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Opening speech on 11th European Public Health conference, Ljubljana 29th Nov. 2018

Opening speech on 11th European Public Health conference, Ljubljana 29th Nov. 2018

LEAVING NO ONE BEHIND, Tomo Križnar

I am convinced that we can all agree that the ideas of health for all cannot be closed into the Sanatorium, as described in the “Magic Mountain” by Thomas Mann. We cannot defend health in a giant underground bunker from the Second World War. Neither a disease can be isolated and closed into medieval leprosy asylums, in which no one enters healthy and from which the sick cannot leave.

But right now, in this same world that we all share, this is happening.

We are closing the borders of our Sanatorium and we are pretending not to see the hardship of refugees which have been forced to escape to survive. We are putting wires on our borders and are using out-dated methods from previous wars; hoping to defend the quality of life in our privileged part of the planet.

But is it not that quality of our lives depends on the quality of lives of people living in all other parts of the World?

The epidemics of diseases and endless violence, the suffering beyond the wires of “the others and the different from down there” as we often label them – affect also our health and lives, and our future – the future of our privileged world.

Those “others and different” cannot be closed into the TV screens, the contemporary asylums for lepers from which catastrophic and meaningless wars and their consequences cannot escape into our homes.

***

You, that gathered here today, are committed to public health. Your mission is a humanitarian one. Your role is to promote and work for the public good, for the well-being and prosperity of mankind of us here; and of the “others and different down there”.                                

In Slovenia, we have a strong National Institute of Public Health. We have people who live and work for public health, who contribute as dedicated professionals, politicians or devoted individuals.

Our former president of state, Dr Janez Drnovšek, was one of them. Before he passed away of cancer he sent me in 2006, as his special envoy, to pick up the hot chestnuts from the embers of Darfur.

Due to his initiative that was called the “World for Darfur”, people  became aware of the happenings in that most geo-strategically confusing, neurotic and, devastating enclave of the World. He did not succeed to stop the spread of the cancer of Darfur, the illness has expanded throughout Sudan, Sahel, Africa and the whole planet. It is now threatening us here, in our beautiful country on the sunny side of the Alps.

With my wife Bojana we are visiting the most marginalized areas in Africa and reporting about what we have seen and heard. We are drawing attention to those, responsible for the increasing fear and horror and for the collective apathy and depression on the Earth.

On the screen you can see the people that we have accompanied with a camera on our expeditions to southern edge of Sahara. For many decades, I have been lisening  to these “others and different” when they talked about and struggled to understand what and why is happening to them. They became my friends, my family. The two of us w are trying to capture and translate to our world, our sentiments when sharing the fate with the people who are abandoned, sick, forgotten, oppressed and deprived of all the basic human rights.

 I would like to share with you what shocked us the most during our last expedition to Nuba people and to people of the Blue Nile, Sudan. It was not the war or the persistent genocide or hunger… This time it was a disease: the unbelievable spread of a new epidemic of leprosy that affected and disabled all generations alike. What has stricken us the most was the unacceptable neglect of the right to health, to dignity and to access to medicines and health services.

We were confronted with the essence of health inequity; inability to control a dangerous communicable disease and to perform effective public health in these besieged, isolated and impenetrable provinces. There, a new civil war is undergoing after the proclamation of the new state of the Republic of South Sudan. In this abandoned part of the World the values, actions and the measures that will be discussed in the next few days during this conference, have no place.

On the screen you can see portraits of people depressed but not running away. They have no intention to leave their territory. They are the indigenous people of the Nuba Mountains and the Blue Nile and not used to migrating. This is the autochthonic population that has, due to displacement and marginalization, adapted to the survival in nature. They are the farmers, attached to their land whose wisdom they cannot transfer to other parts of the world. They would prefer to die, to be extinct; rather than to migrate and lose their land with which they identify themselves and which is fundamental for their culture, morality and ethics.

Now they are dying and can extinct because the World is depriving them from their rights to health and treatment.

The epidemic of leprosy is expanding very fast for several reasons. Because of the  the draughft the local people can no longer produce enough food, therefore they are starving. Even worst They are  in a constant stress between the airborne military attacks and attacks from the ground. Their immune system is put under a huge pressure.

You know better than I do, that where leprosy is still present, antimicrobial resistance has been developed. Leprosy evolves slowly and patients progressively lose their independence and dignity. The Nuba population has no sanatoriums or asylums for leprosy. Patients live together with healthy people, often taking care of orphan children as long as they can.

