[{"_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":7172},{"_id":"en","source":"en","pluralFn":"return n != 1 ? 1 : 0;","pluralForm":2,"dictionary":{},"version":7172},{"_id":"outdated","outdated":{"#Full text of maximizing transparency decisions for COP8 y MOP1":1,"#Submit your form during the time of registration. For more information, please refer to the toolkit for delegates, prepared by the Convention Secretariat for POLICÍA y FREGAR.":1,"#Welcome to the resource center for the upcoming meetings of the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) for party delegations and representatives of observer organizations. (Access this information in French y Spanish).":1,"#Ari BelatharAssistant Secretary":1,"#Irene Patricia N. ReyesBoard Secretary":1,"#Michél LegendreVice Chair":1,"#Paige KirsteinBoard Chair":1,"#Each year, social movements and organizations will gather in Geneva to demand that governments establish a United Nations treaty that could hold transnational corporations accountable for human rights abuses. Formally known as the United Nations binding treaty on transnational corporations and other business enterprises with respect to human rights (OEIGWG), this treaty would serve as a critical tool for people around the world to access justice.":1,"#Por ari rubinstein":1,"#The Kick Big Polluters Out (KBPO) coalition then crunched the numbers and exposed that approximately one in every 25 participants at this round of climate talks was representing fossil fuel interests. It’s the highest concentration since this research began, outnumbering delegates from countries on the front lines of the climate crisis.":1,"#Before the U.N. climate talks even started, the Kick Big Polluters Out coalition—which Corporate Accountability helps coordinate—exposed the extent of Big Polluters’ presence over the last four years of climate talks: more than 5,350 fossil fuel lobbyists attended. The coalition’s analysis revealed how much recent oil and gas production some of these Big Polluters have been responsible for while they’ve been undermining climate action. The research was featured in an exclusive Guardian story that was picked up by outlets around the globe—putting governments and industry on notice on the eve of the climate talks.":1,"#Headlines that exposed Big Polluters’ presence greeted delegates as they made their way to the U.N. climate treaty negotiations.":1,"#Kicking Big Polluters Out":1,"#So at both the climate and tobacco treaty negotiations, Corporate Accountability partnered with allies around the globe and people like you to challenge these corporations—to protect our health, our freedoms, our communities, and the Earth we call home. Here’s a little bit of what that looked like.":1,"#The corporations and billionaires propping up the wannabe dictator in the U.S. are the same ones blocking climate action and pushing products that kill people and harm the planet. From the U.S., to the highest levels of the U.N., including at these treaty meetings, they’re extending their tentacles, selling snake oil packaged as “solutions” to the problems they’ve fueled—and trying to block real and life-saving solutions.":1,"#Righteous outrage meets corporate capture meets international diplomacy. What went down at the climate and tobacco treaty meetings.":1,"#The People vs. Big Polluters, Big Tobacco, and tentacled corporate monsters | Corporate Accountability":1,"#A giant tentacled monster outside the U.N. offices in Geneva":1,"#Corporate Accountability staff and activists march at the People's Summit":1,"#Protest with a giant sign reading \"Kick out the suits\"":1,"#Screenshot of a news article with the headline: “How thousands of fossil fuel lobbyists got access to UN climate talks – and then kept drilling”":1,"#With people like you by our side, we’ll never stop fighting for a world where corporations answer to people and not the other way around.":1,"#It was a lot, all at once. So let’s break it down:":1,"#So that’s the scoop. People around the world are rising up, confronting the unchecked corporate power that’s frankly at the root of so many of the crises we face (including rising authoritarianism). Corporate Accountability shows up in contested spaces like U.N. treaty meetings because they are democratic forums where people’s needs and experiences—not corporate interests—should be the priority.":1,"#And we saw great success: despite resistance from governments in Big Tobacco’s pockets, delegates adopted recommendations for how governments can hold the tobacco industry liable, and will keep developing