From the very important (19 page) press release below: "In his last address to the Forum before ending his tenure on 1 May, Rodolfo Stavenhagen (Mexico), the Human Rights Council's Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples, said he saw "great possibilities" in applying the recently-adopted Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as a framework for the promotion and protection of indigenous rights.
As he reflected on the state of indigenous peoples' rights over the past few years, Mr. Stavenhagen said it had improved greatly in numerous countries, but showed "signs of retreat" in other countries. In his regular reports to the Human Rights Council, he had outlined the damaging impact of mega-development projects -- including hydroelectric, mining and forest activities -- on the lives of indigenous communities. He had also studied the lack of access to justice experienced by indigenous peoples, saying there was rampant discrimination against them.
He said he had prepared a study on best practices for implementing the Declaration*, and that it would fall to the succeeding Special Rapporteur, James Anaya of the United States, to work with the Permanent Forum to ensure that the principles enshrined within the Declaration became a reality.
"
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* UN document A/HRC/4/32/Add.
English: http://daccessdds.
Spanish: http://daccessdds.
French: http://daccessdds.
Also available in Arabic, Chinese, and Russian at http://ap.ohchr.
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Below: Press Release PFII Monday, April 28 2008
At: http://www.un.
28 April 2008
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| Department of Public Information News and Media Division |
Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
Seventh Session
8th & 9th Meetings (AM & PM)
PERMANENT FORUM ON INDIGENOUS ISSUES EXAMINES VALUE OF INCREASED COLLABORATION
WITH HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL UNDER UNIVERSAL REVIEW MECHANISM
Outgoing Special Rapporteur Says He Sees 'Great Possibilities'
In Applying New Declaration as Framework for Protecting Indigenous Rights
Hearing from delegates on topics ranging from industrial encroachment of indigenous lands to the question of racial discrimination against native peoples, members of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues today examined the value of increased collaboration with the Human Rights Council under its universal review mechanism -- established by the Council to assess the human rights situation of United Nations Member States -- and called for indigenous rights to be prominently addressed at those reviews.
In his last address to the Forum before ending his tenure on 1 May, Rodolfo Stavenhagen (Mexico), the Human Rights Council's Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples, said he saw "great possibilities" in applying the recently-adopted Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as a framework for the promotion and protection of indigenous rights.
As he reflected on the state of indigenous peoples' rights over the past few years, Mr. Stavenhagen said it had improved greatly in numerous countries, but showed "signs of retreat" in other countries. In his regular reports to the Human Rights Council, he had outlined the damaging impact of mega-development projects -- including hydroelectric, mining and forest activities -- on the lives of indigenous communities. He had also studied the lack of access to justice experienced by indigenous peoples, saying there was rampant discrimination against them.
He said he had made 11 official visits to different countries, along with numerous semi-official trips, each resulting in a country report to the Council. But Mr. Stavenhagen noted that the submission of a Special Rapporteur's recommendations were "the weakest point of all the special procedures, since neither the Council nor the United Nations had implementation mechanisms".
He said he had prepared a study on best practices for implementing the Declaration, and that it would fall to the succeeding Special Rapporteur, James Anaya of the
For his part, Mr. Anaya said many of the questions raised at today's meeting addressed the "implementation gap" between the principles contained in the Declaration and the rights and lives of indigenous peoples on the ground. Those concerns should first be addressed within the context of real-life issues -- such as the right to prior informed consent in light of challenges faced by the indigenous peoples in
Noting that other questions focused on how the Forum could coordinate its efforts with that of the Human Rights Council, he suggested that one place to start was with the periodic review mechanism, through which the Forum could engage in a dialogue on indigenous rights. Continued dialogue could lead to creative strategies on how to practically implement the Declaration on the ground.
A Forum member from
Continuing on that theme, a Forum member from
A Forum member from
Some indigenous groups had made headway in obtaining their self-determination. A representative of the Arctic Caucus noted that self-determination was a "paramount right" enshrined in the Declaration on indigenous rights. He said the Arctic Caucus recommended that the Permanent Forum have self-determination as its theme next year. Finding workable mechanisms and other solutions that respected indigenous peoples' rights to self-determination was an absolute prerequisite for effective implementation of the Declaration.
