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Indigenous Peoples as a Major Group
of Agenda 21 and the
United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development
Rio +10/World Summit on Sustainable Development PrepCom I
Multi-stakeholder Presentation
United Nations, New York, NY, April 30, 2001
Presented by the International Indian Treaty Council (ECOSOC
NGO) on behalf of the
Indigenous Peoples' Caucus
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
The following observations and suggestions are based on decades of
collective work done by hundreds of Indigenous Nations and
organizations at the international level as well as the grassroots
level.
In order to assess achievements and failures in sustainable
development since the 1992 Earth Summit, and to arrive at specific
proposals for action, the CSD Indigenous Peoples' Caucus has begun a
process of facilitating consultations in Asia and the Pacific, as well
as in South, Central and North America. We will do our part to
encourage the broadest possible input and participation in the
regional and local preparatory processes, as supported by General
Assembly Resolution 55/199. We strongly urge that member states and
the Secretariat insure that our Peoples participation will be fully
informed and effective, in keeping with recent decisions of COPS-5 of
the CBD, and other instruments.
We strongly urge that the process for setting the agenda and
determining themes for review be pro-active in institutionalizing
Indigenous Peoples' full and effective Rio+10 participation, for while
we are the most historically marginalized stakeholders, we also
actively contribute to sustainable development for all Peoples of the
world merely through our continued practice of traditional knowledge
and cultures, merely by our existence as self determined Peoples. Our
contributions are recognized throughout the UN system, especially in
Agenda 21, Chapter 26, the Report of UNCED and GA Resolution 48/163,
which underscores “the vital role of Indigenous Peoples and their
communities in the interrelationship between the natural environment
and its sustainable development…” We should therefore participate
fully and as a distinct Major Group in the Rio+10 process.
The Rio+10 agenda-setting process should note that a recent UNEP
Report re-affirms the obvious link between cultural diversity and
biological diversity. Let me share some extraordinary statistics with
you: Indigenous Peoples are estimated to make up only about 5% of the
world population, yet we represent about 90% of the world's cultural
diversity. It is no accident that over 80% of the world's remaining
biodiversity is found within our territories, since our traditional
practices within our territories (including forest and freshwater
management, and sustainable farming) have allowed us to safeguard the
well being of all life forms. We therefore urge an official Rio+10
thematic focus on Indigenous Peoples and Biodiversity.
Rio+10 is expected by many to result in specific time-bound
commitments for achieving the goals of sustainable development. We
therefore urge that the Rio+10 results include specific commitments to
harmonize development policy with international instruments, such as
the CBD, ILO Convention 169 and the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights. A multi-stakeholder dialogue is planned for the
Rio+10 process, in which Major Groups are expected to announce their
commitments to the next phase of work in Sustainable Development. But
as a prerequisite for Indigenous Peoples to contribute to sustainable
development, our human and collective rights must be observed and
respected, as proscribed by international law.
We have proven that our resistance to non-sustainable forms of
development, such as oil drilling, mining and large hydro power, has
contributed to the goals of Agenda 21, usually in spite of the actions
of industry, governments and multi-lateral lending institutions.
Therefore, the Rio+10 agenda should allow for action-oriented
discussion to address the forces that have caused the CSD to take
backward rather than forward steps toward sustainable development.
Among those are globalization, privatization and the growing
influence of industry within the UN, which was founded in 1945 as an
organization of Peoples.
We look forward to a constructive phase of action toward achieving the
sustainable development goals set out for the world community in 1992.
We pray that it is a phase characterized by political will, and a
true understanding of what was actually being supported by the
Brundtland Commission: the inter-relatedness of all life forms,
across many generations of life on Earth.