resources for further guidance in the lead-up to the next meetings in Armenia in 2027. This will accelerate momentum to make Big Tobacco pay for its abuses around the world.":1,"#The next day, we took the demands of nearly 40,000 people straight to the president of the global tobacco treaty talks. The box of petitions said it all: people around the world are calling for Big Tobacco to pay for fueling death, disease, and environmental destruction.":1,"#To highlight the need to challenge Big Tobacco, we and our allies staged a street theatre performance and action on the first day of the talks. The spectacle exposed industry interference in a highly visible way, securing media coverage in the world’s largest Spanish-language wire service. It made clear that we the people were organized, united, and determined to stop tobacco industry interference. And it emphasized our demands that government delegates use the treaty meetings to curb Big Tobacco’s influence in public health policy and make Big Tobacco pay.":1,"#This year, for example, we made sure that delegates stated clearly who they represented—and that they weren’t there to do Big Tobacco’s bidding. Thanks to our and our many allies’ dogged organizing, governments representing more than 75% of the world’s population complied with disclosure measures we secured several years ago.":1,"#Here’s the thing: The global tobacco treaty, which marked its 20th anniversary this year, explicitly states that governments must protect public policy from the interests of Big Tobacco. And Corporate Accountability and our allies were pivotal in securing the adoption of this provision. But from the start, the tobacco industry has sought to undermine this measure and infiltrate the treaty talks. So it’s critical that we and our allies show up to protect this space from the industry’s influence.":1,"#At the same time that climate justice organizers were challenging Big Polluters at the climate talks, activists were going toe-to-toe with Big Tobacco in Geneva.":1,"#Exposing the deadly reach of Big Tobacco through street theater. Photo Credit: Philippe Audi-Dor":1,"#Making Big Tobacco pay for its abuses":1,"#The power of people was on full display at a march at the culmination of the summit that brought nearly 70,000 people out to the streets.":1,"#The vibe? Righteous outrage meets corporate capture meets international diplomacy.":1,"#And during the People’s Summit—which ran alongside the first week of the treaty negotiations and drew 15,000 attendees—the progress we’ve made was evident in the relationships we built and the topics discussed. And after much debate, the final declaration from the summit included a call to make Big Polluters pay for “the socio-environmental debt accumulated through centuries,” a demand to “end the exploitation of fossil fuels,” and an “opposition to any false solutions to the climate crisis.":1,"#While we organized to help shift what’s possible inside the U.N. climate treaty negotiating rooms, we’ve also been collectively shifting what’s possible outside of them. Our Latin America climate campaign has been organizing for several years to move more of the region’s climate movement to challenge corporate abuse, and make Big Polluters pay.":1,"#Tens of thousands of people took to the streets to demand climate justice":1,"#Building the movement to make Big Polluters pay":1,"#In the end, despite the titanic influence of Big Polluters, we the people secured some hard-fought steps towards climate justice. The climate justice movement laid the groundwork for a pathway towards a just and equitable transition away from fossil fuels—a transition that must honor the needs of workers and others on the front lines of the climate crisis. Together, we also successfully delayed and weakened dangerous schemes pushed by Big Polluters at the talks.":1,"#One example: Thousands of folks like you took action, calling on U.N. Secretary General António Guterres to Kick Big Polluters Out of the climate talks, and rein in fossil fuel industry influence through the U.N. Together, we sent a clear message that, even though the U.S. government may not officially be at the international climate negotiations, we the people are deeply concerned about the climate crisis. And we want real climate solutions that prioritize the lives and needs of people and the planet we call home, not false solutions that put the profit of corporations over our survival.":1,"#To be sure, the institutional power wielded by Big Polluters and the Global North governments in their pockets was on full display. But we the people refused to roll over. We came together and fought with everything we had—at the negotiations and around the world.":1,"#Throughout the climate treaty talks, we joined KBPO partners in protests and events that made it clear: Big Polluters are not welcome!
