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Press Release
30 March 2003
The forested interior of Suriname is home to Amazonian
Indians and so-called Maroons, descendants of escaped slaves who
recreated societies in Suriname’s hinterland in the 17th
and 18th centuries. These peoples have long complained
that they suffer persistent and pervasive racial discrimination
and are provided with substandard health care and schools. Their
main concern is that the government of Suriname has failed to recognize
their rights to their ancestral lands, instead parcelling out their
forests, to loggers, miners and as protected areas. On 21 March
2003, the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination agreed with them.
The Committee monitors compliance with the International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination,
a human rights treaty ratified by 165 countries. Suriname ratified
it in 1985 and is required to submit reports every four years explaining
what it has done to comply with the Convention.
Observing the Suriname has failed to submit even one report
to the Committee since it ratified the Convention, the Committee
issued Decision 3(62), which states that
serious violations of the rights
of indigenous communities, particularly the Maroons and the Amerindians,
are being committed in Suriname: in addition to discrimination
against these communities in respect of employment, education,
culture and participation in all sectors of society, particular
attention is drawn to the lack of recognition of their rights
to the land and its resources, the refusal to consult them about
forestry and mining concessions granted to foreign companies and
the fact that the mining companies’ activities, especially the
dumping of mercury, are a threat to their health and the environment.
The Committee
requested “as a matter of urgency”
that Suriname submit a report
no later that 30 June 2003 and made reference to its General Recommendation No. XXIII on Indigenous Peoples, adopted in 1997, which calls upon countries to “recognize and protect the
rights of indigenous peoples to own, develop, control and use their
communal lands, territories and resources and, where they have been
deprived of their lands and territories traditionally owned or otherwise
inhabited or used without their free and informed consent, to take
steps to return these lands and territories” and; to “ensure that
members of indigenous peoples have equal rights in respect of effective
participation in public life and that no decisions directly relating
to their rights and interests are taken without their informed consent.”
For further
information contact:
Fergus
MacKay
Forest
Peoples Programme
Tel: +
31-20-419-1746 (Netherlands)
fergus@euronet.nl
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