 Hello, I'm here with Teteh Lauron from Ebon International, which is an NGO based in the Philippines, working on a range of issues from climate justice to trade justice to financial justice and human rights. Hi Teteh. How are you doing? Called! So, in the UK, a lot of us don't necessarily see, or we see climate change as being something that's quite abstracted from other issues such as militarism and police violence. How do you and your organisation see these issues a fydd yn ymgrifennu Cymru. Mae'n gwleidio am ysgolwyr gwasanaeth i'w ddiweddol, mae'n aelodau fudda yn ddylch i'w rhan o'r amser. Mae'n ddweud o fynd â'r diweddol a'u ddweud yn cael ei ddweud, a phobl yn cael ei ddweud yn cael ei ddweud i'w gweithio. Mae'n ddweud i'w ddweud i'w ddweud i'w ddweud i'w ddweud i'w ddweud i'w ddweud i'w ddweud i'w ddweud. Na ydych chi'n meddwl y mynd i'r llyfrigol yng Nghymru, yma i yw'r Llyfrgell i'r Llyfrgell Cymru, sy'n meddwl yng Nghymru, yna gweithio'r Hwyl Thaiffwn Hyann. Mae'n hwn i'r hwn yw feddwl yma'r hwyl Thaiffwn Hyann o'r cyfrifiad, ond mae'r Government yn rhan o'r hunain rwy'r cyfrifiad, ond y Nid Ym Mhwyll Hwyl Thaiffwn Hyann, yna'r hwn yn ymgyrch a llyfrigol o'r proses. For instance, communities that have been displaced, of course you want to go back. That's your home, your livelihood, your life. But now people are not allowed to go back to their communities where they lived and they are being relocated forcefully, not of their own will in the name of climate change. Certain areas have been declared as danger zones so they are not allowed to go back any more but in reality what we see corporations are being brought in, Roedd y gwybeth yw'r gwirwyr yn cael ei ddefnyddio'r rhai honu ar y dyfodol i'r cyfnod yng nghymru, ac yn cael ei gael erioed yn dw i'n credu yng Nghymru, ac yn cael ei dweud yng nghymru, ac ond yn cael ei ddefnyddio'r cyfnod yng Nghymru, mae'r cyfnod yn cyfnod o'r cyfnod a'r cyfnod. Mae'n wedi'u bod miliwn i'r gweithio, cyfnod o'r cyfnod o'r cyfnod, o'r cyfnod o'r gweithio, oed i ddwy'n ei gweithio ar eu ddweud, can try to break that connection between the government and militarism when it comes to approaching crises like climate change? Well, for one, you know, we have to debunk the narrative that it's about security, it's about corporations. We need to challenge the existing narrative that it's about security. Basically, we have all of this militarist response, we have wars going on because our governments are so complicit with the elites and with the corporations in order for them to have more access to resources from our countries, from our communities, and they are using force and violence against our people to drive us away so that they can protect investments of companies from Europe, from North America, that go into our country so that, you know, they have access to resources, they have access to trade routes, et cetera. And of course, more importantly, they have access to markets, yeah? So we see that we need to work together, you know, you guys in Europe and elsewhere, we need you to raise louder noises, challenging your government, protecting European corporations' interests that are doing a lot of damage to our people. And in terms of building solidarity between the global south and the global north, what do you think are the main things that the global north need to change and how they approach these issues, particularly the movements in the global north, in order to kind of heed those calls and act in true solidarity with the fights that you're engaged in? Don't bring us to your countries to talk about our situation. You know, it's like, it's very hard, but it's the sad reality that colleagues and comrades and allies from the north bring us from the south to talk to your people about how we are poor, oppressed, deprived. We would rather, you know, in this true spirit of solidarity, you see us fighting together. Us fighting our governments, your governments, your corporations, and you also holding your own governments and corporations accountable for all the damage that's being done to our countries and our communities. I think, you know, we can work together in the spirit of solidarity and not look at us as a charity case, not look at us as exhibit A, exhibit B. But really, how do we now walk together to hold both our governments and the elites and the corporations accountable and demand justice from all of them?