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TOPIC: FOOD SECURITY AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
INDIGENOUS ENVIRONMENTAL NETWORK
STATEMENT
ON THE RIGHT TO FOOD
AND FOOD SECURITY
From the Indigenous Environmental
Network’s 12th Annual Protecting Mother Earth Conference
“What We Do Now, Touches the Next Seven Generations”
Penticton Indian
Band Okanagan Nation Territories, Penticton, British Columbia, Canada,
August 2-5, 2001
Near 700
Indigenous peoples, including youth, from Canada, United States,
Mexico and some from Central America and South America gathered on the
traditional lands of the Penticton Indian Band in Okanagan Territory
in what is known as British Columbia, Canada. Indigenous
organizations, communities and representatives of tribes and bands
came together to work on our commitment to take responsibility to
protect Mother Earth, the health of our Indigenous communities and the
biodiversity or Circle of Life. This gathering was hosted by
the Penticton Indian Band of the Okanagan Nation and the En’okwin
Centre.
Primary issues
whereby statements were developed were: Right to Food and Food
Security; Energy; and Water. Within these discussions were
educational workshops on issues of toxic and radioactive contamination
from agricultural, military and industrial activities; mining and
mineral extraction; the need for sustainable forest ecosystems;
climate change as a result of energy policies that depend on fossil
fuel production; risk assessment policies that don’t protect
Indigenous lands and resources; and environmental health. Within the
conference, participants wove into these issues concerns about the
impacts on how economic globalization, regional, bilateral and global
trading mechanisms and western forms of development have not been
sustainable. Participants consistently expressed concerns that
national-state governmental policies either were absent or not
effective towards protecting the rights of Indigenous peoples,
protection of treaty territories, land, air and water, biodiversity,
food and sacred sites.
These impacts
have been disruptive to the ability of Indigenous peoples to protect
our traditional territories, maintain or develop sustainable economic
systems and to practice our traditional gathering, hunting and fishing
cultures. This disruption has severely affected the ability of
Indigenous communities to maintain sustainable food and economic
security systems that have been developed and refined for millennia.
Indigenous peoples – from the North to the South - historically and
currently are experiencing poverty, economic dependency from
federalism and industrial development, experiencing the symptoms of
colonization - like internalized oppression – malnourishment and
hunger. It was stressed that language is the foundation of Indigenous
identity both to the natural world and to each other. When the
connection to healthy and sustainable ecosystems is disturbed by lost
of habitat, biodiversity and traditional foods, this affects the
ability to pass on language that is closely linked to our environment,
our foods and our relationship to the sacredness of our Mother Earth.
An all-day
plenary was held during this gathering entitled, “Sustainable
Agriculture, Traditional Food Systems and the Right to Food.” The
International Indian Treaty Council assisted in the planning and
coordination of this plenary. This document reflects the voices,
concerns and inspirations of those Indigenous participants present
both at this plenary and other meetings and workshops throughout the
conference.
Statements of
Fact
-
The right to
food is recognized as a basic human right under the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, and the Universal Declaration
on the Eradication of Hunger and Malnutrition.
-
For many
millennia, the Indigenous peoples have developed and refined
traditional sustainable agriculture, maintained hunting, fishing,
and gathering practices, developed animal husbandry, all based on
Indigenous and local knowledge handed down through the generations.
These practices have enabled our Indigenous communities to achieve
sustainability and food security - to adequately address hunger and
nutrition - providing sufficient food year after year despite
fluctuations in weather patterns and natural disturbances. By
adhering to these practices, our Indigenous communities have been
able to retain economic independence and self-sufficiency, and
ensure that the diversity of plant and animal species remains high.
3. Over 80% of the world’s remaining biodiversity is found within
Indigenous peoples’ lands and territories. Indigenous peoples
represent approximately 350 million individuals in the world and make
up approximately 90% of the world’s cultural diversity. We use our
highly specialized, traditional knowledge to care for and conserve the
interconnected web or “Circle of Life” known as
“biodiversity.”