Photo credit: Bianka Csenki, Artivist Network":1,"#The Kick Big Polluters Out coalition put our collective, global media organizing muscles to work—and as a result, this analysis was cited in dozens of media articles and social media posts around the world. It grabbed headlines in top U.S. outlets like the Financial Times to Newsweek, wire services like Agence-France Presse (AFP) that are syndicated around the world, and local and regional outlets. KBPO’s research was also featured in videos on Instagram and TikTok by news outlets like Channel 4 and activist organizers like Greenpeace, who harnessed it to great effect in confronting one fossil fuel executive at the talks. Altogether, this media coverage helped shift the narrative around who’s calling the shots in the halls of the U.N.—and who really should be.":1,"#But while fossil fuel lobbyists flooded the talks, the people took to the streets and to the media. Together, we were determined to defy Big Polluters and bring new possibilities into being.":1,"#The forums? Two international treaty meetings—one in Belém, Brazil (climate), and the other in Geneva, Switzerland (tobacco control).":1,"#This November, people around the world came together to challenge Big Polluters’ and Big Tobacco’s deadly agendas.":1,"#Belém, Brazil: On November 16, 2025, Rachel Rose Jackson, Director of Climate Research and Policy at Corporate Accountability at issued the ...":1,"#STATEMENT: Corporate Accountability’s Rachel Rose Jackson on this week’s final days of COP30":1,"#November 17, 2025":1,"#On Saturday, November 22, Corporate Accountability Director of Climate Research and Policy Rachel Rose Jackson issued the following statement. As ...":1,"#STATEMENT: COP30 clock winds down — our closing thoughts":1,"#November 22, 2025":1,"#Uscpra_logo_final_black-600":1,"#Jwj_vertical_wordmark_primary_blue":1,"#Blue_future_square_logo_2020_white":1,"#Tju-logo_250px":1,"#Ma-primary_(1)":1,"#Ogan_new_logo":1,"#Screen_shot_2020-05-26_at_12.42.43_pm":1,"#Square_logo":1,"#Ajp_red_logo":1,"#Cpda_logo_color":1,"#Pa-logo-black-square":1,"#Logo_kairos_10-13":1,"#Socialicon2":1,"#Progress-america-logo_(1)":1,"#We_are_instagram_01":1,"#Acre2small":1,"#Opin":1,"#Untitled_(2000_x_2000_px)":1,"#Opt in to email updates from May Day Coalition, Organized Power In Numbers, Action Center on Race and the Economy, The Rising Majority, Progress America, The Labor Force, Kairos Center, People's Action, CPD Action , Corporate Accountability, Adalah Justice Project, Civic Shout, The Juggernaut Project, Oil & Gas Action Network (OGAN), Our Revolution Massachusetts (ORMA), Trader Joe's United, Blue Future, Jobs With Justice, and US Campaign for Palestinian Rights Action (USCPR Action)":1,"#Only 204,112 more until our goal of 409,600":1,"#205,488 Letters Sent":1,"#US Campaign for Palestinian Rights Action (USCPR Action)":1,"#Jobs With Justice":1,"#Washington, DC":1,"#Blue Future":1,"#Trader Joe's United":1,"#Our Revolution Massachusetts (ORMA)":1,"#Oil & Gas Action Network (OGAN)":1,"#The Juggernaut Project":1,"#Civic Shout":1,"#Adalah Justice Project":1,"#CPD Action":1,"#People's Action":1,"#Kairos Center":1,"#The Labor Force":1,"#Progress America":1,"#Pasadena, CA":1,"#Organized Power In Numbers":1,"#Additional Sponsors":1,"#May Day Coalition":1,"#Every dollar spent in wars overseas or at home is a dollar we paid for with our taxes - a dollar that could and should go to helping our communities thrive. We can have good jobs, better schools, access to healthcare and get our basic needs met. But not while our government works for billionaires and not for us.":1,"#From Minneapolis and Chicago to Caracas and beyond, Trump is seizing our freedoms in his war to extend rule by the bullies for the billionaires. And the attack on Venezuela is straight out of the authoritarian playbook: distract from unpopularity at home by starting armed conflict abroad. Take action and demand your elected officials condemn the criminal occupation of Venezuela and U.S. cities.":1,"#We will not stand by while Trump occupies nations and let’s ICE loose on behalf of the billionaire class while at home we can’t even afford our groceries.":1,"#This regime isn’t about making our lives better: it’s about billionaires making themselves richer no matter the human cost.":1,"#The attacks