Indigenous peoples’ sustainable solutions to environmental crises
>> Monday, June 9, 2014
BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
(Antonella Cordone,
technical adviser and coordinator for indigenous and tribal issues at the
International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) writes this week’s
piece. Any views expressed in this
article are those of the author and not of Thomson Reuters Foundation.)
I first met Victoria Tauli-Corpuz 11 years ago in Rome. An indigenous
Filipina activist, Vicky was attending a meeting on indigenous peoples' rights
at the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the
United Nations rural development agency where I work. In fact, it was the first
time indigenous peoples' representatives had ever been invited to IFAD's
offices on the outskirts of the Eternal City. Since then, IFAD and the UN
system as a whole have made progress on bringing indigenous issues and
priorities into the mainstream of our work – though we still have plenty more
to do.
Flash forward to New York this spring, when I heard Vicky's name called
by the chair of the UN Permanent Forum on
Indigenous Issues in the General Assembly hall at UN
headquarters. Through the forum, indigenous peoples' representatives advise the
world body and its member states on indigenous peoples' rights and development.
A few weeks before its annual session kicked off in early May, Vicky had been
named Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
I felt a sense of pride and admiration, which I'm sure was widely shared
in the crowded hall. Vicky is the first woman to be appointed to this critical
and sometimes delicate role. As Special Rapporteur, she will be responsible for
promoting indigenous peoples' rights through new laws, programmes and
agreements between indigenous communities and national governments. She will
also report on the overall human rights status of indigenous peoples in
different countries.
But even more striking than Vicky's appointment to the post was her
message to the members of the Permanent Forum.
“It is time to step out of the paradigm of victimhood," she said,
"because we, indigenous peoples, can provide sustainable solutions to the
world's crises. Indigenous peoples are not to be seen only as endangered
victims to be protected … but also as carriers of knowledge and traditions that
– far from being ancient and outdated – can offer concrete solutions to modern
crises."
For example, Vicky pointed out that climate change is one of the most
pressing issues facing developing and developed countries alike. Indigenous
peoples can help the world address this challenge through sustainable practices
that stem from their holistic view of life, she said, adding that indigenous
communities have preserved the ecosystems in which they live for millennia.
Vicky went on to highlight another relevant challenge: preserving the
biodiversity of food, which has declined as a result of industrial food
production. Areas that are home to indigenous peoples also happen to host some
of the planet's most biodiverse ecosystems, she noted.
This is partly because biodiversity is central to indigenous land
management strategies. At the same time, indigenous territories have not been
subject to the intensive development and extraction of natural resources that
has depleted biodiversity elsewhere.
For indigenous peoples, food is not a commodity. Instead, it is
traditionally linked to social, cultural and spiritual values, and a worldview
that centres on being nourished by mother earth and nourishing her in return.
Not surprisingly, indigenous women are often the bearers of precious
knowledge on food and crop biodiversity that is passed down through the
generations. This knowledge has so far been largely neglected outside of
indigenous communities. Yet indigenous agricultural and environmental practices
can be useful tools in building a global response to hunger and malnutrition.
"We need to stop seeing indigenous peoples only as victims, and we
need to stop regarding their knowledge as ancient, outdated, belonging merely
to the past," Vicky asserted at the Permanent Forum. Of course, she was
right. In fact, indigenous knowledge is truly modern when it comes to
sustainable development. It is a key to the future of food production,
agricultural development and environmental preservation.
As Vicky has suggested, the world ignores the great contributions of
indigenous peoples at its own peril. Protecting and respecting their rights is
fundamental. Valuing their knowledge and building upon their untapped potential
is equally important to us all. Thankfully, Special Rapporteur Victoria
Tauli-Corpuz, and millions of other indigenous women and men, are determined to
make their voices heard.
***
In related development , the Kalipunan ng mga Katutubong Mamamayan
(KAMP), Kusog sa Katawhang Lumad sa Mindanao (KALUMARAN), and Koalisyon ng Katutubong
Samahanng Pilipinas, Inc. will award deserving journalists and media workers in
reporting indigenous issues for the second Gawad Agong para sa Pamamahayag.
Nominees for the GawadAgong are media practitioners who have made
exemplary reporting with some aspect or issue in the society, politics,
culture, situation, and rights of indigenous peoples in the Philippines.
Nominations could be made by fellow journalists and media institutions,
indigenous peoples, indigenous people’s organizations, indigenous communities,
institutions, and indigenous peoples’ advocates.
Award categories are open to all Filipino journalists or reporters and
media institutions from radio, television, print and online media. Categories
for the awards are the following: Gawad Agong para sa Mamamahayag (Gawad Agong
Journalist Award), and the Natatanging Gawad para sa Mamamahayag (Gawad Agong
Most Distinguished Journalist Award.) Nominees for these categories must have
excellent reporting on indigenous peoples’ issues in print, broadcast or
online.
The Gawad Agong is part of the Indigenous Voice Asia project supported
by the Asia Indigenous Peoples' Pact (AIPP) and Swedish International Development
Cooperation Agency (SIDA.) Nomination will end June 27, 2014.
0 comments:
Post a Comment