-
Over
millennia, Indigenous peoples have become physically and
metabolically accustomed to the foods found, gathered and cultivated
in local areas and the animals we have traditionally hunted, fished,
and raised. Food is the main medicine, essential to community and
individual health. Our bodies are made of our food and the land that
provides it. Many of our spiritual practices are centered on our
traditional foods, and we have a profound and deeply ingrained
spiritual and cultural relationship with our lands and territories
that has been well documented. Some Indigenous tribal cultures
derive their family clan or kinship identification from certain food
groups and animals.
-
Government
policies have allowed natural resource extraction and development
activities that have historically destroyed and currently threaten
subsistence foods, traditional and modern small-scale agricultural
practices and other food systems in North America, the Americas and
all over the world, depriving Indigenous peoples of their basic
human right to food security. Governmental policies and development
activities often put Indigenous and local communities into a state
of poverty, malnourishment and hunger. To mention only a few types
of activities and their results:
·
Industrial toxic and radioactive releases now pollute both land and
water, accumulating in the fish, traditional crops, commercial food
supply, animals, and soil that are interrelated and essential for
survival.
 |
Mining
operations cause the displacement of communities, destruction of
natural habitat, disruption of sacred sites, and cause
severe water pollution with deadly toxins, water depletion from
surface, subsurface and aquifers, as well as the diversion of
water away from our communities. |
 |
Oil drilling
and related activities fragment the landscape, leading to
increased colonization, development, and deforestation, along with
pollution of land and water and irreparable damage to fragile
ecosystems. |
 |
Clear-cutting, other intensive logging methods, and trade
liberalization of forest products destroy the forest habitat of
animals and fish, cause soil erosion, thermal pollution, and
pollute water with both sediment and herbicides. |
 |
Industrial
agriculture and large-scale commercial animal production and
processing facilities degrade soils, contaminate the air and
water, threaten native seed stocks, disrupt historical, cultural
and sacred areas and displace traditional agricultural and food
security practices. |
 |
Large
hydro-electric projects flood the lands that sustain Indigenous
peoples’ food security, disrupt and destroy subsistence-based
cultural practices, and forcibly displace entire communities.
|
 |
Drug
trafficking and armed conflict displace Indigenous communities.
The responses of domestic and foreign governments to political
violence and illegal economic activity, such as the massive
fumigation of croplands and forests as part of “Plan Colombia,”
further threaten Indigenous agricultural and other food security
practices. |
 |
Genetically
modified organisms and seeds pose a serious threat to the native
seed stocks and plants carefully cultivated by Indigenous
agriculturalists for millennia, as in the recent genetic
contamination of several varieties of native maize in Mexico, the
center of origin and diversity for maize; in the meantime, the
corporations and universities that produce these modified seeds
are attempting to deprive Indigenous peoples of their intellectual
property rights to traditionally cultivated seed strains. |
-
Increasing
dependence on non-traditional processed commercial foods of a
consumer-oriented society is damaging the health of Indigenous
peoples. Diet-related maladies such as obesity and diabetes are
elevated in Indigenous communities with diabetes rates in some
communities as high as 85 percent. Thyroid diseases, immune system
disorders and cancers are also rampant. In industrialized countries
such as the United States, virtually all food products are
contaminated with persistent organic pollutants (POPs). While POPs
residue levels in individual food items are small, when viewed in
the context of daily amounts of food consumption, the contamination
found is at or near levels of concern according to health-based
standards set by US federal agencies.
-
Developing
fetuses and children are especially vulnerable to problems caused by
exposure to POPs. Indigenous peoples are exposed both to
contaminated foods from commercially-processed, traditional and
subsistence foods, raising concerns of disproportionate exposures to
contaminated subsistence foods such as, but not limited to fish and
animals that are higher up in the food chain. Indigenous peoples
from the arctic regions to the tropical and commercial agricultural
regions, where industry, mining and agricultural chemicals are
discharged, are found to experience higher health risks and toxic
exposure, as compared to dominant society.