The Nuba and the Blue Nile populations are not reached by international organizations and international aid, they have no medicines, nobody knows how many patients are infected, and nobody knows the rate of resistance to the antibiotics. All, that to our world is so important and normal, is inaccessible to them. 

From February this year, we were trying to help these victims of the war in Sudan. Through our public health institute and with the help of the ministry of health we have asked for the assistance of the World Health Organization (WHO). On the occasion of the World Health Assembly the former Minister of Health met with the WHO Director-General Dr Tedros in Geneva and informed him on the situation and called for action. On the 1st of October, a WHO representative was expected to come to the meeting in Ljubljana to agree upon how the WHO will use 20.000 EUROs of Slovenia`s contribution to prevent the spread of leprosy in the Nuba Mountains and blue nile. Until now, two months later, the meeting has not yet been scheduled.  No comment is needed.

skeptiki

 Yet, so much could be done and very quickly arranged.  Some of us are ready to leave the comfort and security of our homes and go to the unsafe and most endangered areas. Local people know and accept us. In the vicinity, outside the most dangerous area, but yet close enough, exists a German field hospital that could help us . The World Health Organization could, therefore, use this small amount of money and with its experts provide training for  local people and assure medicines from their stocks. I see the indigenous in Sahel rotting in front of my eyes.

And I see how our values and conscience is rotting at the same time. We have antibiotics that can prevent and treat this disease and improve the situation in a short period of a year. However, we delay the action for to me unacceptable reasons. We consciously let those “others and different” rotting and with no support, arguing that it is politically complicated and dangerous.

I call upon you, public health professionals, to counteract the predatory foreign policies and the perverse and sick neglect of the developed World of this health threatening situation.

In two weeks, we will try to return to Nuba Mountains; to this altar of sacrifice of the World. We will document everything we will find there a year after our last visit. That is what we can do.

We would love to bring with us appropriate antibiotics against leprosy; we would love to arrive to Nuba with the instructions on how to address the leprosy; with hope and the message that the world has not abandoned them. Your conference is an opportunity to talk about this health catastrophe. It is also an opportunity to strengthen ties among us, public health professionals, philanthropists and civil society. Together we could succeed. The world is one and we are all its citizens. We have to work together to overcome this unjustified situation and assure that no one is left behind, not even Nuba and the people of the Blue Nile.

If it is in your competences, please, help us with antibiotics and the knowledge. At the exit, copies of calendars of the Institutions Tomo Križnar and H.O.P.E. from 2019 are available.  You are invited to take your free copy.

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Leprosy (Hansen’s disease) discovered in North Sudan!

Leprosy (Hansen's disease) discovered in North Sudan!

During the last visit in Sudan, my wife Bojana and I have unexpectedly discovered a location of leprosy (Hansen’s disease), which has not been detected before on this area.
Although the leprosy is fully curable since 1940 and the antibiotic treatments and even more effective medications are available today, provided free of charge by the World Health Organization, the WHO representatives are not present on this area, so the disease spread among people …

Leprosy (Hansen’s disease) discovered in North Sudan! Read More »

New calendar 2018: INDIGENOUS PEOPLE ARE OUR ONLY HOPE FOR SURVIVAL

NEW CALENDAR 2018: INDIGENOUS PEOPLE ARE OUR ONLY HOPE FOR SURVIVAL

Happy Noam Chomsky day!

Our natural kind on Earth exterminates not only endemic kinds of plants and animals, but also its own and most special representatives. As in rain forests along the Amazon, in the
Kongo and everywhere in Asia, where we may be losing the cure for cancer by cutting down and burning trees, we may be losing the cure for environmental, social and other spiritual ailments
of the “civilized” part of the world, by exterminating the most indigenous peoples on Earth.

We may be exterminating our last and only salvation!

We present again the forgotten, sacrificed, beseiged and displaced indigenous people facing extermination in Sudan. And the seceded Republic of South Sudan.

Because of the new war between the president of the Republic of South Sudan and Dinka leader Salva Kiir, and vice-president and Nuer leader Riek Machar, which erupted in June and now prevents movement accross the whole new state and access to the northern frontier, and also because of EU policy – transferring 165 million EUR to Omar Bashir in the summer, to control the borders and the trade in refugees, and to block refugee routes accross the Sahara and the Mediterranean Sea to Europe, money that now finances the janjaweed and other mercenaries – access to the Nuba mountains, Blue Nile and Darfur is now made even harder. Maybe even impossible.