A representative of the Greenland Home Rule Government,
Also today, the Forum concluded its discussion on implementation of the recommendations on the six mandated areas of the Permanent Forum and on the Millennium Development Goals, carried over from its previous meeting.
Speaking on the implementation of recommendations on the mandated areas and on the Millennium Development Goals was a
Also speaking on that issue were indigenous representatives of the Amazon Basin; the Grand Council of the Mi'kmaq, the Assembly of First Nations, First Nations Summit, Grand Council of the Crees, IOIRD, Inuit Circumpolar Council -- Canada, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, Native Women's Association of Canada, Canadian Friends Service Committee, Kairos: Canadian Ecumenical Justice Initiatives; COIAB (Brazil), Conselho indigena de Roraima, APOINME, CIVAJA, Rain Forest Foundation, Forest Peoples; Global Indigenous Women's Caucus; Asia Caucus; Instituto Indigena Brasileno para la propiedad intellectual, Red de Mujeres Indigenas sobre, Biodiversidad de Latino America; Indigenous World Association; Comite Indigena (CIPACI); Kaoni Foundation; and International Indian Treaty Council.
The representative of
Speaking during the dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples were
Also speaking on that topic were the Senior Adviser, Human Rights Conferences, Indian and Northern Affairs,
Others speaking during the dialogue were representatives of the Pacific Caucus; Asian Indigenous Peoples Caucus; Arctic Caucus; Lipan Apache Women Defence Alianza Indigena Sin Fronteras, Western Soshone Defense Project, Tonatierra, Indigenous Environmental Network, Winnemem Wintu Tribe, Native Women's Association of Canada, International Geographical Union - Indigenous Peoples Knowledge and Rights Commission; Murray Lower Darling Rivers Indigenous Nations; ONIC, CECOIN, Fuerza de Mujeres Wayuu and OPIAC; Indigenous Parliament of Peru; Caucus Pueblos Indigenas de Abya Yala; CEDHUNG (Panama); Ecuador Caucus; CIDOB and CONAMAQ; CSUTCB, CSCB and FNMICB-BS; Nepal Federation of Indigenous Nationalities, Lawyers Association for Human Rights of Nepalese Indigenous Peoples, AMAN Indonesia, AINU Resource Center (Japan), Indigenous Peoples Rights Monitor (Philippines)
The Forum will meet again at 10 a.m. Wednesday, 29 April, to conclude its discussion on the human rights of indigenous peoples.
Background
The Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues met to conclude its discussion on implementation of recommendations on the mandated areas and on Millennium Development Goals. Following that they were scheduled to take up the item on human rights: dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples and other special rapporteurs.
Statements
A representative of the
KYAW TINT SWE (
PAULINE KINGI, Ministry of Maori Development,
CHERYL MALONEY spoke on behalf of the Grand Council of the Mi'kmaq, the Assembly of First Nations, First Nations Summit, Grand Council of the Crees, the IOIRD, Inuit Circumpolar Council - Canada, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, Native Women's Association of Canada, Canadian Friends Service Committee, and Kairos: Canadian Ecumenical Justice Initiatives. She said she was pleased to bring the recent decision of
JOENIA CARVALHO, making a joint statement from
Ms. MACKENZIE, speaking on behalf of the Global Indigenous Women's Caucus, recommended that the Forum support and implement a strategy to manage indigenous migration, and to create a task force to address the issues. She also called on support for the Forum's recommendation that the respective rapporteurs on violence against women and on trafficking brief the body on the status of indigenous women in relation to those topics by 2009. She called on the Forum to recommend that the United Nations Development Programme continue its work on data disaggregation with special attention to women and children.
She urged the United Nations to hire more indigenous women, and its agencies should be called on to provide financial and legal assistance to professional indigenous women. Specialized bodies of the United Nations were called on to investigate cases of gender violence, in particular as reported by Amnesty International in its report on "stolen sisters". She also called on the United Nations Children's Fund and other United Nations agencies to help maintain the integrity of families by preventing the removal of children for their education, participation in the military or any other reason.
