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Native Peoples Reject Market Mechanisms
SAN JOSÉ - Solutions to global warming based on the logic of the market are a threat to the rights and way of life of indigenous peoples, the Latin American Indigenous Forum on Climate Change concluded this week in Costa Rica.
Proposals from governments and international non-governmental organisations (NGOs), such as the Clean Development Mechanism and the UN-REDD Programme (United Nations Collaborative Programme on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Developing Countries), "are new forms of economic geopolitics" that endanger indigenous rights enshrined in treaties, says the final declaration of the forum, which ended Wednesday.
These proposals allow states and transnational corporations to promote dams, agrofuels, oil exploration, tree plantations and monoculture crops, that cause expropriation and destruction of indigenous peoples' territories and the criminalisation, prosecution and even murder of native people, the document says.
The Forum, which opened Monday, included the Indigenous Council of Central America (CICA), the Meso-American Indigenous Council (CIMA), the International Alliance of Indigenous and Tribal Peoples of the Tropical Forests, the Coordinating Body for the Indigenous Organisations of the Amazon Basin (COICA), the Indigenous Women's Biodiversity Network (IWBN), the South American region of the Continental Network of Indigenous Women (ECMIA), the Intercultural Indigenous University (UII) and the International Indigenous Women's Forum (IIWF).
Indigenous people and their organisations are putting forward holistic solutions that respect the rights of human beings and of Mother Earth, and that are not limited to Western scientific knowledge but include traditional wisdom, indigenous practices and innovations that have contributed to efforts to preserve ecosystems and biodiversity, the Forum declaration says.
There are some 400 different native groups in Latin America, totalling about 45 million people.
"We discussed indigenous peoples' strategies and positions with respect to climate change," the general coordinator of the Guatemala-based Sotz'il - Centre for Maya Research and Development, Ramiro Batzin, told IPS.
Governments talk to each other without taking civil society into account, but indigenous people must be listened to, because they are the most affected by global warming, he said.
Climate change is due to "a model of development that has forced indigenous people into extreme poverty," he said.
The worst harm they are suffering is lack of food, because of drought and floods, and the loss of their cultural identity.
The UN-REDD Programme provides for rich countries to pay for maintaining tropical forests in the developing world, in compensation for their carbon dioxide emissions, the main greenhouse gas responsible for global warming.
The native peoples say that the great majority of places being proposed by governments and some NGOs to participate in the REDD programme are located in indigenous territories.
This shows that these territories are well preserved, but it is urgent to defend guarantees contained in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, particularly territorial rights and the right to self-determination and free, prior and informed consent, the forum declaration says.
"States do not want to acknowledge this; their approach is based purely on the bottom line," said Batzin.
People here pinned their hopes on the World People's Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth, to be hosted this month by the Bolivian government. The meeting is conceived as an alternative approach to the solutions explored to date by the international community.
Official climate negotiations will be resumed at the next United Nations conference in Mexico in November, after the failure of the Copenhagen meeting last December.
"The failure was to expect an outcome from such a meeting. In the midst of an economic crisis, industrialised countries do not want to sacrifice production," Pascal Girot, Mesoamerica and Caribbean coordinator for the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), told IPS.
The present model "is exterminating Mother Nature," said Batzin, who criticised the governments of Panama, Costa Rica and Guatemala for not protesting against the documents that emerged from Copenhagen, which he said were "not very democratic and lacked transparency."
Costa Rica, for instance, is planning to be a carbon neutral country by 2021, and to sell greenhouse gas emissions mitigation mechanisms to industrialised countries.
"It's a licence to pollute. It may be a solution for Costa Rica, taking a very utilitarian view. But it's the principle that the polluter pays, and that is all we have at the moment," said Girot.
Mechanisms like the REDD programme must guarantee the long term survival of the world's large forests. But to achieve that in Central America is very difficult, because of the pressures on forested areas, and because "investors want guarantees that the mechanisms will be measurable," Girot said.
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Show AllWe in the industrialized world ignore these voices at our peril. Unless we return to the values of the indigenous people who have lived on their land sustainably for thousands of years, we will perish.
"market mechanisms" is of course just a "subset" of any economy, or should be...as the Asiatimesonline writer Henry CK Liu puts in his many thorough historical observations of economic, political, monetary , trade systems:
"THE MARKET - as espoused by the Western ideologies to be the be-all and end-all of existence - really is just a subset of any economy..or ought to be...it is NOT the economy itself and shouldn't be".
i recall a long conversation i was lucky enough to have with an old Italian gentleman of 102 years about a couple of years ago...he was then very hale, clear-eyed wearing no glasses at all, very sharp mind and memory and his only big "ailment" was a somewhat weaker gait when he walked. otherwise he was in good health and daily read newspapers in at least 5 or so languages.
he told me:
"we have a world of largely bad leaders....including in our own western world. All my life i was devoted to the study of cultures, history, countries, people and the world..that is why I became a Nautical Engineer so I could not just earn a living but at the same time see the world and learn about it. I grew up seeing the First World War and the Second world war..my brother and I played in the Piazza of our town when the Fascists came to power...and we knew from all the signs that war and horrible things would come...they tried to revive the old Roman Empire....I know about Empires, I know about the Roman Empire...because I AM Roman....Today - that roman empire is the United States..on a global level...
WE in the West have MUCH to be ashamed for....for we have gone out for centuries to other lands to subjugate other people and take their resources and then leave them nothing, in order to Enrich ourselves....and THEN we are surprised that they come to our shores seeking a better life..if we couldn't help them , or trade with them fairly, we should have just left them alone and lived within OUR means with what our continent gave us...that is a shame we should admit to".
as an american poet said (i can never remember his name or the website i found his poetry years ago) :
"WE americans ....carefully nurture an attitude of detached indifference to the suffering of others....even if WE are the cause of it".
this includes the general concept of americans , for example, that reflects that line by the poet, that AMerica's or the west's prosperity and prowess is largely or mainly "due to our better system or our hard word"........
when in fact, starting with the theft of the Americas from the natives, going forward to the subjugation and even destruction of the economies of other nations which had no "modern" methods to defend themselves from the rapacious assault by the West...including the global "monetary system" such as that for the Dollar hegemonic imperialism forcing countries to put so much of their native resources, labor and economies in SERVICE to the dollar, forced under the global "wetsern financial regime" to use those precious national resources to BUY dollars for them to make "transactions" under that same regime...and therefore leave precious little for their own development....independent of coercion...much of western "advancement" is and has been dependent on the abrogation and plain theft of the resources of other peoples and cultures.
can americans HONESTLY say for example:
that the resources of the NATIVE LAND of indians were "created" by europeans? no...they merely EXTRACTED them...regardless of what the value of that is for civilization. ..after of course exterminating the Natives or causing their extermination (Thomas Jefferson HIMSELF used that word concerning the indians as something that MUST be DONE)...
"private property" -- they imposed it on the americas...where native indians did not bother to have such concepts.
"money" - did native peoples NEED money and monetarism in order to learn how to find food and make shelter and by that create their own economies?. or at least were not so dependent on "monetarizing" everything under the sun?