The Philippine Star

Lumad’s rights violated in name of ‘conservati­on’

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HONOLULU (AFP) – Some of the world’s leading conservati­on groups are violating the rights of indigenous people or lumad by backing projects that oust them from their ancestral homes in the name of environmen­tal preservati­on, a top UN expert said this week.

UN special rapporteur Victoria Tauli-Corpuz’s latest report documents killings, evictions and lands being used for resource extraction without native consent – practices that affect millions of indigenous people across Asia, Africa and Latin America.

“Projects supported by major conservati­on organizati­ons continue to displace local peoples from their ancestral homes,” said Tauli- Corpuz, who gave a series of talks on her findings at the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature World Conservati­on Congress in Honolulu, the globe’s largest gathering of conservati­on leaders.

While she refrained from naming names in her report, she told AFP the groups in- clude the World Wildlife Fund, Conservati­on Internatio­nal and the Wildlife Conservati­on Society.

“They know who they are,” she said in an interview on the sidelines of the IUCN meeting, which has drawn 9,000 heads of states and environmen­talists to Hawaii for a 10- day meeting.

“From the reports I have received, these big conservati­on groups are some of the main groups that should account for what has happened.”

Tigers or people

In the past year, Tauli-Corpuz traveled to Honduras, Brazil, and to the Sami people in the Arctic regions of Finland, Norway and Sweden.

In Honduras, she met with indigenous Lenca activist, Berta Caceres, four months before she was killed in March 2016 “because of her protests against the Agua Zarca dam project, even though she had been awarded precaution­ary protection measures from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights,” said the report.

In Brazil, Tauli-Corpuz expressed deep concerns about “killings and violent evictions of the Kaiowa Guarani peoples in Mato Grosso (that) continue to take place.”

One of the main threats to the rights of the Sami people is the “increased drive to mineral extraction and the developmen­t of renewable energy projects,” added the report.

According to the Rights and Resources Initiative, a nongovernm­ental organizati­on that backs indigenous rights, other rights violations remain unresolved too, include the eviction of local people in India’s Kanha tiger reserve, even though evidence suggests people and tigers can co-inhabit the same area.

Nepal’s Chure region was declared a conservati­on area in 2014 without consulting the leaders of the indigenous communitie­s, who represent a population of five million people.

Local people have also been forced from their homes in Cameroon and Kenya.

Native people “are best equipped to protect the world’s most threatened forests, and have been doing so for decades,” said RRI Coordinato­r Andy White.

“Yet many conservati­on organizati­ons and government­s still treat them as obstacles to conservati­on rather than partners.”

Expanding problem

Indigenous territory is increasing­ly being included in “protected areas,” which have nearly doubled over the past two decades, from nearly nine million square kilometers in 1980 to six million square kilometers in 2000, said the report.

Traditiona­l indigenous lands tend to be particular­ly precious because they make up less than one quarter of the Earth’s land surface but contain 80 percent of the planet’s biodiversi­ty, it said.

Certainly, the areas in question are ultimately managed by government­s.

But conservati­on groups “are the ones that facilitate the money,” Tauli-Corpuz said.

“They can do much more in terms of putting more pressure on the government­s.”

‘Old story’

Conservati­on’s negative impact on indigenous people is “a constant and recurring theme since the establishm­ent of the mandate of the Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples in 2001,” the report said.

Indeed, the issue dates even further back, to when the United States violently expelled Native Americans from lands that were designated as Yellowston­e National Park in 1872 and Yosemite National Park in 1890.

“That is an old story, and that is not the story that we as conservati­onists are trying to make happen today,” said John Robinson, executive vice president for conservati­on and science at the Wildlife Conservati­on Society.

“If you look at the special rapporteur’s report, she is mostly just talking about history.”

But Tauli- Corpuz, an indigenous leader from the Kankanaey Igorot people of the Cordillera Region in the Philippine­s, disagreed.

“They say it is an old issue, it is like history. I say of course not,” she told AFP.

“That is precisely why I am making the report. Because it continues up until the present.”

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