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Victoria Tauli-Corpuz
Executive Director, TEBTEBBA
(Indigenous Peoples' International Centre for Policy Research and
Education)
Chair, UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
Poznan, Poland, 10 December 2008
It is with great sadness that today, the 60th Anniversary of the adoption
of the UN Declaration on Human Rights, some States have denied indigenous
peoples of their rights at the 14th Conference of Parties of the UNFCCC.
This morning indigenous peoples were shocked to see the final version
of the Draft Conclusions on Agenda Item 5: Reducing emissions from
deforestation in developing countries: approaches to stimulate action,
of the 29th Session of Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological
Advice (SBSTA). This Document (FCCC/SBSTA/2008/L.23) removed any references
to rights of indigenous peoples and the UN Declaration on the Rights
of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). This move was spearheaded by the same
States (Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the USA) which voted against
the adoption of the UNDRIP by the UN General Assembly last 13 Sept.
2008.
Furthermore, these same states used the phrase "indigenous people"
instead of "indigenous peoples" with an "s" which is the internationally
accepted language. The international human rights instrument on indigenous
peoples' rights, the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples,
which was adopted by 144 member-states of the UN, uses Indigenous
Peoples. This was a battle fought by indigenous peoples for more than
30 years within the United Nations. The "s" in peoples means that
indigenous peoples have the right to self-determination (Article 3,
UNDRIP) and have collective rights. The UNDRIP is an interpretation
of how the existing Human Rights Covenants apply to indigenous peoples
considering the historical and present injustices they are suffering
from.
Witnessing the way indigenous peoples rights are undermined by the
very States who took the lead in formulating and adopting the UN Declaration
on Human Rights, 60 years ago, is a tragic thing.. These States are
very keen to include REDD as part of the agreement on mitigation which
will be agreed upon during the 15th Conference of Parties in Copenhagen
which will be held in 2009. However, they obstinately refuse to recognize
the rights of indigenous peoples and other forest peoples, who are
the ones who sacrificed life and limb to keep the world's remaining
tropical and sub-tropical rainforests.
I call upon these States to reconsider their positions and move
towards recognizing indigenous peoples' rights, as contained in the
UNDRIP, as a framework for the design and implementation of REDD.
I earnestly wish to see States and the UN system implement effectively
the UNDRIP as stated in Article 42. The Declaration has to be implemented
in all arenas, whether at the local and national level and at the
global level, including by the UN Framework Convention on Climate
Change and its protocols.
I congratulate the Parties who insisted that the language of rights
and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples remain
in the draft conclusions. I know they fought hard for these and I
certainly hope they will continue to do this in the future negotiations.
Indigenous peoples will continue to oppose the REDD mechanisms if
their rights are not recognized by States and the UN, including the
UNFCCC and the World Bank. They are very vulnerable to the adverse
impacts of climate change, but they are also providing the solutions
to climate change. Their traditional knowledge on forests and biodiversity
is crucial for the methodological issues being tackled under REDD.
Their participation in designing, implementing, monitoring and evaluating
REDD policies and proposals has to be ensured. Their free, prior and
informed consent has to be obtained before any REDD mechanism is put
into place in their territories. It is their right to decide whether
to accept REDD or not.
I welcome paragraph 6 of the Draft Decision which calls for an Expert
meeting on REDD before the 30th SBSTA session. This Expert meeting
should be used to go more deeply into the methodological issues relevant
for indigenous peoples. However, it should also be linked with the
policy issues which will be discussed under the Ad-Hoc Working Group
on Long-Term Cooperative Action (AWG-LCA). Enhanced policies and measures
for REDD should be linked with methodologies proposed by the SBSTA.
Indigenous peoples participation in this Expert Group meeting was
acknowledged in the Draft Decision and it is my hope that this is
implemented.
I call on the Ministers who will be speaking before the High-Level
Ministerial Segment to reiterate the importance of recognizing and
implementing the UNDRIP in REDD decisions and mechanisms. I call on
the Ministers to pledge more financial and technical support for indigenous
peoples to be able to contribute more substantially to mitigation
efforts.
I urge indigenous peoples to continue being vigilant and active in
influencing and monitoring the climate change negotiations, policies
and programmes at the national and global levels. We have to use the
UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as an instrument
which will ensure our survival and dignity especially in the face
of the multiple crisis the world faces. The climate change crisis,
the economic downturn and the destruction of biodiversity and cultural
diversity are serious threats to our continuing existence. But if
we strongly unite amongst ourselves, with other civil society organizations,
with States who are willing to do all they can to genuinely address
these, then there is hope for the earth and the future generations.
There is no choice left for us but to continue contributing what
we can to help bring down greenhouse gas emissions, to strengthen
our values and systems which are respectful of nature, to assert our
rights contained in the UNDRIP and to be in solidarity with the most
vulnerable sections of society. We should continue practicing our
low-carbon and sustainable traditional livelihoods. At the same time
we should demand that resources be made available for us to adapt
to climate change.
I reiterate the imperative for the Annex 1 countries to carry the
heavier burden of mitigating climate change. As these are the countries
which have mainly caused climate change, it is just fair that they
be the ones to lead the way. Meeting their legally binding targets
for reducing their greenhouse gas emission is the main path towards
mitigation. REDD, if properly designed and implemented can still contribute
to mitigation. However, I believe that forests should not be used
as carbon offsets for Annex 1 countries. Thus, emissions trading of
forest carbon may not be the right approach. Rewards, both monetary
and non-monetary, to indigenous peoples and other forest peoples for
protecting the forests maybe a better track to take.
Let it not be said that the richest and most powerful reneged on
their duty to save this world and to respect the rights of those who
have contributed the most to mitigating climate change.
Thank you.
Contact:
Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, email: vicky@tebtebba.org
mobile: +63-9175317811
www.tebtebba.org
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