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Annual World Water Forum
disappointing to indigenous
© Indian Country
Today April 10, 2006. All Rights
Reserved
MEXICO CITY - Indigenous peoples attending the recent 4th Annual
World Water Forum said the gathering catered to corporate interests,
while denying the legitimacy of indigenous people and their
spiritual vision of the sacredness of water.
They also said the World Water Forum's final ministerial
declaration, agreed to by 148 countries, diluted the assertion of
water as a basic human right of all people because the forum bowed
to the demands of transnational corporations.
While 1.1 billion people do not have access to clean water, the
forum's final declaration said water is a ''guarantee of life for
all of the world's people,'' but fell short of stating that water is
an unequivocal human right.
In the appendix of the declaration, Bolivia, Cuba and Venezuela did
state that water is an unequivocal human right of all people.
Enei Begaye, water campaigner for the Indigenous Environmental
Network and member of the Dine' and Tohono O'odham nations, attended
the forum and said indigenous people are at the center of the battle
for the right to water.
''Water is not only a human and indigenous right, it is a sacred and
powerful being,'' Begaye said. ''Our delegation is concerned that
water is quickly becoming the next great commodity. But amidst the
rampant corporate buy-up of water resources, there is a growing
movement for the protection of water as a basic human right.''
Indigenous community and spiritual leaders from the United States
and Canada attended the forum, which is sponsored every three years
by governments and corporate interests.
Saul Vicente Vasquez, Zapoteca from Mexico who works with the
International Indian Treaty Council, said, ''We don't trust the
federal officials and corporations in that meeting. At the local
level, they have been violating our indigenous rights to water. They
protect the rights of private ranchers and mining corporations over
the water needs of our people.''
During the forum, world water ministers, corporations and civil
society said they are challenged by the escalating water crisis.
The World Health Organization said 1.1 billion people lack clean
drinking water and that the resulting diseases kill 3.1 million
people a year. Inadequate or no sanitation cause 1.7 million deaths
each year.
Tom Goldtooth, director of the IEN, a non-governmental organization
that works with indigenous communities in the United States and
Canada on environmental and economic justice issues, said
governmental representatives at the forum were too close with the
private sector corporations to deal appropriately with the water
crisis.
''The U.S. and other northern industrialized countries have been
pushing privatization of water services and large expensive water
infrastructures as a quick fix remedy,'' said Goldtooth.
''In the end, our communities end up without water or no funding for
big expensive water systems.''
Goldtooth said the majority of the participants of the governmental
water forum are from an industrialized mindset that depends on
technology and market-based answers to solve this water crisis.
Meanwhile, governments are pushing more mineral extraction, energy
production and corporate agriculture that consume too much water.
''They have no environmental ethics and have no understanding of the
sacredness of water.''
Goldtooth said corporations see water as a commodity to be sold and
traded on the open market. ''That is why we brought a delegation of
indigenous activists familiar with both the political struggle as
well as understanding the sacredness of water.''
Ojibwe elder Josephine Mandamin, member of the Three Fires Mdewin
Society from Ontario, Canada, spoke during the forum on the topic of
''Is Water Alive?'' Mandamin is one of the grandmothers known as the
Water Keepers in the Great Lakes region.
''I have come here to talk to anyone that will listen to me. The
human beings on this planet need to know, and take care of, our
precious sacred resource: the water. It is one of the basic elements
needed for all life to exist.''
The U.S. and Canadian indigenous delegation met with indigenous from
Mexico, Bolivia and Chile in a parallel meeting organized for
indigenous peoples.
Wahleah Johns, member of the Dine' Nation and the Black Mesa Water
Coalition in Arizona, said coal mining has depleted the scarce
aquifer water of the Navajo and Hopi peoples on their tribal lands
in northern Arizona.
''Indigenous peoples don't have access to water, yet wasteful
companies right next door get all the water they want. These are
major injustices, and these are major human rights violations! On my
reservation, Peabody Coal Company has been depleting our
groundwater, our only drinking water source, just to feed a
coal-fired power plant.
''Where I'm from, water is scarce and we are taught that water is
sacred. Corporations and governments need to recognize the
indigenous relationship to water for all people.''
IEN partnered with Coalicion de Organizaciones Mexicanas por el
Derecho al Agua for a parallel two-day meeting of indigenous
peoples.
The 17-point Tlatokan Atlahuak Declaration was released as a voice
for the recognition and rights of indigenous peoples worldwide.
The indigenous peoples' declaration denounced the World Water Forum
as being ''financially prohibitive'' and excluding the very
indigenous peoples who are impacted by the world water crisis. As
Vasquez noted, ''Our indigenous peoples don't have the money to pay
the registration fee to go into the World Water Forum.''
Further, the declaration said the World Water Forum denied the
legitimacy of the indigenous world and spiritual vision of the
sacredness of water.
The declaration also recognized the need for an Indigenous Water
Defense Committee that would be formed to watchdog abuses and
violations of water rights within indigenous lands and territories.
Please visit the
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