Thursday, December 13, 2007

Indigenous Peoples protest World Bank carbon scam in Bali

Indigenous Peoples, including Navajo and Mohawk representatives of the Indigenous Environmental Network, are now in Bali at the 13th United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Indigenous Peoples from around the world are protesting both the exclusion from the climate negotiations and the World Bank's carbon scam.

During protests outside the climate negotiations, Indigenous people wore symbolic gags that read UNFCCC, the acronym of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, symbolizing their systematic exclusion from the United Nations meeting.

A delegation of indigenous peoples was forcibly barred from entering the meeting between UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer and civil society representatives, despite the fact that the indigenous delegation was invited to attend. This act is representative of the systematic exclusion of indigenous peoples in the UNFCCC process, the group said.

"There is no seat or name plate for indigenous peoples in the plenary, nor for the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, the highest level body in the United Nations that addresses indigenous peoples rights," said Hubertus Samangun, the Focal Point of the Indigenous Peoples delegation to the UNFCCC and the Focal Point for English Speaking Indigenous Peoples of the Global Forest Coalition.

"Indigenous peoples are not only marginalized from the discussion, but there is virtually no mention of indigenous peoples in the more that 5 million words of UNFCCC documents," argued Alfred Ilenre of the Edo People of Nigeria.

Indigenous Peoples said this is occurring despite the fact that they are suffering the most from climate change and climate change mitigation projects that directly impact their lands.

(Read about Chile's Mapuche indian battle with the Norwegian government owned hydro-developer, SN Power: Norwegian Power Projects in Mapuche, Chile Heartland Plunder Environment , Mapuche Protest against Norwegian Hydroelectric Power , SN Power, Norway, & Pacific Hydro, Australia, move on La Confluencia dam project on the Tinguiririca River- effort to reduce Europe's Carbon Emissions )

Indigenous peoples are in Bali to denounce the false solutions to climate change proposed by the United Nations such as carbon trading, agrofuels and so-called "avoided deforestation" that devastate their lands and cause human rights violations.

"This process has become nothing but developed countries avoiding their responsibilities to cut emissions and pushing the responsibility onto developing countries," said Fiu Mata'ese Elisara-Laula, of the O Le Siosiomaga Society of Samoa, in a statement. "Projects like REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation in Developing countries) sound very nice but they are trashing our indigenous lands. People are being relocated and even killed; my own people will soon be under water. That's why I call the money from the projects blood money," he added.

(See more here: Indonesia: WALHI Protest against Kyoto, Carbon Trade, Clean Development Mechanism , A gift from Scotland to Brazil: drought and despair )

Marcial Arias of the Kuna People of Panama reminded the international community that indigenous peoples' right to participate was recognized in the Earth Summit in 1992 and reaffirmed this year. "On September 13th of this year, the United Nations General Assembly adopted the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples [1] which enshrines the fundamental human rights of indigenous peoples to their lands, territories and environment. It is precisely these rights recognized by the UN itself that the UNFCCC is violating," he explained.
Jihan Gearon, Dine’ Navajo Nation, IEN energy & climate campaign organizer and Benjamin Powless, Mohawk, Six Nations, Ontario, Canada, IEN youth representative, are in Bali and taking on the world's super powers.

Gearon, writing from Bali, said Indigenous People need a much bigger and better seat at the table.

“Our communities and livelihoods are the first affected by climate change. We are also the most affected by the unsustainable solutions being proposed to solve climate change – nuclear power, clean coal, carbon sequestration, reforestation, carbon trading, etc. Yet, instead of having real input in the UNFCCC process, we have to spend our time picking through words. And while we’re busy doing that, those people who want to sacrifice us to put some dollars in their pockets, make the decisions.

"This past September 13th, the UN General Assembly adopted the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which protects the rights of Indigenous Peoples to their lands, territories and environment. Yet through the faulty process and false climate change solutions of the UNFCCC, it’s these fundamental human rights that are being violated.

"The Indigenous Peoples here in Bali are asking the United Nations to live up to their words, to listen to us, and to stop with the false solutions that devastate our lands, threaten our ways of life, and deny our human rights."

Here is the full text.