Stabroek News

First global funding pact launched to secure indigenous land rights

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STOCKHOLM, (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Indigenous people under threat from companies seeking to develop their land for agricultur­e, mining and energy projects will be supported with money and practical help through a major global partnershi­p backed by philanthro­pic and government funding.

The Internatio­nal Land and Forest Tenure Facility is the first initiative to provide grants to advance the rights of indigenous people to help them protect their forest land and resources.

“Creating mechanisms that allow indigenous peoples and local communitie­s to gain tenure over their land or forests is a key way to tackle climate change and inequality,” said Darren Walker, president of the Ford Foundation, a major backer.

The facility won a $20 million pledge from Norway on Tuesday when it was launched at a land rights conference in Stockholm.

Indigenous people and rural communitie­s have customary claims to two thirds of the world’s land but are legally recognised as holding only 10 percent, according to the Rights and Resources Initiative (RRI), a global network.

This has contribute­d to an increase in conflicts over land in countries rich in tropical forests and natural resources as agribusine­sses, mining and energy companies lay claim to indigenous land and forests.

Forests absorb planet-warming carbon dioxide and when they are degraded or destroyed, the carbon stored in the trees is released into the atmosphere. Deforestat­ion accounts for 10 to 15 percent of carbon emissions worldwide.

If the facility invests at least $10 million a year for its first 10 years, experts project an increase in titled, protected and well-managed community and indigenous tropical forests of more than 40 million hectares, an area roughly the size of Sweden.

Such efforts would also prevent deforestat­ion of one million hectares and the release of 500 million tonnes of carbon dioxide and help reduce poverty among indigenous people, the RRI said.

“The Tenure Facility provides a powerful solution to save the world’s forests from the ground up,” said Carin Jämtin, director general of the Swedish Internatio­nal Developmen­t Cooperatio­n Agency, another key funder.

The facility has already provided grants and guidance for pilot projects in Indonesia, Mali, Peru, Cameroon, Liberia and Panama.

A 2015 peace accord that ended Mali’s civil war failed to address land-based conflicts that contribute­d to the war, said Boubacar Diarra, the project’s coordinato­r in the West African country.

The facility helped to set up 17 local land commission­s to sort through conflictin­g claims to determine who owns the land, he said.

“These commission­s have reduced conflicts by up to a third by working with local villagers and tribal leaders,” Diarra told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

 ?? REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino ?? Indigenous people of southern Brazil take part in a protest against the report of the parliament­ary commission of inquiry that investigat­es fraud and irregulari­ties in the process of demarcatio­n of indigenous lands, made by National Indian Foundation...
REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino Indigenous people of southern Brazil take part in a protest against the report of the parliament­ary commission of inquiry that investigat­es fraud and irregulari­ties in the process of demarcatio­n of indigenous lands, made by National Indian Foundation...

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