by Noem’s ICE militia on our communities are about profit for private prisons and lining the pocketbooks of Trump’s billionaire backers.":1,"#The attack on Venezuela is seizing control of the mineral and energy wealth of Venezuela and handing it over to Big Oil. Trump is beholden to oil corporations like Chevron, Exxon and billionaire oil tycoons like Tim Dunn. These are the same corporations that extract our natural resources from our backyards and exploit workers all over the country - exposing them and their communities to dangerous and sometimes lethal conditions.":1,"#We stand united against a regime that occupies nations and wages war on our cities on behalf of the billionaire class while they jack up our rent, healthcare and groceries.":1,"#We are calling on every elected official in this country to condemn this administration’s reckless aggression.":1,"#As working people of this country we stand in opposition to the illegal attack and occupation of Venezuela and the deadly presence of ICE in our cities.":1,"#Condemn the Criminal Occupation of Venezuela & Our Cities":1,"#Demand elected officials condemn the occupation of Venezuela & our cities - Corporate Accountability":1,"#Demand elected officials condemn the occupation of Venezuela & our cities":1,"#January 12, 2026":1,"#You may receive email updates from May Day Coalition, Organized Power In Numbers, Action Center on Race and the Economy, The Rising Majority, Progress America, The Labor Force, Kairos Center, People's Action, CPD Action , Corporate Accountability, Adalah Justice Project, Civic Shout, The Juggernaut Project, Oil & Gas Action Network (OGAN), Our Revolution Massachusetts (ORMA), Trader Joe's United, Blue Future, Jobs With Justice, and US Campaign for Palestinian Rights Action (USCPR Action), the sponsors of this letter campaign.":1,"#No war for oil in Venezuela!":1,"#Demand your elected leaders condemn
the attack and occupation of Venezuela.":1,"#Pierce Delahunt":1,"#Read more about Pierce Delahunt":1,"#Pierce Delahunt photo of face":1,"#For nearly a decade, we've partnered with Pittsburgh organizers to expose Veolia's role in the city's water crisis, and keep the city's water system in public hands. Photo credit: Pennsylvania United":1,"#You're part of a movement that's challenging the corporations and billionaires undermining our democracy, polluting our planet, and threatening our communities. Together, we're in it for the long haul, building toward a world where everyone can thrive — no exceptions.":1,"#Thanks to you, we're ready to meet the challenges ahead.":1,"#As corporations infiltrate our government, steal our essential resources, and seize more and more power, we're not backing down. We're taking our hard-hitting campaigns even further by:":1,"#Our global team is made of people committed to building a world that's centered on the needs of people and the health of our planet — no exceptions. Learn more about our bold, talented staff and board that drive our corporate campaigning forward day in and day out. And get to know our board members, who all bring unique perspectives and experiences in mobilizing people for social change.":1,"#Most of all, it's the responsibility he feels toward people and the planet, and his commitment to live out his values, that keeps him going. \"The important question for me is: When bad stuff happens, will it be because I rolled over and let it? Or will I have done everything I could to stop it?\"":1,"#Pierce's teaching and research keeps him engaged with his community and energized in this difficult political moment. In teaching nonviolent communication to inmates at San Quentin prison and political economy online, he finds that his students are more open than ever to learn about the different ways of relating, as well as the inner workings of power and the economy.":1,"#\"Corporations are the emblem of exploitation, capitalism, and colonialism,\" he says. He's most drawn to Corporate Accountability's campaigning that challenges the privatization of essential resources and utilities, like water. \"Holding our resources as a commons instead of selling them for profit goes a long way in countering oppression and environmental catastrophe,\" he says.":1,"#That led him to accompany Corporate Accountability's team to a McDonald's shareholders' meeting. Pierce described the scene on his blog: executives patting each other on the back for reaping profits from an underpaid workforce, unhealthy food, and harm to animals and land. The event helped solidify his understanding of the modern corporation as an