-
Government
agencies and corporations have not responded sufficiently and
responsibly to the massive natural resource development, cleanup and
mitigation of natural resource damage and environmental problems on
Indigenous lands. On the other hand, these same governments and
corporations often respond quickly and more thoroughly when even
minor toxic spills and exposures threaten non-Indigenous
institutions and communities.
Conclusions
1. For
many millennia and on every continent, Indigenous peoples have created
successful and durable frameworks for sustainability based on
ceremony, ritual and traditional cultural practices. These practices
function like highly regulated legal systems, based on natural and
spiritual laws, and they ensure long-term conservation and
sustainability through traditional management, control and monitoring
systems. Long-tenured and place-based traditional knowledge of the
environment is valuable, and has been proven to be valid and
effective. This knowledge should not be compromised by over-reliance
on relatively recent and narrowly defined western scientific methods
and standards.
2. Access
to and protection of traditional lands and water rights, the
continuation of traditional practices, and conservation of seed stocks
are prerequisites to food security and the eradication of hunger.
Traditional Indigenous food production relies on cooperative,
collective harvesting and distribution, ensuring that everyone
receives an equitable share and that surpluses are given to those most
in need. Maintaining economic autonomy is essential to maintaining
Indigenous solidarity.
3. The
threats to the survival of traditional practices, and in turn to the
survival of Indigenous peoples, are common to communities all around
the world. Imposed disruption of food and traditional economic
systems, established cycles of agriculture, food gathering, hunting,
and fishing, is a form of continued colonization that damages the
attitudes, and eventually the cultural knowledge, of Indigenous
peoples.
Hunger and food
insecurity are unfortunate companions to poverty and undeveloped
economies.
Solidarity among Indigenous communities in resistance to these threats
is essential.
-
This
colonization can be subtle, as in the case of organic farming
standards that require changes in sustainable agricultural methods
that have been practiced by Indigenous peoples for millennia. It can
also be overt and fundamentally aimed at the displacement of
traditional Indigenous peoples from their territories through
destruction of self-sufficiency and economic autonomy. This in turn
facilitates resource extraction and industrial agriculture. Either
form of colonization is worthy of resistance.
-
Historically,
development activities have been based upon a western model to raise
gross domestic product at the expense of recognition of basic human
rights.
-
Climate change
and global warming by greenhouse gases (CO2) have been found to
negatively impact food security within Indigenous lands. Oil, gas
and coal increases the greenhouse gases. The combination of climate
change and environmental degradation has: created conditions that
have spread infectious disease; altered the balance of predators and
prey; disrupted the ecological balance effecting the biodiversity
and loss of species; destroyed forests and marine ecosystems; caused
frequent and violent storms, hurricanes and drought; caused
destruction of fisheries, rising sea levels threatening the survival
of small island states and many other effects.
-
Money cannot
fully compensate for debilitating illnesses, death, loss of
traditional lands, degraded water quality, threatened long-term food
security, or diminished economic autonomy. Therefore, precautionary
principles and the prevention of harm should be the cornerstones for
agricultural or any other type of development that will affect
Indigenous peoples.
-
The policies
of economic globalization, carried out by financial and trade
institutions and agreements such as the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA), other global institutions as the World Bank, the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Trade Organization (WTO)
all stress food production for export rather than for local
consumption. Under these trade regimes food is neither produced nor
distributed equitably. Indigenous and local communities and
farmers, who once nourished themselves from local sustainable food
systems, are forced from their lands, either by forced-choice or no
choice, due to privatization of their lands or development of
large-scale agribusiness or natural resource extraction. Indigenous
peoples and local farmers are forced to migrate to cities to compete
for low-wage jobs, resulting in putting themselves and their
families in conditions of poverty, malnourishment and hunger.
Demands
-
Governments
must unconditionally support the adoption by the United Nations of
the current United Nations Draft Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous peoples.
