Indigenous Leaders Plan Anti-Poverty Strategies at UN Forum
Some 1,500 indigenous leaders and their supporters will hold
a meeting at the United Nations starting next week to create strategies to meet
the first two Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) eradicating extreme poverty
and hunger and providing universal primary education.
"Often the most marginalized peoples in society, without adequate access
to education, health care and water, indigenous peoples are frequently deprived
of the right to participate in or shape their own sustainable human development,"
according to the 16-member UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.
The achievement of the MDGs, which were agreed at a UN Summit in 2000 and were
designed to eliminate or reduce a host of socio-economic ills, "could inadvertently
result in harm done to indigenous and tribal peoples," the Forum said.
Educational models for indigenous and minority children using mainly dominant
languages as languages of instruction have extremely negative consequences on
the right to education and perpetuate poverty, it gave as one example.
"Without education mainly in the mother tongue in public schools, with
good teaching of a dominant language as a second language, most indigenous peoples
have to accept education through a dominant/majority language, at the cost of
the mother tongue which is displaced, and often replaced, by the dominant language,"
it said.
UN Deputy-Secretary-General Louise Frichette will open the two-week meeting
on Monday. Sid Hill, the traditional Chief of one of the native peoples of New
York, the Onondaga, will bless the gathering.
This year is the start of the Second International Decade of the World's Indigenous
People, designated by the UN General Assembly last December. The Assembly also
asked Secretary-General Kofi Annan to appoint the Under-Secretary-General for
Economic and Social Affairs, now Josi Antonio Ocampo, as the Decade's Coordinator.
Half of the Forum's 16 members are nominated by indigenous organizations and
the rest by Governments.
Nominated by organizations are Michael Dodson (Yawuru, Australia), Wilton Littlechild
(Cree, Canada), Aqqaluk Lynge (Inuit, Greenland), Nina Pacari Vega (Quichua,
Ecuador), Pavel Sulyandziga (Udege, Russian Federation), Parshuram Tamang (Tamang,
Nepal) and Victoria Tauli-Corpuz (Igorot, Philippines).
Those nominated by States are Eduardo Aguiar de Almeida (Brazil), Hassan Id
Balkassm (Amazigh, Morocco), Yuri Boychenko (Russian Federation), Ralph Joey
Langeveldt (Khoe-San, South Africa), Merike Kokajev (Estonia), Otilia Lux de
Coti (Maya, Guatemala), Ida Nicolaisen (Denmark), Liliana Muzangi Mbella (Democratic
Republic of the Congo) and Qin Xiaomei (China).