a respetar el Estado de derecho y hacerla pagar por los daños ocasionados por sus productos en el pasado, pero también por aquellos que ocasionará en el futuro, incluidos los derivados del consumo y exposición a los cigarrillos electrónicos, los productos de tabaco calentado y dispositivos similares. Y la gente de todo el mundo está de acuerdo: de hecho, miles de particulares junto con expertos y organizaciones se han unido para":1,"#Ha llegado el momento de trasladar la carga de los costos que implica el consumo y exposición a los productos de tabaco a la industria":1,"#Durante mucho tiempo, la industria tabacalera ha utilizado amenazas legales para intimidar a los gobiernos e influir en sus decisiones para abandonar la aplicación de las medidas más audaces del tratado.":1,"#, así como con la Secretaría del CMCT de la OMS”.":1,"#“Corporate Accountability en compañía de sus aliados vigilarán la interferencia de la industria tabacalera durante las negociaciones de la COP10 y la MOP3. Si tiene conocimiento de intentos de obstaculización por parte de la industria antes o durante las reuniones, póngase en contacto con":1,"#pueden encontrar más información sobre el uso de grupos de fachada por parte de la industria tabacalera para interferir en las negociaciones del CMCT de la OMS.":1,"#Por supuesto, esta interferencia tiene su origen desde la adopción del tratado.":1,"#lea el índice mundial de injerencias de la industria tabacalera":1,"#Desde el inicio de la pandemia de COVID-19, la interferencia de la industria en las políticas de salud pública de todo el mundo no ha cesado. Para más información,":1,"#de las tácticas de injerencia de la industria tabacalera en la COP7. (Estas revelaciones ayudaron a impulsar a las Partes a tomar medidas decisivas a través de “maximizar la transparencia” en la COP8 y la MOP1). Todos los asistentes a las negociaciones del tratado -Partes, observadores, medios de comunicación y público en general- pueden beneficiarse de comprender la profundidad de las tácticas de la industria leyendo el reportaje y el análisis mencionados:":1,"#Reuters publicó un análisis en el que había hecho una investigación a profundidad":1,"#en 10 países africanos, aparentemente, con el objetivo de interferir en las delegaciones de la OMS para el CMCT y paralizar los avances en la aplicación del tratado.":1,"#un plan de pagos cuestionable":1,"#Un reportaje de 2021 dio a conocer cómo British American Tobacco (BAT) participó en":1,"#, pero gracias a la rápida actuación de las Partes y de la sociedad civil, la injerencia de la industria salieron a la luz en los medios de comunicación de":1,"#durante la COP9 en 2021":1,"#La interferencia de la industria tabacalera ha sido ambiciosa; tuvo mucha fuerza":1,"#(anexos 5, 6 y 7) incluye modelos de formularios para observadores, medios de comunicación y público en general.":1,"#decisión final":1,"#un modelo de formulario de declaración de intereses, en caso de que decidan utilizarlo. (Descargue el documento y desplácese hasta la página 6; los Estados no Parte también pueden utilizar este formulario). Tenga en cuenta que el texto de la":1,"#Las Partes pueden encontrar":1,"#Puede consultar el texto completo de las decisiones sobre “maximizar la transparencia” aquí:":1,"#Descargue la carta a las Partes, incluida la lista de firmantes, aquí":1,"#Además, dado su carácter histórico y el precedente que está sentando, más de 120 organizaciones de salud pública de todo el mundo se unieron para pedir a las Partes que apliquen plenamente estas decisiones antes de la COP9/MOP2.":1,"#First name":1,"#Last name":1,"#eventos musicales más populares y con mayor asistencia en América Latina":1,"#las actividades del Día Mundial Sin Tabaco":1,"#consumo de tabaco y nicotina entre los jóvenes":1},"version":6971}]