YUKI HASAGAWA, speaking on behalf of the Asia Caucus, said she was dismayed that, in Cambodia, indigenous peoples who left the community had the right to appropriate a piece of land that was part of indigenous communal land, according to Cambodian law. That provision would undermine the concept of communal land, since, when indigenous peoples left their community in that fashion, it would almost certainly lead to a disintegration of culture and indigenous resources. It would contradict the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which stated that land rights should be drawn up with due respect to the customs of people concerned. She asked the Forum to urge the Cambodian Government to engage in another round of consultations on the procedures concerning the registration of indigenous land.
LUCIA FERNANDA KAINGANG, speaking on behalf of the Instituto Indigena Brasileno para la propiedad intellectual, Red de Mujeres Indigenas sobre, Biodiversidad de Latino America, said that the dominant model of economic and social development violated the traditional cultural and economic structures of indigenous peoples. The indigenous peoples were in extreme poverty and the situation was growing worse, due to neglect of their cultural rights. "Mega projects" currently being implemented in their communities violated the rights of indigenous peoples. She called on the Forum to call for the respect of the lands of indigenous peoples and stressed that development programmes should solicit their participation. Acknowledging indigenous peoples' rights to their lands was fundamental in preserving and honouring their critical role in preserving global biodiversity. The legal systems of indigenous peoples should be incorporated in the international regime being created to protect biodiversity, she said. The culture of indigenous peoples depended on the balance of the Earth and no economic development was worth the loss of life or the degradation of their soil.
MILIANI TRASK, of the International Indigenous World Association, noting her statement was a "collective intervention" on behalf of 12 affiliated groups, said the Declaration was the most significant of the human rights conventions in the last few decades. States were using the Declaration in their laws and judicial systems. For several years, the United Nations had had a commitment to take a system-wide approach; yet there was a lack of clarity as to the rights of indigenous peoples. With the Declaration there was no longer any excuse for that. The Forum had an obligation to ensure that the Declaration was integrated into the work of the United Nations and the Forum needed to undertake a technical review of the Declaration. That would link it with other important human rights instruments and serve as an educational opportunity.
MARIA SARAVIA, Comite Indigena (CIPACI), expressed concern over the situation of indigenous peoples in voluntary isolation and urged all Governments of countries where such people lived to respect their rights. Logging companies were trampling on their lands. She demanded urgent measures in
Mr. FYFE, Kaoni Foundation, who spoke on behalf of the Hawaii Caucus, said that
ANDREA CARMEN, International Indian Treaty Council, said the rights of the Dakota nation were being violated. At this time, protests that called attention to the 1851 treaty between the United States Government and the Dakota nation were under way. Those protests were targeting the establishment of a large-scale hog farm that would bring widespread environmental degradation to the treaty lands. Tribal and local community members were blocking the access road to that hog farm's site and a lawsuit had been filed. Not only were the Indian lands being threatened, sites such as the
Statements on Situation of Human Rights
The Forum then took up the next agenda item, on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples.
RODOLFO STAVENHAGEN, Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples, said the recent adoption of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples provided development actors with a precise normative framework for the formulation, implementation and evaluation of public development policies. Noting that today's would be his final report to the Permanent Forum as Special Rapporteur, he said his final report to the sixth session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva had documented several cases of best practices where those principles had been effectively incorporated into projects and programmes. During his tenure, he said he had conducted official visits to
He noted that the Human Rights Council had renewed the mandate of the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples for an additional three years. The Council also established a new expert mechanism on the rights of indigenous peoples to coordinate the activities of the Rapporteur and the Permanent Forum, with a view to promoting the rights affirmed in the United Nations Declaration.
Taking the opportunity to share some general thoughts at the end of his tenure, Mr. Stavenhagen said the situation of the rights of indigenous peoples had improved greatly in numerous countries, with "signs of retreat" in other countries. In his thematic reports to the Human Rights Council, he had emphasized the impact of mega-development projects, including hydroelectric, mining and forest activities, on the lives of indigenous communities. Those activities did not always benefit affected communities, but tended to damage them. He had also studied the lack of access to justice experienced by indigenous peoples, with discrimination and lack of intercultural sensitivity against them being particularly rampant. Indigenous intercultural bilingual education continued to be plagued by multiple problems and obstacles.
