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Andy White, Coordinator of Rights and Resources Initiative, summarised
the findings of the two major reports being launched. The studies
report a sharp increase in government allocations of forests to
industrial plantations, and suggest that booming demand for food
and fuel is rapidly eating up vast forestlands in the Amazon and
Southeast Asia.
The findings showed, he said, that unless the rights and resources
of forest dependent peoples were urgently addressed the consequences
would be the continued destruction of the world's forests, with
appalling ramifications.
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Mbendjele
man climbing tree for honey, Cameroon
[Photo: Jerome Lewis] |
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| Sasak
Dayak protest against IFC funding of palm oil expansion on their
lands in West Kalimantan, Indonesia. [Photo: Marcus Colchester] |
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'Arguably, we are on the verge of a last great global land grab,'
said White. 'Unless steps are taken, traditional forest owners,
and the forests themselves, will be the big losers. It will mean
more deforestation, more conflict, more carbon emissions, more climate
change and less prosperity for everyone.'
Joji Cariño, of Tebtebba (the Indigenous Peoples' International
Centre for Policy research and Education), spoke about the situation
in her native Philippines where the present push for increased mining
is making the fragile rights of indigenous peoples yet more precarious.
She pointed to the sidelining of forest peoples in decision making,
saying:
'It is this great imbalance that increases the risks to indigenous
peoples because we are absent from the table. Due to this our important
forest stewardship role is ignored and prevented.'
Speaking for the British Government, Gareth Thomas, Minister for
Trade and Development, outlined what he believed to be the five
necessary aspects for a new agenda on forests: increased knowledge
and understanding about what is happening in the world's forests;
the strengthening of the rights of forest users; fair regulation,
in particular better law enforcement and governance; paying people
for the services that the forests provide as well as the products
that they produce; and more informed consumers able to make discerning
choices about the timber that they buy.
The starkest warning of the evening was issued by Kyeretwie Opoku
of Civic Response, Ghana, who said:
'We're faced with a great danger or we're faced with a great opportunity.
It's either a new world order or it's extinction.'
Opuku said that the determining factor would be whether in all
the 'polite discussions about the measuring and pricing of carbon'
the rights of the forest communities were addressed. For it is,
he said, the people who own the forests, the people who own the
trees.
_____________________________________
The RRI is an international coalition
comprising the world's foremost organisations on forest governance
and conservation. Forest Peoples Programme is the UK member of the
coalition.
Text of speeches by:
_____________________________________
RRI
Press release
Links to principal media coverage:
UK
- The
Guardian (UK): Forest funding 'could put billions in wrong
hands'
- BBC
Online: Forests to fall for food and fuel
- Telegraph
(UK): Warnings of a global land grab
- New
Scientist: World on the verge of the last great land grab
International
- Asian
News International: Demand for food and fuel may lead to destruction
of forests
- Le
Monde: La demande accrue en carburants et aliments menace
les forêts (rapports)
- Reuters
España: El boom de la población afectará
a los bosques, dicen informes
- Reuters
português: Estudos apontam impacto demográfico
sobre florestas
- Science
daily: Record land grab predicted as demand soars for
new sources of food, energy and wood fiber
Seeing
People Through The Trees
Scaling Up Efforts to Advance Rights and Address Poverty, Conflict
and Climate Change
Executive
summary
Fact
sheet
Full
report - pdf (1.5Mb)
From
Exclusion to Ownership?
Challenges and Opportunities in Advancing Forest Tenure Reform
Executive
summary
Fact
sheet
Full
report - pdf (0.7Mb)
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