Forest Peoples Programme E-Newsletter July 2011
Forest Peoples Programme E-Newsletter July 2011
Ugandan Batwa complete 3-D Model
of their Bwindi Forest ancestral area
In 2009 a group
of Batwa representatives from Uganda travelled to Ogiek
communities in Kenya to learn about their situation and the
different advocacy strategies they were using. One of these
strategies was the use of Participatory 3-Dimensional
Modelling (P3DM), which helped the Ogiek engage Kenyan
agencies on their rights to their ancestral territory, the
Mau Forest. The Batwa walked away from this visit impressed
by the simplicity of the P3DM technique and hopeful of
replicating it in their own context. Two years later in June
2011, the Batwa, with support from the ARCUS Foundation,
began their own three-dimensional modelling of their
ancestral territory, Bwindi Impenetrable National Park. More
than 100 representatives from the Batwa communities
surrounding Bwindi, including youth, elders, women and men
attended the exercise over a three-week period. Read more
‘No signing of REDD
contracts in Madre de Dios and San Martin’: Indigenous
organisations call on their communities to exercise
caution
San Martin and Madre de Dios are the two
regions earmarked for the development of pilot REDD
activities in Peru. Both regions are facing an avalanche of
over 20 REDD projects oriented towards the voluntary carbon
market. Many of these sub-national REDD+ projects are
descending on the ancestral territories of indigenous
peoples including the Shawi, Awajun and Kechwa in San
Martin, and the Ese Eja, Yine, Shipibo, Amahuaca, Arakambut
and Machiguenga in Madre de Dios. In Peru, approximately 20
million hectares of indigenous territories have no legal
recognition which means that REDD may often pose a threat
rather than an opportunity. Read more
Determined lobbying by
Peruvian national indigenous organisation - AIDESEP - leads
to government commitment to address outstanding indigenous
territorial claims
On the 25th March 2011 in Dalat,
Vietnam, members of the Forest Carbon Partnership Fund
(FCPF) Participants Committee approved the third version of
Peru’s national REDD Readiness Preparation Proposal (RPP)
that the Ministry of Environment (MINAM) had been developing
since 2009. Read more
Congo Basin Forest
Peoples, Rights and Delivery of REDD Benefits
Forest
Peoples Programme staff recently visited forest communities
in Equateur province, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC),
who they have been supporting since 2009 with
information-sharing and consultation meetings related to
REDD and conflict prevention. During training and project
monitoring visits FPP and our local partner CEDEN (Cercle
pour la defense de l'environnement) held public meetings
with around 2000 forest people from across the Lac Tumba
conservation landscape. Read more
Special Rapporteur on the
Rights of Indigenous Peoples Issues: A Note on his official
mission to Costa Rica
The UN Special Rapporteur on
the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (SRIP), James Anaya, has
recently (24 to 27 April 2011) concluded an official mission
to Costa Rica. In his report of that mission he makes a
series of observations and recommendations concerning the
situation of indigenous peoples affected by the Diquis
hydroelectric project. Read more
Input into the Global
Environment Facility environmental and social
safeguards
The process of the Global Environment
Facility (GEF) developing safeguards continues. In April
this year an initial draft was released, and with minimal
consultation, sent to the GEF Board for approval in May. The
indigenous peoples’ focal points to the GEF, the GEF-NGO
Network, other indigenous organizations and Forest Peoples
Programme (FPP) all provided detailed input into the GEF
Council deliberations, arguing strongly that the safeguards
were not sufficient and would not act to improve development
or environmental outcomes. Read more
Implementing the UN
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: an
opportunity to influence GEF policy, Jen Rubis
As
awareness of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples has grown, we as indigenous peoples have actively
sought the implementation of this document in all
institutions, policies and programmes that have the
potential to impact us. To be able to address the exclusion
that indigenous peoples face at the grassroots, we have
consistently fought for the right to full and effective
participation in mechanisms that affect us. Moving the
battle upstream is not easy as we have to educate ourselves
in a language and cultural environment that is far removed
from our own processes of participation and decision-making.
It takes time away from the priority – the persistent
violation of our rights and resources at the community
level. Read more
Could land reform succeed
where conservation has failed?
Conservation
organisations have been making great strides towards
recognising that protected areas must respect the rights of
indigenous peoples as enshrined in international law,
including the right to give or withhold their free prior and
informed consent to the establishment of new protected areas
in their customary territories. Yet in practice conservation
organisations often continue to exclude local people from
using forest and other resources, and only consult them
after they have drawn up management plans rather than
jointly writing them. Read more
Guest article from the
Nishnawbe Aski Nation of Canada - "Expropriation of
Indigenous Lands for Government Designated Protected Areas
in Northern Ontario, Canada"
Canada’s Auditor
General commented in her June 2011 report that living
conditions in First Nations reserves are still much worse
than elsewhere in Canada. Reflecting on her ten years in
office, she argued that a fundamental change is needed to
address this issue. In 2010, Canada finally endorsed the
United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples (UNDRIP) after being one of four governments to vote
against it during its passage through the General Assembly
in 2007. Read more
Looking Ahead –
Regional workshop on Gender and Land Tenure in
Africa
A regional workshop entitled ‘Gender and
land tenure in Africa’ will take place from July 26 to 29,
2011 in Edea, Cameroon. Organized by Rights and Resources
Initiative (RRI), the Réseau des Femmes Africaines pour la
Gestion Communautaire des Forêts (REFACOF), and Forest
Peoples Programme (FPP), this workshop’s goals include
creating a discussion forum on gender, rights to land, and
forest resources in Africa and clarifying the applicable
legal framework and protection mechanisms created to secure
the rights to land and resources. This workshop will also
provide an opportunity to share information on land and
forest reforms that are taking place in several African
countries. It will bring together approximately thirty
participants, including representatives from forest
communities and indigenous peoples. Read more
Draft concept note for
pilot Whakatane Assessments now open for feedback
As
mentioned in Forest Peoples Programme’s February
E-Newsletter, a meeting was held at the IUCN CEESP Sharing
Power conference in Whakatane, New Zealand, January 2011,
between indigenous representatives, the chairs of three IUCN
commissions (CEESP, WCPA and SSC) and sub-commissions
(TILCEPA and TGER), key staff of the IUCN secretariat (the
Director of the Environment and Development Programme and
the Senior Adviser on Social Policy), and other staff from
IUCN, Conservation International and Forest Peoples
Programme. The main outcome of the meeting and subsequent
follow-up discussions was an agreement to implement a series
of measures to review the implementation of resolutions
related to indigenous peoples adopted at the 4th World
Conservation Congress (WCC4) in 2008 and to advance their
implementation should there be a gap. Read
more