He said he had made 11 official visits to different countries, some follow-up visits and numerous semi-official visits. The results of those visits were reflected in various country reports to the Council. Wherever there was available information, he gave special attention to the situation of human rights of indigenous women and children. But, the problem of the Special Rapporteur's recommendations continued to be the weakest point of all the special procedures, since neither the Council nor the United Nations had implementation mechanisms. As a result, he had presented a study on best practices in implementation (document A/HRC/4/32/Add.
He said that he had tried to promote constructive dialogue with Governments, indigenous peoples and other actors, in relation to allegations of violations and threats to the collective rights of indigenous peoples, as well as the individual rights of members of those communities. He had transmitted more than 200 communications to different Governments on topics such as rights to housing, health, food and the situation of human rights defenders.
He said his regular participation in the sessions of the Permanent Forum had allowed him to closely follow the debates regarding specific subjects and regions. He had also interacted with numerous indigenous delegations. In addition, he had cooperated on several occasions with other United Nations agencies, such as the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), International Labour Organization (ILO), World Health Organization (WHO) and members of the Inter-Agency Support Group of the Permanent Forum. But, special attention should be given at the level of the United Nations country teams in countries with indigenous populations. The Permanent Forum could work with the Special Rapporteur in the future to strengthen the capacities of country teams.
He said the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples provided a new normative and institutional framework with great possibilities for the promotion and protection of the rights of indigenous peoples. It paved the way for new opportunities of collaboration between the United Nations system, indigenous peoples, Member States and other actors. Hopefully, the next Special Rapporteur and the Permanent Forum would continue working together to ensure that the principles enshrined within the Declaration became a reality.
He ended by expressing satisfaction at the appointment by the Human Rights Council of the new mandate-holder on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples, Professor James Anaya, who would take over on 1 May. In addition to thanking the Governments with which he had worked, he expressed gratefulness to Julian Burger, head of the Minorities and Indigenous Peoples Unit in the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in
After a round of sustained applause, the Chair expressed her warm appreciation to Mr. Stavenhagen for his work on behalf of the Forum and indigenous peoples around the world.
JAMES ANAYA, incoming Special Rapporteur of the Human Rights Council on the human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples, expressing gratitude for the work of Rodolfo Stavenhagen in his capacity as Special Rapporteur, said Dr. Stavenhagen had earned his place in the history of the human rights movement. While many aspects of Dr. Stavenhagen's work merited mention, one of his foremost achievements was his work towards the adoption of the Declaration. He expressed his deep honour at being nominated as the next Special Rapporteur. Indigenous peoples around the world continued to endure violations of their human rights and were still deprived of their lands and rights. Strides could be made to overcome the obstacles they faced, however, and he noted that the adoption of the Declaration had marked a new era in the history of their human rights and fundamental freedoms.
QIN XIAOMEI, Forum member from
HASSAN ID BALKASSM, Forum member from
ALLAN TORBITT, Senior Adviser, Human Rights Conferences, Indian and Northern Affairs,
CARLOS MAMANI, a member of the Permanent Forum from
MARIA FERNANDA ESPINOSA (
She said
ADEL G. M. ALAKHDER (
BARTOLOMÉ CLAVERO, Forum member from
Dr. Stavenhagen's performance showed that the Special Rapporteur could have an impact, not only through reports, but through semi-official country visits, he said. Associating himself with his colleague's concerns about Latin American countries generally, and
PAIMANEH HASTEH, Forum member from
TONYA GONELLA FRICHNER, Forum member from the
CARSTEN SMITH, Forum member from
Responding, Mr. Stavenhagen said the universal periodic review mechanism of the Human Rights Council provided an opportunity to examine the rights of indigenous peoples, with the Declaration and other international rights instruments providing the legal framework. The Special Rapporteur, expert mechanism of the Human Rights Council and the Permanent Forum could act jointly to hold dialogues with Governments and organizations working on indigenous rights matters, so that that issue would enjoy a permanent presence at all instances of universal periodic review.
