South Korean teen activist hopes for landmark court ruling on climate change
SEOUL — Yoon Hyeonjeong, a 19-year-old South Korean activist, says the fate of her years-long fight for more action to tackle climate change hinges on what could be a landmark ruling by the country's top court on Thursday (Aug 29).
Yoon is among about 200 plaintiffs, including young environmentalists like herself and even infants, in petitions filed to the Constitutional Court since 2020, which argue the government is violating its citizens' human rights by not effectively tackling climate change.
Climate advocacy groups say it will be the first high court ruling on a government's climate action in Asia, potentially setting a precedent in a region where similar lawsuits have been filed in Taiwan and Japan. In April, Europe's top human rights court ruled the Swiss government had violated the rights of its citizens by failing to do enough to combat climate change.
"Picketing on streets, policy proposals, these campaigns weren't enough to bring about real changes," said Yoon, who is hoping the court ruling will help tear down bureaucratic hurdles on climate policy.
Lawyers for the government say authorities are doing everything possible to cut carbon emissions.
Han Wha-jin, who was environment minister, said in May the government's emission reduction targets did not infringe on people's rights, though the constitutional petition provided a public forum about the severity of the climate crisis.
In 2019, Yoon was in her third year of middle school when she watched a climate crisis documentary that she said shocked her into action.
Despite not being particularly outgoing, she decided to try and follow in the footsteps of the likes of Greta Thunberg, a Swedish climate activist who has inspired a global youth movement demanding