OECD opens investigation into WWF in world first
OECD opens investigation into WWF in world first
January
5 2017
In an unprecedented move, a member of the
Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) has agreed to investigate a complaint that the World
Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) has funded human rights abuses in Cameroon, beginning a process which
until now has only been used for multinational
businesses.
Survival submitted the complaint in February
2016, citing numerous examples of violent abuse and
harassment against Baka “Pygmies” in Cameroon by
WWF-funded anti-poaching squads. Survival also alleges that
WWF failed to seek communities’ free, prior and informed
consent for conservation projects on their ancestral
land.
This is the first time a non-profit organization
has been scrutinized in this way. The acceptance of the
complaint indicates that the OECD will hold WWF to the same
human rights standards as profit-making corporations.
WWF
funds anti-poaching squads in Cameroon
and elsewhere in the Congo Basin. Baka and other rainforest
tribes have reported systematic abuse at the hands of these
squads, including arrest and beatings, torture and even
death, for well over 20 years.
Survival first urged
WWF to change its approach in the region in 1991, but since
then the situation has worsened.
Baka have repeatedly testified to
Survival about the activities of these anti-poaching squads
in the region. One Baka man told Survival in 2016: “[The
anti-poaching squad] beat the children as well as an elderly
woman with machetes. My daughter is still unwell. They made
her crouch down and they beat her everywhere – on her
back, on her bottom, everywhere, with a machete.”
In
two open letters Baka made impassioned pleas to
conservationists to be allowed to stay on their land.
“Conservation projects need to have mercy on how we can
use the forest … because our lives depend on it.”
WWF
has rejected Survival’s claims. It accepts that abuse has
taken place but, in a statement in 2015, a spokesman stated
that such incidents “appear to have tailed off” despite
repeated testimonies from Baka themselves. In its response
to the OECD, the organization cited political instability in
the region and difficulties in the process of creating
“protected areas” for wildlife conservation as the main
reasons human rights abuses had taken place. It did not deny
its involvement in funding, training and equipping
guards.
Survival’s Director Stephen Corry said: “The
OECD admitting our complaint is a giant step for vulnerable
peoples. They can already use OECD Guidelines to try and
stop corporations riding roughshod over them, but this is
first time ever it’s agreed that the rules also apply to
industrial-scale NGOs like WWF. WWF’s work has led to
decades of pain for tribal peoples in the Congo Basin.
It’s done nothing effective to address the concerns of the
thousands of tribal people dispossessed and mistreated
through its projects. That has to change. If WWF can’t
ensure those schemes meet UN and OECD standards, it simply
shouldn’t be funding them. Whatever good works it might be
doing elsewhere, nothing excuses its financing of human
rights abuses. The big conservation organizations must stop
colluding in the theft of tribal land. Tribal peoples are
the best conservationists and guardians of the natural
world. They should be at the forefront of the environmental
movement.”
Background
briefing
- The OECD is an international body
with 35 member countries. It has developed Guidelines for
Multinational Enterprises which are monitored by national
contact points in each country, and offer one of the very
few opportunities to hold MNEs to account if they fail to
respect the human rights of communities affected by their
projects.
- WWF International’s headquarters are in
Switzerland, so Survival’s complaint was submitted to the
Swiss contact point, as Cameroon is not a member of the
OECD.
- In 2008, Survival International lodged a
complaint against British-owned mining company Vedanta Resources when it was seeking to
mine on the territory of the Dongria Kondh in India without
the tribe’s consent. The OECD stated that Vedanta had
broken its guidelines.
- WWF is the largest conservation
organization in the world. According to the organization
itself, only 33% of its income comes from
individual donors. The rest is derived from sources
including government grants, foundations, and
corporations