The Forum, and not the Human Rights Council, was a unique coordinating mechanism for dialogue between United Nations and indigenous peoples, he said. As Special Rapporteur, he had noticed that, although coordination took place in
As for the question on ways to improve the Forum's inner workings, he said the newly adopted Declaration did not mean automatic improvement in the rights of indigenous peoples. That instrument would be open to a multitude of interpretations. Already, there were contradictory interpretations of its provisions.
JAMES ANAYA said many of the questions being asked addressed the "implementation gap" between the Declaration and the rights and lives of indigenous peoples on the ground. It was one thing to have the tremendous achievement of the Declaration, but that achievement would matter little if the real-life situation of indigenous peoples did not change. Nonetheless, the Declaration was the primary instrument for promoting the rights and freedoms of indigenous peoples, and as such, it was a guide for the United Nations and its affiliated agencies, as well as for Member States.
While noting that some States had abstained in the vote or voted against adoption, he said, however, that those States still supported the Declaration's ideals. Not one State had opposed those ideals or its core principles in their statements to the General Assembly, and that was important to keep in mind.
Although the Declaration rested on important human rights principles and mechanisms, starting with the United Nations Declaration on Human Rights, he recognized that concerns remained about certain parts of the Declaration. Those concerns should first be addressed within the examination of real, context-specific issues. For example, concerns about how the right to informed consent should be applied were best addressed in real situations, such as the challenges of logging faced by indigenous peoples in
Noting that other questions focused on coordination challenges, he urged the Forum to consider how coordination had been addressed in other areas of the United Nations system. The fundamental question the Forum should ask was what it could add. He suggested that one place to start was with the periodic review mechanism, through which the Forum could engage in a dialogue on indigenous rights. Continued dialogue could lead to creative strategies about how to practically implement the Declaration on the ground and to confront the enormous problems seen in individual States. Finally, he stressed that education was not only necessary for Government representatives, but for entire populations as well.
Statements
SIRAMIN BOEGKIN of the Pacific Caucus called for immediate efforts by all Pacific States to implement the Declaration, with particular emphasis on the exercise of the right to self-determination. He welcomed
PHEAP SOCHEA, speaking on behalf of the Asian Indigenous Peoples Caucus, welcomed the Declaration's adoption and the Bolivian Government's enactment of it in its national law. He also welcomed the establishment of the expert mechanism on the rights of indigenous peoples. However, he expressed concern about the use of the term "indigenous peoples" in a way that had a discriminatory connotation in one of the United Nations official languages.
He said that the Forum should view the non-recognition, and even partial recognition, of the rights of indigenous peoples by Governments, as connoting racial discrimination -- such as what was happening in
MATTIAS ARWEN, a representative of the Arctic Caucus, noted that a paramount right enshrined in the Declaration was that of self-determination. The Declaration's affirmation of developments within international law implying that non-State forming peoples enjoyed the right to self-determination constituted a fundamental achievement in indigenous peoples' struggle for the recognition of their rights. There was little experience with operationalizing the right to self-determination when two or more peoples shared the same State, or when a people's territory stretched over more than one State, such as with the Inuit and Saami. Yet, finding workable mechanisms and other solutions that respected indigenous peoples' right to self-determination was an absolute prerequisite for the Declaration's effective implementation.
He recommended issues of self-determination as the theme for next year's Permanent Forum and the focus of its annual expert meeting. He went on to direct questions to specific countries, asking the Canadian Government whether it would change its position on the Declaration, and Denmark's Government to provide an update on the work of the Greenland Judicial Commission and the Joint Commission on Self-Governance. He asked
Turning to the
Speaking in exercise of the right of reply, the representative of
Turning to questions about the forthcoming report by the Special Rapporteur on the health effects of such spraying, which was expected to be published in May, he said his Government had presented reservations about that report in preliminary consultations. Once the report was made final, his country would consider its public response.