imperialist force that will seek profit at the expense of everything: people's health, lives, and the planet.":1,"#As Pierce got older, his systemic analysis deepened. During the first Trump regime, he met an organizer from Corporate Accountability. He joined the Giving Circle, a group of young adults that met regularly to learn about corporate power, build campaigning skills, and mobilize resources for the organization and the movement.":1,"#In high school, Pierce hated history class. He remembers his eyes glazing over as his teachers recounted one event after another. He realized later that he was getting a curated timeline, not the full story. \"This was on purpose,\" he says, exasperated. \"There is a reason why people in power don't want you to see the origins of the unjust world that you're living in now.\"":1,"#Member, teacher, researcher":1,"#(Acceda a esta información en ingles y francés ).":1,"#Campaign Director – Dogwood Alliance
Social movement leader & organizer":1,"#Vocal Type":1,"#Bayard font by":1,"#Gabby Gray":1,"#Valerie Johnstone":1,"#Presente su formulario durante el proceso de registro. Para obtener más información, consulte el kit de herramientas para delegados preparado por la Secretaría del Convenio para la":1,"#Miembros del público y medios de comunicación:":1,"#Organizaciones No Gubernamentales (ONG):":1,"#Estados no Parte:":1,"#Estados Parte:":1,"#maximización de la transparencia":1,"#Abra este documento sobre la":1,"#, a pesar de la idea popular sobre el supuesto declive de la relevancia de la industria tabacalera, la “industria del tabaco es más poderosa que nunca”. Por eso, las Partes tienen la obligación legal de proteger la formulación de políticas de salud pública de la influencia de la industria. Y una forma importante de cumplir con esa obligación es presentando un formulario de Declaración de Intereses antes de que comiencen las negociaciones de la COP11 y la MOP4.":1,"#el exministro de Salud de Finlandia y presidente del comité del CMCT, Pekka Puska":1,"#Como afirmó":1,"#, anteriormente considerada una campeona en control del tabaco, para promover su agenda en la COP10.":1,"#Philip Morris International presuntamente reclutó a miembros de la delegación de Filipinas":1,"#en África. BAT realizó más de 200 pagos cuestionables a políticos, funcionarios públicos y periodistas en todo el continente para asegurar una ventaja competitiva, obtener información e influir en las políticas de control del tabaco. Investigaciones del Tobacco Control Research Group, la Universidad de Bath y otros socios indicaron que las acciones de la corporación no fueron un incidente aislado, sino que ejemplificaron su modo regular de operar para mantener un control monopolístico.":1,"#British American Tobacco (BAT) socavó las políticas de salud pública y llevó a cabo espionaje corporativo":1,"#Entre 2008 y 2013,":1,"#en un hotel a una hora del centro de conferencias y sostuvo reuniones secretas con delegados del gobierno de Vietnam y otros miembros del tratado. Estas sesiones individuales formaron parte del esfuerzo más amplio de la corporación para debilitar y bloquear disposiciones del tratado que salvan vidas, impulsar medidas que socavan la salud pública y revertir protecciones destinadas a reducir el consumo de tabaco.":1,"#Philip Morris International instaló su base de operaciones":1,"#a exclusivas fiestas posteriores y lujosas cenas orientadas a promover productos como los cigarrillos electrónicos y los dispositivos no combustibles.":1,"#han atraído a delegados fuera del lugar de negociación":1,"#, así como recopilar información sobre decisiones del tratado que les permita socavar el progreso de las reuniones. Estos representantes también":1,"#manipular e intimidar a delegados":1,"#Las corporaciones tabacaleras han utilizado credenciales “públicas” —un recurso destinado a que los medios de comunicación y la sociedad civil participen y observen las negociaciones— para infiltrarse e influir en la formulación de políticas y la toma de decisiones. Representantes de la industria tabacalera se han hecho pasar por periodistas y miembros de la sociedad civil con el fin de":1,"#Formulario de muestra aquí":1,"#Orientación sobre cómo presentar su formulario de Declaración de Intereses (DOI) para ayudar a proteger la formulación de políticas de la influencia de la industria tabacalera. (":1,"#, la disposición del tratado destinada a mantener a la industria tabacalera fuera de la formulación de políticas de salud, los intentos de la industria por influir, desviar y debilitar estas medidas críticas continúan. Este