New Report Uncovers Human Rights Impacts of Exclusionary Natural Protected Areas on the Kichwa People of San Martin, Peru

A new report published today shows how the creation and implementation of two State protected areas in Peru threaten the continuity of the Kichwa people’s territorial occupation in the San Martín region, as well as their traditional forms of control and usufruct.
The report, Conservation Without Indigenous Peoples. The Case of Kichwa Territories in Cordillera Escalera and Cordillera Azul in San Martin, Peru was published by several prominent Indigenous organisations within Peru, and Forest Peoples Programme.
The two conservation areas which are the focus of the report, the Cordillera Azul National Park (PNCAZ) and the Cordillera Escalera Regional Conservation Area (ACR-CE), are natural protected areas (NPAs) created in the San Martin region of Peru in 2001 and 2005 respectively.
Read the full report in English
The investigation was led by anthropologist Miguel Valderrama Zevallos, and finds that there are at least 72 Kichwa native communities in the San Martin region whose territories are affected by the management of these two NPAs. Five Kichwa communities have population centres within one of them (the ACR-CE), and at least 28 (18 for the ACR-CE and 10 for the PNCAZ) have population centres close to the NPAs’ boundaries and, in most cases, have areas of traditional occupation in these areas. And for at least 39 communities, while their population centres are not located near NPA boundaries, they still maintain areas of traditional use in them, making long walks to these places.
These areas of traditional use, called “sectors” by Kichwa people, generally concentrate great biodiversity, and are used for hunting, fishing and gathering resources, such as medicinal plants and bark, wood, clay and salt. The traditional Kichwa occupation of these sectors is multilocal, with several of them distributed across the region, including in the aforementioned NPAs. Other fundamental aspects of Kichwa territoriality are the continuous and sustained movement of families to these places over time; the technical knowledge for the economic exploitation of resources; and a cosmopolitical diplomacy aimed at guaranteeing good relations between humans and nonhumans with the Amazonian environment.
The report explains how, since their creation, the PNCAZ and the ACR-CE have affected the legal security that the Kichwa sectors should have for the territorial rights of their population. The lack of adequate identification in basic diagnoses and management instruments (especially their master plans), as well as the position adopted by both administrations to deny the possibility of titling communal territories, have contributed to the invisibility of the Kichwa territories in practice. Furthermore, the management of both NPAs has limited the Kichwa’s mobility within their sectors, criminalised their activities, and marginalised their representatives in spaces for deliberation and decision-making, among other disincentives to Kichwa occupation.
Thus, this report demonstrates that, in practice, those responsible for these NPAs have been developing a model of conservation management that is exclusionary and imposed on the Kichwa people in San Martin.
Fully recognising their territorial rights and incorporating Kichwa forms of territorial control and management could lead to management models that are not only less exclusionary but more legitimate among the Indigenous population, because they would be based on a greater consensus and would respond to current international standards and regulations on the environment and Indigenous peoples. Likewise, this would allow society as a whole to better appreciate and recognise Indigenous strategies, generally the most effective form of conservation and, which, as pointed out in this report, are being developed outside the management of these NPAs.
Conservation Without Indigenous Peoples concludes with the following recommendations:
The Peruvian State must take immediate measures to fulfil its responsibility to recognise and protect the Indigenous territories of the Kichwa people through the collective titling that they have been demanding for years.
In addition, the management of both NPAs should develop specific mechanisms that include principles of Kichwa territoriality at different levels:
- Establish mechanisms for an adequate registry of Kichwa trails and places of traditional occupation based on research programmes that promote the identification of Indigenous sites, the analysis of anthropogenic forests and highlighting the role of Indigenous practices in the care of the forest.
- Include among its objectives the safeguarding of traditional Indigenous practices, and the care of sectors that allow conservation achievements to be evaluated under criteria concerning the care of Indigenous sectors, which strengthens traditional practices and preserves traditional knowledge
- Implement mechanisms to raise awareness amongst the local population not only of the current objectives linked to conservation, environmental care and management of NPAs, but also to respect and value traditional practices for the care of the forest.
- Consider monitoring and control mechanisms that include the participation of local Indigenous peoples.
- Establish adequate, horizontal, and culturally relevant governance and participation mechanisms that allow the Kichwa people to make decisions about the future of their traditional places of occupation. Likewise, facilitate and contribute, as far as possible, to the implementation of communal titling processes.
The report, is published by the Ethnic Council of the Kichwa Peoples of the Amazon (CEPKA), the Federation of Indigenous Kichwa Peoples of the Lower Huallaga San Martin (FEPIKBHSAM), the Federation of Indigenous Kichwa Peoples of Chazuta, Amazonia (FEPIKECHA), and the Coordinator for the Development and Defense of Indigenous Peoples of the San Martin Region (CODEPISAM), and Forest Peoples Programme.
The report is available in both English and Spanish:
Overview
- Resource Type:
- News
- Publication date:
- 10 November 2022
- Region:
- Peru
- Programmes:
- Conservation and human rights Territorial Governance Culture and Knowledge
- Partners:
- Consejo Étnico de los Pueblos Kichwa de la Amazonia (CEPKA) Federación de Pueblos Indígenas Kechua Chazuta Amazonas (FEPIKECHA) Federación de Pueblos Indígenas Kechwas del Bajo Huallaga San Martín (FEPIKBHSAM)
- Translations:
- Spanish: Nuevo informe revela los impactos en los derechos humanos de las áreas naturales protegidas excluyentes sobre el pueblo Kichwa de San Martín, Perú