Meanwhile, he said that the spraying had been suspended unilaterally and in goodwill. In fact, spraying had been suspended for a long time and had only been re-launched because of an immense increase in the illegal growing of those crops. Yet there had been no further aerial spraying since early 2007 and crops were instead being manually eradicated.
Special Rapporteur IDA NICOLAISEN presented her report on the structures, procedures and mechanisms that currently existed, or that might be established, to effectively address the human rights situation of indigenous peoples. The study had been conducted with Special Rapporteur Wilton Littlechild.
She recalled that the Permanent Forum had six mandated areas in relation to indigenous peoples: economic and social development; environment; health; education; culture; and human rights. In addition, the Forum responded to reports of violations of the rights of indigenous peoples brought forward at its sessions. Working on the basis of information provided by indigenous peoples, United Nations agencies and States, it had developed recommendations on human rights problems of indigenous peoples.
The study had been divided into five sections, including one on initiatives taken by the General Assembly and United Nations funds relating to indigenous peoples, she explained. It also outlined the work of the Permanent Forum to date. Another section tackled the future work of the Forum with respect to the impact of the adoption of the Declaration on the work of the Forum, and how the United Nations Human Rights Council would interact with the Forum.
She said she foresaw the Forum working to motivate States to comply with the standards contained in the Declaration. The Forum had already proven its ability to galvanize States to act in ways that were solution-oriented. She now called on the Forum to establish a step-by-step strategy to provide itself with the capacity to act effectively towards turning the Declaration into reality. She proposed the establishment of a United Nations Permanent Forum "chamber".
Mr. LITTLECHILD, Special Rapporteur and former member of the Permanent Forum, said it had been an honour to present this report. It had also been an honour to co-chair a session in
KIRSTI GUVSAM, speaking on behalf of the Youth Caucus, saluted the States that had adopted the Declaration and encouraged those that had not to do so. On the whole, indigenous youth faced difficulties speaking their own languages, a long list of environmental and health violations, an inability to identify and be recognized as peoples and State-sanctioned repression, racism and educational and institutional oppression. Indigenous youth were particularly vulnerable to those human rights violations, which contributed to internalized self-hatred among those youth and resulted in high numbers of suicide, alcoholism and drug abuse.
Comprising more than 50 per cent of the world's indigenous population, indigenous youth were precious commodities, she said. Despite that, indigenous youths' voices, concerns and distinct experiences were often rendered invisible and underrepresented. Indigenous youth activists were labelled terrorists and insurgents. "We are not terrorists," she said, adding that her fellow youth were guided by elders and teachers, and carried the sacred responsibility to maintain their culture and defend the Earth. Unfortunately, indigenous youth were dying before their time.
Stressing the right to safety, security, culture and dignity, she said that the rights under the Declaration were not being made available to indigenous youth. Their rights were constantly compromised in the name of national progress, development and natural resources extraction. She called on States to implement articles 7 and 8 of the Declaration and on the United Nations to encourage States to educate their indigenous youth and general populations on the Declaration. She also urged States to recognize and incorporate indigenous youths' voices into human rights discourse. Indigenous youth issues were not only community issues, but also national issues, and as such, they should be addressed in tandem.
A representative of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights recalled recent institutional developments in
She noted that, with the new process of reviewing countries' human rights, non-governmental organizations had the possibility of providing information that could be considered part of the review procedure. But very few indigenous peoples were using the new mechanism. They were encouraged to contribute to that process, and to reflect on the best ways to use the Human Rights Council's "expert mechanism", which would hold its first session in
As for the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, she said it would continue to cooperate with various United Nations specialized agencies on furthering understanding of indigenous peoples in urban areas, and to elaborate policy guidance on voluntarily isolated indigenous peoples as follow-up to the expert meeting in
Mr. ALAKHDER (
MICHAEL PAUL HILL, a Chiricahua Apache, speaking on behalf of the Lipan Apache Women Defence, spoke against the fencing being built by the
He said there were currently 18,000
LLYOD BUSHEY (
HASSAN ID BALKASSM, Forum member from
The representative of
STEPHEN ROSS, Murray Lower Darling Rivers Indigenous Nations, voiced concern over the gap between norms and practice in relation to indigenous rights, or the "implementation gap". The principles contained in the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples expanded on the rights already contained in other rights documents, such as International Labour Organization Convention 169, which had been adopted long before the Declaration itself. Meanwhile, the Special Rapporteur had affirmed the wisdom of human-rights-
WILTON LITTLECHILD, a member of the Forum, responded to a statement by the delegate of
He noted that the criteria governing the universal periodic review did not include a specific reference to indigenous peoples. Unless it was included as an agenda item, indigenous rights would not be dealt with adequately in that process. He expressed the belief that the United Nations expert mechanism would be of great value to the Human Rights Council for its ability to convene all parties to a dialogue, whether governmental or non-governmental, indigenous or non-indigenous.