Maybe the best solution, at least in the short run, for these half million people would be to establish a trans-national natural and cultural park. This temporary solution, advocated by the Tomo Križnar Foundation and the humanitarian organization H.O.P.E, would also involve the use of surveillance drones / unmanned aircraft to watch over and protect these most innocent indigenous people from heartless poachers, the way animals are being protected in the wild in parts of Africa.

Please join us and help us with your contribution to finish editing the documentary »Drones above the Roots of Humanity«, with which the victims on this sacrificial altar of the planet may still invoke the attention of sensitive fellow humans.

You can also support us by ordering our new calender 2018 on: narocila@tomokriznar.com

Price: 9 EUR + posting
Account Number Fundation Tomo Križnar: SI56 0510 0801 3175 987
BIC: ABANSI2X (Account will be attached to the shipment).

Please help to spread this message.

Thank you for your cooperation.

We wish you happy Noam Chomsky new year.

Tomo Križnar

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Saturday November 21: German Foundation for Ethics & Economy – Ethecon Foundation – Award for Tomo Križnar

Saturday November 21: German Foundation for Ethics & Economy - Ethecon Foundation - Award for Tomo Križnar

The Jury in their justification wrote: “The Award goes to fearless, tireless Fighter who is returning dignity to the People and Hope in a better Future. In a World where the only Criterion for Decisions are Profits slovenianFighter for Human Rights TomoKrižnar markedly contributes to the Preservation and Rescue of the Blue planet. “

At the same time Ethecon Foundation also awards a Prize Black Planet who has this year gone due to USA chemical plant Dow Chemicalor the Destruction of the Planet in the bigest industrial disaster in Bhopal, India in 1984.

In the Aftermaths of Disasters caused by Industrial CatastrophiesEtheconFoundation assisted among others in the Constructions of the Hospitals in Bhopal and Fukujama.

Arrangements how and in what Way Etheconwill help to the Indigenous People facing Genocide in Nuba Mountains and Blue Nile, Sudan – where Tomotogheter with his supporters is strugling for many years, are still in progress.

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June 2015 – “To whom the bells toll” – Tomo’ public message

"To whom the bells toll" - Tomo' public message

Today, right now, not tomorrow, we need a new policy for the victims of climate changes and wars for control over natural resources in Africa, especially in the Sahel and specifically in Sudan. Recent “democratic elections” in Sudan resulted in the “re-election” of the military Islamic fundamentalist hunta of Omar Bashir, who is the subject of an arrest warrant by the International Criminal Court in The Hague after his indictment in 2011 on charges of genocide in Darfur. The masses of refugees from thirst, violence and general lack of opportunity, making their escape on the highway across the Sahara desert and over the Mediterranean sea, drowning in the most dramatic ways on our doorstep, are finally getting the attention of our media. The message of this mass movement of people is that the foreign policy of the EU must no longer support the local dictators and ruling elites in Africa who share enormous profits with our own hucksters and profiteers of war. We must immediately, today and not tomorrow, start to support our fellow human beings, the native and indigenous people in those regions, so they can stay at home and make a living from the results of their labor, engaging their potentials and capacities, instead of having to flee, in the struggle for bare survival, to foreign and unkind environments where they become a burden to us, our guilty consciousness, stoking our feelings of being endangered and the general sense of looming instability that threatens our “comfort zone”.

We are opposing this catastrophic policy by producing documentary films (Dar Fur – War for Water, Eyes and Ears of God – Video Surveillance of Sudan) and training and equipping the natives with digital technology and satellite connections to the Internet, enabling them to scream for help themselves. Over the last two years, we have also been using cheap drones carrying cameras for surveillance and protection, and lobbying for the establishment of protected areas of rich cultural heritage. Such areas, a sort of transnational natural parks, will protect a heritage that is not material but is readily apparent to anyone in the indigenous values of coexistence and harmony with the natural environments of the sacrificial altars of the world. Such parks might save and preserve indigenous families and societies, the way social groups of gorillas and elephants are preserved in other, safer parts of Africa.

To realize this idea, our civic initiative needs the wide support of all those citizens of the European Union that still share a basic sensitivity and good will.

Tomo Križnar, 12. JUNE 2015

Fighter for Water, Zaghawa tribe, Darfur, Sudan
Indigenious freedom fighter, Katchipo tribe, Republic of South Sudan
Suleiman Jamous, Klemen Mihelic and Tomo Kriznar with cameras in Darfur, Sudan

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