Stabroek News

The main issue is the Marudi Agreement was signed without effective Indigenous participat­ion

- Dear Editor,

Thank you for providing me the opportunit­y and space to comment on the recent visit of the high level team to Aishalton on Saturday the 29th November, 2021, concerning the signed agreement between GGMC, the Rupununi Miners Associatio­n, Romanex, and Aurous. The visit came after the SRDC wrote a letter to the Minister and published a press release denouncing the agreement as being signed in violation of our right to free, prior, and informed consent.

The November 29th meeting was framed as a “consultati­on” over the mining agreement. “Consultati­on” is a distorted word, especially by the authoritie­s that be, including the mining companies and politician­s. The meeting on 29th November cannot be considered a consultati­on, as we were provided with no prior informatio­n or time to prepare for the meeting. The Toshao was not even afforded the respect of advance notice for the meeting. Instead, on Friday the 28th November, a regional official visited some communitie­s and told residents to say they support the mining in Marudi and to say that 90% of our people mine in Marudi, when we know that is not true. Agents of the regional official were walking around our villages in the night to have documents signed. Is this the way ‘consultati­ons’ are supposed to be carried out?

At the meeting in Aishalton on November 29th, we heard the principle of Free

Prior and Informed Consent mentioned several times. The principle of FPIC was similarly invoked by our Head of State at COP26 in Glasgow. These speeches sound inspiring, but what is happening on the ground is a horse of a totally different colour. Our communitie­s have still yet to even receive any copy of the signed agreement, let alone have any meaningful opportunit­y to participat­e in the negotiatio­n and drafting of the agreement. Indeed, respecting our right to FPIC is impossible now that the agreement is already signed; the only remedy now is to revoke the agreement and recommence the process of discussion­s over what activities to allow at Marudi with our effective participat­ion.

Statements by government representa­tives in the meeting and in the press seem to suggest that a few is raising objections to this agreement because we do not want developmen­t for our communitie­s. This is false. The issue is not about whether we want mining or not, or the possible benefits of mining, or about how many permits have been granted previously; the main issue is that this agreement, which authorizes activities on our traditiona­l lands and will have direct impacts on our Indigenous Communitie­s, was signed without our effective participat­ion and inclusion in decision-making. Marudi is a sacred mountain and is in our Traditiona­l Lands, in an area where we have a pending extension applicatio­n, and we have formally claimed it as such since the 1967 Amerindian

Lands Commission Report.

It is true that there have been mining permits issued over Marudi for years, but any change in circumstan­ces immediatel­y demands meaningful and effective consultati­on with the consent of the rightshold­ers, the Wapichan nao, before any agreement can be signed. Don’t put the cart before the horse and say that all is well because it is not. We have previously objected to decisions being made about Marudi without us and we will continue to do so once we are being excluded from decisions that will have lasting impacts on our villages. The continued and serious violation of our rights as Indigenous Peoples to Free Prior Informed Consent and to effectivel­y participat­e in decisionma­king affecting us violates the protection­s in the Constituti­on of Guyana for our cultural heritage and way of life, as well as the rights protected in internatio­nal convention­s incorporat­ed therein. In addition, in 2018, the Caribbean Court of Justice, our nation’s highest court, explained that our “Constituti­on’s Preamble indicates the determinat­ion of the Guyanese people to ‘forge a system of governance that promotes concerted effort and broad-based participat­ion in national decision-making in order to develop a viable economy and a harmonious community based on democratic values, social justice, fundamenta­l human rights, and the rule of law’” (McEwan and Ors v. A.G. Guyana, [2018] CCJ 30 (AJ), para. 61, per PCCJ Saunders).

Where was the broad-based participat­ion when our lands, our sacred mountains, were again burdened by mining concession­s and permits, and we learned of this via a Facebook post? Imagine if this were your house or your farm. Imagine if this was one of your sacred places, your church, mosque or temple. Where was the concern for social justice and the fundamenta­l human rights of Indigenous peoples, we who must live with the direct consequenc­es when the others have all moved on? In the same case, the CCJ further explained that our constituti­onal promise of equality prohibits the State from adopting measures “that treat a group of persons as second-class citizens or in any way that otherwise offends their dignity as human beings” (para. 66). This is how we have been made to feel; secondclas­s citizens, whose dignity and rights have been trampled on, yet again.

I demand of the present and future government­s to respect us as first-class citizens who deserve respect, especially for our rights to our lands, territorie­s and natural resources, our right to be consulted in accordance with our traditiona­l norms, and our right to give our consent, be it negative or positive, free of political interferen­ce, intimidati­on or any other form of coercion. When are we going to stand up and ensure that human rights of Indigenous Peoples are respected and upheld?

Sincerely,

Chief Tony James Wapichan Elder

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