MARIA XIMENA FIGUEROA, speaking on behalf of ONIC, CECOIN, Fuerza de Mujeres Wayuu and OPIAC, said the situation of the human rights of indigenous peoples in
She expressed concern at the criminalization of indigenous peoples, who were working hard to protect their lands. There was insufficient interaction between the Government and indigenous communities. The Government's report on the state of indigenous peoples listed several laws approved many years ago. However, that did not necessarily indicate progress on indigenous issues. Some laws had been overthrown since then, and other regulations had been declared illegal by the constitutional court. She asked the Forum to urge countries not to criminalize the struggle of indigenous peoples. She also confirmed that aerial spraying was being conducted in indigenous territories.
Noting that she had participated in the struggle of indigenous peoples and women for many years, HILARIA SUPU HUAMAN, of the Indigenous Parliament of Peru, denounced the multinational companies that polluted and killed the lands of
JEAN-DANIEL VIGNY (
BARTOLOMÉ CLAVERO, Forum member from
Turning to
Mr. LITTLECHILD, a member of the Forum, who was also Regional Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, took the floor to deliver a joint statement on behalf of Assembly of First Nations of Canada, the International Indian Treaty Council, the Assembly of First Nations Quebec and
He voiced appreciation for Mr. Stavenhagen's work and welcomed the new Rapporteur, Mr. Ayana. He asked that the Special Rapporteur fully integrate the Declaration on indigenous issues in his mandate, and that
He noted that 29 May had been designated by First Nation leaders across the country as the second National Day of Action, on which all First Nations and other indigenous groups were called on to present a unified front to the Government of Canada in asking it to address the "shameful poverty" facing them. He then presented the outgoing Special Rapporteur with a traditional thank you gift and extended an invitation to the incoming Rapporteur to visit their region.
MARIANNE THOMSEN, Greenland Home Rule Government, responded to a series of questions posed by a member of the Arctic Caucus. She said both Commissions referred to by the speaker had completed their work regarding self-determination provisions contained in the Declaration on indigenous rights. Based on those recommendations, the Danish and Greenland Home Rule Governments were seeking to renew the criminal court of Greenland based on
On the agreement to extend self-government to Greenland, she said a document had been signed by
MARIAN SANCHEZ, speaking for the Caucus Pueblos Indigenas de Abya Yala, said the Declaration was a minimum standard of coexistence. She stressed that mega-projects built against the will of indigenous populations created environmental degradation and she called for a suspension of such large-scale projects. She recommended that the Special Rapporteur make a visit to investigate the territories being affected in her country. She also called for the Forum to promote the participation of the indigenous peoples in all United Nations discussions. The Forum should ask its Special Rapporteur to address the situation of the people in the Amazon. Further, the Forum should suggest that the relevant financial agencies and development bodies suspend projects that destroyed the lands of indigenous peoples and current infringements by those groups should be investigated.
SAMUEL CARPINTERO, speaking on behalf of CEDHUNG, a lawyers association in
CHARLOTTA SCHLYTER (
ANA MARIA GAUCHO, speaking on behalf of the Ecuador Caucus, asked States to suspend all land concession for natural resource exploration if it was done without prior, free and informed consent. She asked that consultations be conducted in indigenous languages. Before-and-after impact studies on the political, socioeconomic and cultural effects of "megaprojects" should be conducted. Indigenous peoples' integral biodiversity should be protected in accordance with ancestral principles.
