Climate a "Life and Death" Issue for Native Peoples
UNITED NATIONS - Leaders of the world's 370 million indigenous peoples are calling for the United Nations to include their voices in its future talks on climate change.
"Both the climate change and its solutions are concerns for indigenous peoples," said Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, chairperson of the U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.
Currently, the Forum, which includes 16 representatives -- eight nominated by governments and eight by indigenous representatives -- is holding its seventh annual meeting in New York. The meeting is being is being attended by more than 3,300 delegates from around the world.
"The indigenous peoples contribute the smallest ecological footprints on Earth," according to Tauli-Corpuz, "but they suffer the worst impacts from climate change and mitigation measures, such as the loss of land and biofuel production."
Despite representation from nearly 500 aboriginal groups worldwide, the Forum is not empowered to enact laws; it can only advise the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), a 54-member U.N. body, whose members are elected by the General Assembly every three years.
Last year in September, the General Assembly passed a historic resolution calling for the recognition of indigenous peoples' right to control their lands and resources, but fell short of saying the "Universal Declaration on the Rights of the Indigenous Peoples" was legally binding.
Indigenous leaders they want both the governments and private corporations to incorporate the declaration into their national economic, political, cultural and environmental policies, so that indigenous people can participate in the process of development in a meaningful way.
"The indigenous peoples have observed and felt the impact of climate change before anybody else," said Tauli-Corpuz. "They are becoming 'environmental refugees' [because] small island states are sinking due to rising sea-levels."
According to Fiu Elisara, executive director of the Ole Siosiomaga Society of Samoa island, climate change has become "a life-and-death" issue for the Pacific island states, also known as the "liquid continent".
"One cyclone is enough to completely wipe out one island state," he said, adding that 90 percent of the people in the Pacific are indigenous who have nowhere to turn to for help because most of their rulers have not signed the declaration.
Indigenous leaders say many of their communities in mega-biodiverse countries, such as Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brazil are greatly suffering due to extensive use of their lands and forests for biofuels in the name of carbon-trading and climate change mitigation.
Tauli-Corpuz said such activities are being carried out by governments and private corporations without the "prior and informed consent" of the indigenous peoples, an issue that environmental organisations and indigenous groups have repeatedly raised at various international forums.
Elisara and other indigenous leaders say they intend to press U.N. member states to recognise the principle of "prior and informed consent" in its legally-binding treaties concerning sustainable development and environmental preservation.
The U.N. Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) promotes and protects the ownership by indigenous people of their traditional knowledge, but the principle of "informed consent" for the use of indigenous lands is not part of its provisions.
In supporting the indigenous peoples' demand, the CBD executive secretary Ahmed Djoghlaf said he would like to see the treaty be translated into "national laws and national actions".
"The convention has a unique procedure that recognises the indigenous peoples as partners," he told IPS. "It's the first international convention to have a fully fledged programme and full-time team dedicated to the issues of indigenous peoples and the protection of the knowledge that has been accumulated over millennia."
Tauli-Corpuz and other other representatives of the Forum said they want the U.N. member countries to translate the declaration into a "living document", but acknowledged that would not be an easy task, because some powerful nations are still reluctant to embrace it.
Last year in September, when a vast majority of the U.N. General Assembly supported the declaration, the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand cast their votes in opposition. However, recently both Canada and Australia issued statements indicating their willingness to endorse the declaration.
Some countries with large indigenous populations, such as Bolivia and Ecuador, according to Tauli-Corpuz, have assured the Forum that they were willing to adopt the declaration as part of their national laws.
At a news conference Monday, Bolivia's indigenous president, Evo Morales, said the indigenous peoples have the moral authority to shape "a new model for living" because "they live closely to Mother Nature and have defended it for ages."
"Mother Earth is the wellspring of life that must be cherished and respected rather than treated as a tradable commodity," he added in a statement highlighting the significance of the role of the indigenous peoples in protecting the environment and preserving Earth's biodiversity.
During the two-week meeting, the Forum leaders said they would recommend a number of proposals to the U.N. member states, including the one concerning their demand for participation in the international decision-making on climate change mitigation.
© 2008 Inter Press Service
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8 Comments so far
Show AllYes, exactly so D n G -- One's internal _ I N T E G R I T Y _ trumping and superseding external ( un-enforceable ) _ L A W S _
The New Model For Living will be based upon traditional Indigenous values of cooperation, respect, and reciprocity.
"At a news conference Monday, Bolivia's indigenous president, Evo Morales, said the indigenous peoples have the moral authority to shape "a new model for living" because "they live closely to Mother Nature and have defended it for ages.""
Actually, it's a very old model for living, but I get Evo Morales' point. The good news is that we don't have to re-invent the wheel - the way to live (closely to Mother Nature) has worked for hundreds of millennia.
Y para los otros, los de la cultura de asesinos, te digo en Guaranì: Nderejo añame, añamembu!
What's it like to have your ancient village swept away by a rising sea? For an entertaining, authentic and informative trip to a modern Native Alaskan village besieged by climate change, industrial and cultural plunder and coercion, see award-winning novel "Flight of the Goose: A Story of the Far North" -
http://www.lesleythomas.alaskawriters.com
The concept of the positive feedback loop in climate change patterns is devoid of a social component other than destructive indices. The incapacity for tech dependent societies to recognize balances has and is a social dimension. There is growing awareness that spiritual/social values of indigenous peoples are the core of traditional knowledge that are consistantly and resiliently reitterated. All that is heard and acted on by the technological west is front-end-loaded comodification value.
The social component being silenced by the major developers is proving 'theory' of post-modern existence to be a boondogle - regardless of 'advances'. Technology cannot jump over its knees. It is a goaliath without life utterly dependent on nature and what it denies in a hubris with 'theoretical' roots. It is a brick without an architect claiming to be a house construction site.
Evil has dominion in these times but a transformation will take place in 2012 that will end it one way or another, life or death. Make your choice.
Mother Earth has already been too damaged by human interference to stay still. She is in the process of methane-burping us and our reign of environmental terror out of existence. I feel bad for the native peoples, they are the least responsible yet will be the first to suffer, but maybe they'll get to watch from somewhere in their afterlives as the rest of us suffer and die on a planet which just can't take our abuse any more.
Climate Change is a Life and Death issue for EVERYONE.