Cordillera Peoples Alliance rep talks to UN on IP rights
>> Wednesday, May 21, 2014
BEHIND
THE SCENES
Alfred
P. Dizon
This is a joint statement of the Cordillera Peoples
Alliance, National Alliance of Indigenous Peoples Organizations in the
Philippines (KAMP), Stop the Killing of Indigenous Peoples in the Philippines
network, BAI National Network of Indigenous Women’s Organizations, Innabuyog
alliance of indigenous women’s organizations in the Cordillera region,
Kalumaran alliance of indigenous peoples’ organizations in Mindanao, and
Tumanduk.
In the Philippines, the National Commission on
Indigenous Peoples or NCIP continues to be a major concern in relation to the
genuine recognition and respect of our inherent rights as indigenous peoples as
enshrined in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP).
The NCIP is mandated by law, through the Indigenous
Peoples Rights Act of 1997, to promote
and protect the rights and well-being of the indigenous peoples in the country.
However, for 17 years since its establishment in 1997, the NCIP has not truly
upheld indigenous peoples’ rights. Instead, it served as a tool for
perpetrating development aggression and massive natural resource extraction,
systematic land grabbing, human rights violations, and violations to our right
to self-determination, self-determined sustainable development, and collective
rights to our land and resources.
The
NCIP has been instrumental in the entry of destructive projects in indigenous
territories by facilitating the Free Prior and Informed Consent of indigenous
peoples in favor of the corporations. These FPIC are usually acquired through
manipulation, deceit, and coercion and with disregard to indigenous
communities’ customary systems and practices in decision-making. To date, there
are a total of 251 approved large-scale mining projects covering 532,530
hectares of indigenous lands, most of which have anomalous FPIC. This is on top
of ongoing operations and newly approved energy projects that destroy what is
left of our natural resources and environment on which we depend on for
survival.
The
NCIP likewise remains silent on the militarization of indigenous communities;
and the unabated extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, harassment,
forced evacuation, filling of trumped-up charges and other human rights abuses
committed against indigenous peoples. As of April 2014, forty-four indigenous
peoples have already been killed under the present administration since July
2010, and under its OplanBayanihan Counter Insurgency Program and pretenses of
peace and development. Many indigenous peoples who are asserting their rights
to FPIC, to ancestral land and resources, and for human rights are politically
vilified, are facing threats to their lives, and have been victims of human
rights violations as in the case of Cordillera Peoples Alliance members in
northern Philippines.
In
conclusion, the NCIP has for a long time failed to protect indigenous peoples’
rights and well-being and instead worsens the violations of indigenous peoples’
rights and human rights. It is for this reason that our organizations are now
calling for the dismantling of the NCIP.
We
reiterate the following recommendations which we have in the past forwarded to
various UN bodies including the UNPFII, Expert Mechanism on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples (EMRIP), Convention for the Elimination of all forms of
Racial Discrimination (CERD), Universal Periodic Review (UPR) and Special
Rapporteurs on Indigenous Peoples:
- Recognize indigenous peoples’ right to our ancestral lands and domains.
- Ensure independence of the FPIC process through non-intervention by the NCIP, the company and military. Ensure that all necessary information for proper decision-making is provided to the community.
- Avoid using funds and projects to influence the FPIC process.
- Give primacy to the indigenous community’s decision making systems, customary laws and recognized tribal councils over the NCIP-facilitated FPIC process.
We
urge the Philippine government to repeal the Philippine Mining Act of 1995,
revoke Executive Order 79 and support the passage of an alternative mining law
in Congress that will uphold the rights of indigenous peoples and re-orient the
mining industry to pursue a strategic and systematic national industry
We
urge the Philippine government to revoke Oplan Bayanihan, stop militarization of
indigenous communities and human rights violations including extrajudicial
killings, enforced disappearances and harassment of indigenous peoples,
leaders, human rights defenders and their advocates. Immediately bring the
perpetrators of human rights violations to justice, ensure indemnification for the
victims and end the culture of impunity.Thank you everyone for your attention.
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