año, las Partes tienen la capacidad responsabilizar a estas corporaciones abusivas. Este centro de recursos le ayudará a aprovechar su potencial y participación para impulsar el progreso del tratado, incluyendo:":1,"#A pesar del sólido apoyo al":1,"#de su Protocolo para la Eliminación del Comercio Ilícito de Productos de Tabaco (el Protocolo)— que tendrán lugar en Ginebra del 17 al 26 de noviembre, son fundamentales.":1,"#la Cuarta Reunión de las Partes (MOP4)":1,"#la Undécima Conferencia de las Partes (COP11)":1,"#Recomendaciones para fortalecer la implementación del Artículo 19, una disposición que alienta a los países y gobiernos a responsabilizar a la industria tabacalera por sus abusos.":1,"#— a costa de nuestras vidas, nuestra salud y el planeta. Y por eso estas negociaciones —":1,"#declaración de la Conferencia Mundial sobre Control del Tabaco":1,"#Pero las corporaciones tabacaleras transnacionales continúan encontrando formas de interferir en la salud pública en todo el mundo —como se abordó recientemente en la":1,"#. En las últimas dos décadas, este acuerdo internacional, pionero y sin precedentes, ha establecido un cortafuegos entre los intereses corporativos y la salud pública. Con el apoyo de 183 países, el tratado protege al 90% de la población mundial mediante leyes de espacios libres de humo, impuestos al tabaco, prohibiciones de publicidad y advertencias sanitarias en los paquetes de cigarrillos. También ha servido como un sólido precedente en salud global en cuanto a salvaguardas frente a la interferencia de la industria a través del Artículo 5.3 y la responsabilidad mediante el Artículo 19.":1,"#20.º aniversario de la ratificación del tratado mundial para el control del tabaco":1,"#(Accede a esta información en":1,"#(Accede a esta información en inglés y francés.)":1,"#Bienvenido(a) al centro de recursos para las próximas reuniones del Convenio Marco de la Organización Mundial de la Salud para el Control del Tabaco (CMCT de la OMS), dirigido a las delegaciones de las Partes y a los representantes de las organizaciones observadoras.":1,"#Action on Smoking and Health (ASH), responsabilidad penal y violaciones a los derechos humanos":1,"#ACT Promoção da Saúde, Quem paga a conta cigarro / Quién paga la cuenta del cigarrillo":1,"#Centro Global para la Buena Gobernanza en el Control del Tabaco (GGTC), Artículo 19, documento de política":1,"#Base de datos de expertos e instituciones para la implementación del Artículo 19":1,"#Kit de herramientas de responsabilidad civil del Artículo 19":1,"#Informe y recomendaciones del Grupo de Expertos sobre el Artículo 19":1,"#Avanzar en materia de responsabilidad mediante el Artículo 19":1,"#Índice mundial de interferencia de la industria tabacalera e índices regionales":1,"#Ejemplo de formulario de Declaración de Intereses para las Partes (consulte el anexo en la página 6). Acceso rápido aquí.":1,"#Plantilla del formulario de Declaración de Intereses para medios, observadores y público":1,"#Guía de una página para proteger el espacio del tratado de la interferencia de la industria":1,"#Desafiando la interferencia de la industria tabacalera mediante el Artículo 5.3":1,"#Reglas de Procedimiento de la Reunión de las Partes":1,"#Reglas de Procedimiento de la Conferencia de las Partes":1,"#Celebración del impacto del tratado durante 20 años":1,"#Guía de la MOP para participantes":1,"#Guía de la COP para participantes":1,"#clave del CMCT y sus directrices de implementación":1,"#Descripción general de los":1,"#Descripción general del Protocolo":1,"#Descripción general del CMCT de la OMS":1,"#Información sobre el Tratado Mundial para el Control del Tabaco":1,"#A continuación, puede encontrar recursos para apoyar su participación en la COP11 y la MOP4, con el fin de avanzar y fortalecer el tratado mundial para el control del tabaco.":1,"#Durante demasiado tiempo, la industria tabacalera ha utilizado amenazas legales para intimidar a los gobiernos y hacer que abandonen las poderosas medidas del tratado destinadas a salvar millones de vidas. El Artículo 19 brinda a las Partes la oportunidad de responsabilizar a la industria tabacalera por estas acciones.":1,"#Avanzar en materia de responsabilidad y hacer que la industria tabacalera rinda cuentas":1,"#Depende de todos nosotros —miembros de las Partes, observadores de la sociedad civil y miembros de los medios de comunicación— mantenernos vigilantes frente a la interferencia de la industria. Corporate Accountability y nuestros aliados monitorearán las acciones y la presencia de la industria tabacalera durante las negociaciones. Si