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Press release by the UN Special Rapporteur
25 August 2008, Brasilia
“Despite advances, exercise of the
right to self-determination for indigenous peoples – that is, real
control of their own lives and lands – is still a major challenge
for Brazil.” This was the main observation of the United Nations Special
Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms
of indigenous people, S. James Anaya, as he concludes a 12-day visit
to Brazil.
The Special Rapporteur’s visit came
after a request by several indigenous organizations throughout the
country. The purpose of the visit is to investigate and report on
the human rights concerns of indigenous peoples and engage in a constructive
dialogue with the Government of Brazil. The Government’s cooperation
with the visit is an important component of its partnership with the
United Nations to build democracy and respect for human rights.
The Special Rapporteur visited Brasilia
and various areas in the states of Amazonas, Roraima, and Mato Grosso
do Sul. He held meetings in Brasilia with the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, Ministry of Justice, including the National Indian Foundation
(FUNAI), Special Secretariat for Human Rights, Office of the General
Prosecutor of the Republic, Attorney General, Mixed Parliamentary
Front for Indigenous Peoples, Ministry of Education, and National
Foundation for Health (FUNASA), and participated in a forum with various
indigenous organizations during a seminar on a new statute of indigenous
peoples.
He consulted various communities, indigenous
organizations, local and state authorities, and civil society organizations
during his trips to Manaus and Alto Rio Negro in the state of Amazonas,
Boa Vista, Serra do Sol and Raposa in the state of Roraima, and Campo
Grande and Dourados in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul.
The Special Rapporteur noted with satisfaction
the expressed commitment of the Government of Brazil to advance the
rights of indigenous peoples in accordance with the United Nations
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, as well as the existence
of constitutional and other legal protections, which he said are among
the most advanced in the world. According to the Special Rapporteur,
however, “there is much left to do to improve the human rights situation
of indigenous peoples in Brazil and to fully implement the constitutional
protections and accepted international norms.”
The Special Rapporteur observed that,
overall, “reforms are needed to ensure that indigenous peoples are
better able to exercise their right of self-determination within the
framework of a Brazilian state that is respectful of diversity.” This
means exercising control over their lives, communities, and lands;
and participating in all decisions affecting them, in accordance with
their own cultural patterns and authority structures, he said. The
Special Rapporteur noted with concern that, “it is evident that indigenous
peoples frequently do not control the decisions that affect their
everyday lives and their lands, even when their lands have been officially
demarcated and registered, because of invasions and mining by outsiders
and other factors.”
Various actors reported concerns to
the Special Rapporteur that indigenous communities have some input
into, but not adequate control over, the delivery of services in their
communities by the FUNAI, FUNASA, and other government agencies, especially
those responsible for education and health. “While culturally rich,
indigenous peoples remain impoverished economically, without sufficient
power or opportunities to develop on a sustainable basis, and are
continually suffocated by discrimination,” he said. The Special Rapporteur
identified paternalistic attitudes among both governmental agencies
and nongovernmental organizations that impede indigenous peoples from
setting their own priorities and managing the programs that are intended
to benefit them. Furthermore, the Special Rapporteur observed a scarcity
and lack of efficient use of resources devoted to much-needed programs.
The Special Rapporteur noted that the
health and educational situation is critical and that for many, if
not most, indigenous communities, it is poor at best. Indigenous women
and children especially suffer from poor health conditions. “The lack
of formal education and adequate health limits opportunities available
to individuals as they seek to better the conditions of their lives,
and it deprives indigenous communities of the skills necessary to
manage their own affairs and control the government and NGO-run programs
that concern them.”
Also crippling, the Special Rapporteur
noted, is the persistent discrimination underlying the formation of
policies, delivery of services, and administration of justice. The
discrimination has at times infested parts of society to result in
violence. The Special Rapporteur heard alarming accounts of violence
against indigenous individuals, especially their most vocal leaders.
Further lacking, he said, is a mechanism
for ensuring adequate consultation with indigenous communities on
major development projects – such as the construction of highways
and hydroelectric dams and large-scale mining activities – that are
outside their demarcated lands but nonetheless affect them. The Special
Rapporteur said he saw this absence of a consultation mechanism as
reflecting a broader problem: the need for harmonizing government
policies, laws and initiatives for industrial development with those
to secure the rights of indigenous peoples.
Finally, the Special Rapporteur emphasized
that during his visit to Brazil he perceived that a significant part
of Brazilian society and many influential political actors stand in
opposition to government policies that are responsive to the aspirations
of indigenous peoples. This opposition appears even to challenge the
rights that are enshrined in the Constitution. The Special Rapporteur
said this situation manifests a lack of understanding and even confusion
over the rights of indigenous peoples as affirmed in the Constitution
and relevant international instruments.
“A national campaign of education on
indigenous issues and respect for diversity, guided by the government
in partnership with indigenous peoples, and with the support of the
news media, would likely help build bridges of mutual understanding.”
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Consistent with the terms of his mandate,
the Special Rapporteur will present the findings of the visit and
recommendations to actors involved in a report to the United Nations
Human Rights Council in Geneva.
The Human Rights Council appointed
S. James Anaya for an initial period of three years as new Special
Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms
of indigenous people, and he assumed his mandate on 1 May 2008. He
is James J. Lenoir Professor of Human Rights Law and Policy at the
University of Arizona (United States).
For more information on the mandate
of the Special Rapporteur, visit: http://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/indigenous/rapporteur/index.htm
For media inquiries, please contact
Taryn Lesser: indigenous@ohchr.org
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