Thank you, all our relations. |

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Conferencia de CITI de 2008 en
Guatemala, nueva informacion para participantes
IITC 2008 Conference in Guatemala,
new information for participants
UNPFII 7th
Session, April 21st - May 2nd 2008, Interventions
and Statements
2008
International Indian Treaty Conference, Guatemala
SYMPOSIUM ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF
THE UN DECLARATION ON THE RIGHTS OF INDIGENOUS
PEOPLES” Monday April 21st, 2008, during UNPFII7
(PDF 555K)
Opening Statement of the Indigenous
Caucus, 11th Meeting of Negotiations in the Quest
for Points of Consensus, Organization of American
States April 14th, 2008
Declaración de Apertura del Conclave
de los Pueblos Indígenas XI Reunión de Negociaciones
para la Búsqueda de Puntos de Consensos Organización
de los Estados Americanos 14 de abril de 2008
Indigenous Peoples' Caucus, UN
Permanent Forum on April 19th & 20th , 2008 (PDF
90K)
Web link for Longest Walk 2
IITC Human Rights Forum” may 9th
2008, Southern Illinois University (PDF 244K)
NEW! IITC Power point: “Indigenous
Peoples’ Advocacy for a Rights and Culturally-based
Approach to Food Security”, April 3, 2008
(9.4 MB PowerPoint Presentation)
Treaty Conferences/2008 Guatemala,
“Provisional Conference Agenda” (PDF 28K)
The UN Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples, Treaties and the Right to Free,
Prior and Informed Consent: The Framework For a New
Mechanism for Reparations, Restitution and Redress,
submitted by the IITC to the UN Permanent Forum on
Indigenous Issues Seventh Session (UNPFII7) (PDF
80K)
NEW save the dates, 34th Anniversary
Treaty Conference, Chimaltenango Guatemala, June
19th – 22nd 2008 (PDF 448K)
Aparte las fechas, Asamblea Anual
XXXIV del Consejo Internacional de Tratados Indios
junio 19 a 22 de 2008, Chimaltenango, Guatemala (PDF
138K)
Report of the North America
Preparatory meeting for UNPFII7, Vancouver Canada,
February 22nd and 23rd 2008 (PDF 168K)
Hawaiian Land Rights decision by
Hawaiian Supreme Court, Nation of Hawaii calls upon
Legislature to "Cease and Desist", February 8, 2008
Indigenous Shadow Report to UN CERD
highlights Racism by United States, February 5th
2008
Peoples’ Shadow Report to the CERD on
the United States submitted by IITC January 2008
(PDF 400 KB)
New IITC Brochure
33rd annual Alcatraz Sunrise
Gathering, November 22nd 2007 (PDF 209K)
FINAL REPORT FROM THE INDIGENOUS
PEOPLES’ BORDER SUMMIT OF THE AMERICAS II SAN XAVIER
DISTRICT TOHONO O’ODHAM NATION NOVEMBER 7-10, 2007
Live Web Casts from the Indigenous
Peoples’ Border Summit II, San Xavier, Arizona
November 7 – 10, 2007
PUBLIC FORUM, Local Indigenous Environmental and
Sacred Sites Issues, Saturday, November 17 U of A
College of Law, Tucson AZ
Report of the Special Rapporteur on
the Right to Food to UN Human Rights Council and
General Assembly , May 2007 (see page 44 on
Indigenous Peoples in California and Alaska, USA)
PDF 243K
Alberta Chiefs of Treaty 6, 7 & 8
Express Disappointment Re: Canadian Federal
Government "Throne Speech", October 19th 2007 (PDF
50K)
AGROQUIMICOS: LA AMENAZA A NUESTRA
SALUD COMUNITARIA Y AL MEDIO AMBIENTE/ Pesticides:
The Threat to our Community Health and the
Environment, AHOME, SINALOA, Mexico, Octubre 26 - 28
2007, October 26 – 28, 2007 (PSD 52K)
IITC Training Manual for filing “Shadow Reports” for
the review of the United States by the UN Committee
on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination (CERD), October 17th, 2007 (PDF 578K)
IITC Human Rights Training Novmeber
8th 2007, during the Indigenous Peoples’ Border
Rights Summitt II, San Xavier Arizona! (PDF 79K)
UN Declaration for the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples adopted by the UN General
Assembly September 13th, 2007!
UN Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples as adopted by the UN General
Assembly September 13th 2007 (PDF 56k)
Declaracion de las Naciones Unidas
sobre los derechos de los Pueblos Indigenas,
adoptada por la Asemblea General el 13 de septiembre
de 2007 (PDF 60K)
IITC Statement on the
Adoption of the Declaration
on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples, September 16th 2007
(PDF 200K)
US
Statement against the adoption of the Declaration on
the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, September 13th
2007 (PDF 53K)
CSD 15th session, 2007, April 30 - May 11, 2007
Link for the
COMMITTEE FOR THE ELIMINATION OF
RACIAL DISCRIMINATION,
Seventieth session,
19 February – 9 March 2007, Concluding
observations re: CANADA/
COMITÉ PARA LA ELIMINACIÓN DE LA
DISCRIMINACIÓN RACIAL, Septuagésimo
período de sesiones, 19 de febrero – 9 de marzo de
2007, Observaciones
finales sobre
CANADA
Appointment of
Indigenous UNPFII members (2008-2010) announced,
April 20, 2007
Treaty Council News Winter 2007 (PDF
1MB)
IITC Submission to the UN High
Commissioner on Human Rights for her study on the
Human Right to Water, April 15th, 2007 (PDF 136k)
Pesticides are Poison” booklet now
available online
Los Plaguicidas son Venenos” manual
ahora disponible en internet
UN Web page, Indigenous Peoples and
Treaties, the UN Treaty Study Expert Seminars
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