llega a tener conocimiento de cualquier intento de interferencia, por favor contacte a [email protected]":1,"#Miembros del público y medios de comunicación: Anexo 5, página 10":1,"#Organizaciones No Gubernamentales (ONG): Anexo 4, página 9":1,"#Organizaciones Intergubernamentales (OIG): Anexo 3, página 8":1,"#Estados no Parte: Anexo 2, página 7":1,"#Estados Parte: Anexo 1, página 6":1,"#Consulte las secciones del Anexo y elija la plantilla correspondiente a su delegación::":1,"#Cómo completar su formulario de Declaración de Conflicto de Interés::":1,"#Más recientemente, Philip Morris International presuntamente reclutó a miembros de la delegación de Filipinas, anteriormente considerada una campeona en control del tabaco, para promover su agenda en la COP10.":1,"#Depende de todos nosotros —miembros de las Partes, observadores de la sociedad civil y miembros de los medios de comunicación— mantenernos vigilantes frente a la interferencia de la industria. Corporate Accountability y nuestros aliados monitorearán las acciones y la presencia de la industria tabacalera durante las negociaciones. Si llega a tener conocimiento de cualquier intento de interferencia, por favor contacte a COP11@corporateaccountability.org":1,"#e índices regionales":1,"#Texto completo de las decisiones de maximización de la transparencia para la":1,"#(consulte el anexo en la página 6). Acceso rápido aquí.":1,"#Ejemplo de formulario de Declaración de Intereses para las Partes":1,"#, que proporciona información de contacto de especialistas y profesionales con experiencia en litigios contra la industria y en materia corporativa.":1,"#La industria tabacalera tiene una larga y bien documentada historia de interferir en las políticas de salud pública en todo el mundo para proteger sus propias ganancias. Y desde la ratificación del tratado, solo ha redoblado sus esfuerzos.":1,"#la base de datos de expertos jurídicos":1,"#, las Partes pueden obtener orientación práctica que les ayude a determinar cómo iniciar un proceso legal, según su contexto y circunstancias. Las Partes también pueden encontrar el apoyo que necesitan mediante":1,"#Pero el trabajo para responsabilizar a la industria no se detiene en las salas de negociación de Ginebra. Debe avanzar país por país, en todo el mundo. A través del":1,"#(punto 6.5 del orden del día) para acceder a los ámbitos civil, penal y administrativo, las Partes pueden proteger la salud pública, salvaguardar el medio ambiente, recuperar costos y garantizar que la industria tabacalera rinda cuentas plenamente.":1,"#las recomendaciones del Grupo de Expertos":1,"#La COP11 es un momento decisivo para hacer que la industria tabacalera pague por los daños que ha causado. Al respaldar el proyecto de decisión de la COP en la Sesión Plenaria de Clausura e implementar":1,"#El Artículo 19 también puede ayudar a recuperar los costos de atención en salud y los daños ambientales causados por los productos de tabaco, desbloquear recursos para medidas que salvan vidas y dificultar que la industria continúe con sus abusos.":1,"#. Esta disposición alienta a los gobiernos a adoptar acciones legales, legislativas o administrativas contra la industria tabacalera, y obliga a que las corporaciones que han lucrado a costa de nuestra salud, nuestras vidas y nuestro planeta paguen por los daños pasados y futuros causados por sus productos.":1,"#El Artículo 19 es a la vez poderoso y subutilizado":1,"#Depende de todos nosotros —miembros de las Partes, observadores de la sociedad civil y miembros de los medios de comunicación— mantenernos vigilantes frente a la interferencia de la industria. Corporate Accountability y nuestros aliados monitorearán las acciones y la presencia de la industria tabacalera durante las negociaciones. Si llega a tener conocimiento de cualquier intento de interferencia, por favor contacte a":1,"#Proteger el tratado frente a la interferencia de la industria":1,"#Centro de recursos para la COP11 y la MOP4":1,"#to fancy afterparties and decadent dinners aimed at promoting products like e-cigarettes and noncombustable devices.":1,"#that will help you and your peers use these policy meetings to improve the lives and health of people around the world.":1,"#Key resources on what’s at stake at COP11 and MOP4":1,"#a provision that encourages countries and governments to hold the tobacco industry liable for its abuses.":1,"#Recommendations for strengthening the implementation of Article 19,":1,"#to help protect policymaking from the influence of the tobacco industry (sample form here.)":1,"#Guidance on how to submit your