She asked that Governments and international bodies assign specific and adequate budgets for the design and implementation of culturally appropriate health and education programmes. Intercultural and bilingual education should be strengthened by means of immersion programmes with relevant curriculum and materials, to be taught by indigenous teachers. The Forum should advise States receiving displaced indigenous peoples to respect their worldview and to refrain from forcing them to assimilate the ways of the dominant culture. The Permanent Forum should recommend that the Colombian Government stop fumigating the area at the border.
SVEIN MICHELSEN (
SANDRO CRUZ, Indigenous Peoples of Brazil, speaking on behalf of 13 indigenous leaders in the area, said there were several cases of human rights violations in
SATO SISTONEN (Finland), responding to questions from the Arctic Caucus, said the Government saw the adoption of the Declaration on indigenous rights as a step forward in ensuring full and effective participation on the part of indigenous peoples in public life. It provided a framework for cooperation between the State and indigenous peoples, and was a standard-setting, political document.
Concerning forestry in reindeer herding areas, he noted that all actions by public authorities had been carried out within the bounds of domestic law and with the approval of the reindeer herders association. Individual complaints by the Saami to the Human Rights Council had led to a Government review, which revealed no violation of Saami rights. As for the Saami claim to the sole right to reindeer herding, he said the Government believed in equal treatment of individuals, so no such limits would be placed. The Finnish Government planned to develop a convention on the status and development of the rights of the Saami; at the latest, a complete background study would be completed by mid year.
TOMAS HUANACU, speaking on behalf of the peoples of eastern
Responding to the questions posed by the Arctic Caucus, BORIS V. CHERNENKO (
DAMIAN CONDORI HERRERA, delivering a joint statement on behalf of several indigenous groups from
CHANDA PUN, speaking on behalf of the Nepal Federation of Indigenous Nationalities, said
She said Nepalese indigenous peoples had lost power over their "nations" at different periods of
JOAN CARLING, of the International Work Group on Indigenous Affairs, said the universal periodic review should be at the heart of the Permanent Forum's discussion. While the first session of the universal periodic review had recently been held, there had hardly been a full discussion of the rights of indigenous peoples. Noting that some States continued to deny the rights of their indigenous peoples, she urged the Forum to recommend to the Human Rights Council that the situation of indigenous peoples be incorporated in the scope and benchmarks of the universal periodic review. Not only should individual State reports address the concerns of their indigenous populations, but indigenous peoples should regularly be consulted during each review to ensure the independence of troika members and to improve information gathering. She also called on the Permanent Forum and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) to engage in the universal periodic review process.
BEVERLEY JACOBS, speaking on behalf of the Native Women's Association of Canada and a number of other groups, said indigenous women continued to be disproportionately discriminated against, because they were women, were often poor and rarely had sufficient access to fair judicial processes. Perhaps more alarming was the sexual discrimination against them that resulted from growing instances of human trafficking. While Governments had not paid enough attention to that issue, they were particularly neglectful of its effects on indigenous women within their populations. She recommended that the Permanent Forum call on all relevant United Nations agencies to pay particular attention to the rights of indigenous women. She also called on States, civil society groups and international organizations to support indigenous women who suffered from human rights violations. She also urged Member States to implement the Secretary-General'
PAUL GIBBARD (
CELESTE MCKAY, Indigenous Americas Caucus, said a majority of States in North, South and Central America and the
Since then, she said, the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination had released recommendations in response to the
A representative of
In a concluding statement, Ms. NICOLAESEN said today's intervention showed the need for all countries to adopt the Declaration. It also suggested that, when they worked closely together, the Human Rights Council, the Forum and the Special Rapporteur could move towards better implementation of the Declaration. It was clear, however, that the key players in the effort were the individual States and their indigenous peoples, as the Declaration had to be integrated into the country-specific legal and cultural systems. She had been struck by the Greenland Home Rule Government's observation that the Declaration had provided guidance to different ministries on how to protect and promote the rights of
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iS iT WiN-abled ?
iF NoT, how soon will iT be WiN-abled ?
:)