-
Government and
industry must recognize that Indigenous peoples’ food related
traditional knowledge and practices are valid and valuable to food
security, yet they must not implement policies that violate
Indigenous peoples’ rights to maintain their traditional knowledge,
practices, seeds and other food related genetic resources.
-
Governments
should support, rather than discourage or infringe upon, Indigenous
peoples’ own methods and institutions for the registration,
protection, management and continuation of traditional knowledge,
practices and food related genetic resources.
-
Governments
must take effective steps to ensure that Indigenous peoples can
freely access their lands and territories, and protect the
biological regions and habitats in which their traditional knowledge
and foods are based.
-
Governments
and multinationals must, under international human rights standards,
consult with Indigenous peoples in all matters that may affect them,
including those that will affect their subsistence, right to food
and food security. These consultations must be carried out in “good
faith,” meaning that there is no fraud, manipulation, duress nor
guarantee that agreement will be reached on the specific project or
measure. Good faith consultations also require that the Indigenous
peoples involved:
·
Give free and informed consent to conduct the consultations;
·
Be
provided the means and capacity to fully participate in them; and
·
Can exercise both their local and/or traditional decision-making
processes, including the direct participation of their spiritual and
ceremonial authorities and the traditional practitioners of
subsistence and cultural ways in the consultation process and the
expression of consent for the particular project or measure
-
Industrial,
natural resource, agricultural development and the application of
technology in Indigenous communities must not threaten the
communities’ economic autonomy or long-term, traditionally-based
food security, and must therefore respect Indigenous peoples self
determination, rights to land, water and other productive resources,
as well as the right of a community to provide for itself in
accordance with their millennial traditional knowledge.
-
International
mechanisms must be developed to support technology transfer,
capacity building and financial mechanisms to Indigenous communities
to address poverty, malnourishment, hunger and other food security
issues related to building sustainable development initiatives that
embrace traditional knowledge. Developing
sustainable food systems can meet our need for food and expanded
economic development.
-
Governments
must expeditiously sign and ratify the Stockholm POPs Convention.
Governments and their heads of state and environment ministers
around the world must ratify the POPs treaty and three other
treaties: the Rotterdam Convention on prior informed consent for
trade in hazardous chemicals and pesticides; the Basel Convention
and its 1995 ban on the export of hazardous wastes from OECD to
non-OECD countries; and the 1996 Protocol to the London Convention
on ocean dumping.
-
In order to
protect human health, native seeds and other food related genetic
resources, there should be an immediate moratorium on the
development, cultivation and use of genetically modified seeds,
plants, fish and other organisms.
-
Governments
and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (FCCC)
must take rigorous steps and immediate and effective measures to
stop CO2 emissions in the sites of origin. There must be a
moratorium of the expansion and exploration of new sites of oil,
natural gas and coal development in and near Indigenous lands as a
step towards eliminating fossil fuels as a primary energy source.
The promotion of clean renewable energy.
-
A moratorium
on bilateral and multilateral loans, and on national credits and
subsidies by the World Bank, IMF and other national and
international financial mechanisms for natural resource development,
logging and deforestation, hydrocarbon extraction projects, fossil
fuel energy generating projects, nuclear power, mega-scale hydro
electric projects, mining and other developments, until a national
assessment and inventory is conducted on the social, economic and
cultural impacts of these developments on Indigenous peoples. This
moratorium must also be applied to the Structural Adjustment Program
(SAP’s), which heavily influence the economic and social policies of
debtor governments, hence impacting the poverty and food security
status of Indigenous peoples.
-
The
cancellation of the internal debt of countries of the South, which
results in pressure for unsustainable natural resource developments
and energy extraction.
-
Governments,
industry and multi-lateral institutions should adopt and abide by
the precautionary principle in all decisions, recognizing that each
decision will have impacts on the future generations of all Peoples.
INDIGENOUS
ENVIRONMENTAL NETWORK
– PO Box 485, Bemidji, Minnesota 56619 USA, Tel: + 1 218 751 4967,
Fax: + 1 218 751 0561, email:
ien@igc.org
www.ienearth.org
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