Declaration-of-Interest form (DOI)":1,"#Key resources on what’s at stake at COP11 and MOP4 that will help you and your peers use these policy meetings to improve the lives and health of people around the world.":1,"#of its Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products (the Protocol), taking place in Geneva from November 17 – 26, are critical.":1,"#But transnational tobacco corporations continue to find ways to interfere with public health across the globe — as recently addressed on the":1,"#. In the past two decades, this precedent-setting international agreement has placed a firewall between corporate interests and public health. With the support of 183 countries, the treaty protects 90% of the world’s population through smoke-free laws, tobacco taxes, advertising bans, and cigarette package warning labels. It has served as a strong global health precedent for safeguards around industry interference through Article 5.3 and liability through Article 19.":1,"#Recommendations for strengthening the implementation of Article 19, a provision that encourages countries and governments to hold the tobacco industry liable for its abuses.":1,"#(Access this information in":1,"#(Access this information in French and Spanish)":1,"#ACT Promoção da Saúde, Quem Paga a conta cigarro (Who Pays the Cigarette Bill)":1,"#Guidance on how to submit your Declaration-of-Interest form (DOI) to help protect policymaking from the influence of the tobacco industry (sample form here.)":1,"#Declaration of Interest form for Parties sample (refer to the annex on page 6).":1,"#Celebration of the treaty’s impact over 20 years":1,"#But transnational tobacco corporations continue to find ways to interfere with public health across the globe — as recently addressed on the World Conference on Tobacco Control declaration–at the the expense of our lives, health, and planet. And that’s why these negotiations, Eleventh Conference of the Parties (COP11) and the Fourth Meeting of the Parties (MOP4) of its Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products (the Protocol), taking place in Geneva from November 17 – 26, are critical.":1,"#Below you can find resources to support you in participating in the COP11 and MOP4 in order to advance and strengthen the global tobacco treaty.":1,"#But the work to hold the industry liable does not stop in the Geneva negotiating halls. It has to be moved forward country by country, across the globe. Through the Civil Liability Toolkit, Parties can get practical guidance to help them determine how to embark on the legal process, depending on their context and circumstances. Parties can also find the support they need through the Legal Expert database, which provides contact information for legal experts and professionals skilled in industry and corporate litigation.":1,"#Article 19 can also help recover healthcare costs and environmental damages caused by tobacco products, unlock resources for lifesaving tobacco measures, and make it harder for the industry to continue its abuses.":1,"#Article 19 is both powerful and underutilized. The provision encourages governments to take legal, legislative, or administrative action against the tobacco industry, and force the corporations that have profited at the expense of our health, our lives, and our planet to pay for the past and future harms caused by their products.":1,"#This year, we celebrated the 20th anniversary of the ratification of the global tobacco treaty. In the past two decades, this precedent-setting international agreement has placed a firewall between corporate interests and public health. With the support of 183 countries, the treaty protects 90% of the world’s population through smoke-free laws, tobacco taxes, advertising bans, and cigarette package warning labels. It has served as a strong global health precedent for safeguards around industry interference through Article 5.3 and liability through Article 19.":1,"#It is up to all of us—Party members, civil society observers, and members of the media—to stay vigilant against industry interference. Corporate Accountability and our allies will monitor Big Tobacco’s actions and presence at the negotiations. If you become aware of any interference attempts, please contact [email protected].":1,"#Copy applicable template to a Word document and fill out the form.":1,"#Members of the public and the media: Annex 5, page 10.":1,"#Nongovernmental Organizations (NGOs) Annex 4, page 9.":1,"#Intergovernmental Organizations (IGOs): Annex 3, page 8.":1,"#Non-Party States: Annex 2, page 7.":1},"version":7172}]