October
2017
GIVING
VISIBILITY – AND LAND RIGHTS – TO THE INDIGENOUS
A
new institution gives indigenous peoples hope of securing their land
rights.
By
Fabíola Ortiz
STOCKHOLM (IDN) – Indigenous peoples are all but
invisible on the development agenda but a hoped for change is on the
cards with the launch of the world’s first and only funding institution
to support the efforts of local and native communities to secure rights
over their lands and resources.
“Include us, so that we can protect our lands for our
children and protect the planet’s biodiversity for all the world’s
children,” said by Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, UN Special Rapporteur on
the Rights of Indigenous Peoples during the launch. Recognising the
land rights of native and traditional peoples is a low-cost solution
toward achieving the world’s development, environment and climate
agendas.
Known as the International Land and Forest Tenure
Facility, the new institution dedicated to scaling up the recognition
of collective land and forest rights was officially presented on October
3 during a conference in Stockholm organised by the Swedish government,
the Ford Foundation and the Rights and Resources Initiative (RRI).
For most indigenous people, “land is everything,” continued Tauli-Corpuz.
Having secure rights over their lands ensures that “they can feed
their families and practise their culture and traditional knowledge.”
Almost 2.5 billion people, one-third of the world’s population,
depend on community-held lands for their livelihoods. They manage
more than half the planet’s land area in traditional systems, yet
indigenous peoples and local communities have formal legal ownership
of only 10% of the world’s lands, according to a 2015 RRI report.
The Tenure Facility will invest $10 million
a year for the next decade in titling projects. This funding
could increase titled, protected tropical forestland by 40 million
hectares, preventing the emission of more than 0.5 gigatonnes
of carbon dioxide.
It will work with indigenous and community leaders to
take advantage of laws that are already on the books to strengthen
their rights, said RRI coordinator Andy White, stressing that the
Tenure Facility is aligned with the United Nations’ Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs)
and the Paris Agreement on
climate change.
“Indigenous peoples have cared for the forests for centuries,
despite increasing pressure from governments and private interests
that want access to the land and its soil, the timber in the trees
and the minerals in the ground below,” said White.
The Tenure Facility has kicked off with six pilot projects
in Africa, Asia, and Latin America covering two million hectares
of forest in six countries – Cameroon, Indonesia, Liberia, Mali, Panama
and Peru.
The tropical rainforest in Peru, which is part of the
Amazon basin, is an interesting case in which more than half of the
country’s territory is forest, and much of that land is occupied by
indigenous people.
After Bolivia, Peru is the South American country with
the second highest proportion of indigenous population. Approximately
20 million hectares are pending titling in favour of indigenous people
– corresponding to 15% of Peruvian territory.
“We cannot design public policies and conservation strategies
without including the indigenous,” Silvana Baldovino, programme director
of the Peruvian Society for Environmental Law, told IDN. “We
cannot create rules inside a cabinet without speaking to the native
peoples. It would be illogical to draw conservation policies without
engaging who are actually on the ground.”
Baldovino was in Stockholm to talk about the successful
Peruvian case of titling and managing forests. “Madre de Dios has
a large percentage of its region as protected natural areas. It is
important for the indigenous peoples to have their land demarcated.
It is a historic debt,” he said.
The tropical Madre de Dios region in the southeast part
of Peru covers 800,000 hectares and is under constant pressure from
illegal logging, gold mining and oil exploration.
In the region, there are seven indigenous peoples living
in 36 communities. Many of these communities require legal and physical
clarification of their territorial claims before they can secure their
titles.
This first pilot project supported by the Tenure Facility
helped to map five communities. Over 112,000 hectares were geo-referenced,
enabling three communities to actually obtain the title of their land.
Securing tenure would also set the stage for more sustainable
and equitable development, as well as reducing conflict over
land, agrees Nonette Royo, the Tenure Facility’s executive director.
“The whole world is looking at the Amazon forest,” she
told IDN. “At the moment, the indigenous peoples are experiencing
such a huge challenge: they occupy places where most of the forests
are still growing and stand. They have protected these places for
generations.”
At least one-quarter of the carbon stored above the ground
in the tropical forests is found in the collectively managed territories
of indigenous peoples and local communities, according to a study
released in November 2016.
This amount represented 70% of what was emitted globally
in 2015, according to the International Energy Agency. – Third
World Network Features.
-ends-
The
above article is reproduced from IDN-InDepthNews, 7 October 2017.
When
reproducing this feature, please credit Third World Network Features
and (if applicable) the cooperating magazine or agency involved in
the article, and give the byline. Please send us cuttings. And
if reproduced on the internet, please send the web link
where the article appears to twn@twnetwork.org.
4588/17