By Alma Grace Barla
On September 21,
2014 the world witnessed a large-scale activist event “People’s Climate March”
to advocate action against climate change which took place in New York City
followed by many countries including India. Some 400,000 participants from across
the globe together with environmental justice organizations, celebrities,
unions, schools and indigenous communities proclaimed their support of New York
Declaration on Forest, to do their parts to halving deforestation by 2020 and
end it by 2030. Forest took centre stage at the UN Climate Summit when dozens
of global leaders announced huge reductions to global warming pollution – by
unveiling the first global timeline to slow and end deforestation. More than 30
countries, governments, civil society groups, corporates like Unilever,
Philips, Axe Body Spray, L’Oreal, Dove Soap, Golden Agri-resources, Big Palm
Oiler Producer Cargill, Asia Pulp & Paper, McDonals, Nestle, Kellog’s etc.
were among those pledged to combat deforestation. This new pledge was the first
time in history that a critical mass of developed and developing country
leaders partnered around such a goal.

Meeting
these goals would cut between 4.5 billion and 8.8 billion tons of carbon
pollution every year. The Declaration also includes a commitment to restore
hundreds of millions of hectares of forest land. Although many environmental organizations
like Green Peace International welcomes the move, it states that the
Declaration is missing ambitious targets and tangible actions, therefore it’s
important to hold those involved in the declaration accountable and ensure
actions are taken. Certainly it’s a good move that after long five years, once
again the world leaders came together to renew the momentum. Even though we
have seen many declarations, conferences, meetings in the past, what really
matters now is the action followed from it.
In
the same week another high-level plenary meeting of the UN General Assembly’s
69th Session, known as World Conference of Indigenous Peoples (WCIP 2014, took
place on 22-23 Sept.) which brought together over a thousand of indigenous and
government delegates from across the globe to discuss the realization of their
rights including pursuing the objectives of the UN Declaration on Right of
Indigenous Peoples adopted in 2007. This was also followed by Equator Prize
2014 Award ceremony hosted by UNDP to honour indigenous and local communities
for creating bold and creative pathways to save the mother earth through conservation
and sustainable use of nature.
Among
the 25 prize winners was the Chhattisgarh Traditional Healer Association, which
empowers traditional healers “village botanists” to serve as agents of positive
community-level change by showing them how to use traditional medicinal plants
to meet modern medical needs like treating fever, colds, arthritis, malaria,
gastro-intestinal diseases, and a range of public health concerns.
Thus,
the WCIP and a week-long side events concluded with a prime focus on Mother
Earth and the future of the Planet which is a sign of hope towards a “full life
and not just survival” of 370 million world’s indigenous peoples.
In
2007, while addressing a conference, UN General Secretary Mr Banki Moon once
said that even though the effects of climate change are being felt around the
world, they are being felt most by vulnerable communities. The terrible irony for
many developing countries is that, though they have contributed the least to
the process of climate change, they are the ones most at risk from its
consequences. While not being specific, his statement could very well have been
made about indigenous and forest dwellers because they are the ones who will
bear the brunt of the consequences of climate change even though they have
contributed the least to climate change.
On
the one hand the rich or city people are better equipped to handle climate
effects – as their life is more technology- based, they do not directly depend
on natural resources or agriculture for subsistence or employment; but on the
other hand, the rural people face the direct consequences of climate change,
due to their dependency and close relationship with the environment. For many indigenous
communities, climate change is already a reality.
In
the high altitude regions of the Himalayas, glacial melts affecting hundreds of
millions of rural dwellers who depend on the seasonal flow of water is
resulting in more water in the short term, but less in the long run as glaciers
and snow cover shrink. In the Amazon, deforestation and forest fragmentation,
more carbon is released into the atmosphere intensifying and creating further changes.
Indigenous peoples in the Arctic region depend on hunting for polar bears,
walrus, seals and caribou, herding reindeer, fishing and gathering, not only for
food to support the local economy, but also as the basis for their cultural and
social identity. Their major challenges include the change in species and availability
of traditional food sources, perceived reduction in weather predictions and the
safety of travelling in changing ice and weather conditions, posing serious
challenges to human health and food security. In Finland, Norway and Sweden, rain
and mild weather during the winter season often prevents reindeer from
accessing lichen, which is a vital food source.
This
has caused massive loss of reindeer, which are vital to the culture,
subsistence and economy of Saami communities. In African countries rising temperatures,
increased wind speeds, and loss of vegetation are negatively impacting
traditional pastoralists to maintain their livestock, largely affecting their economy
and making their survival tough. (www.un.org/en/events/indigenousday)
In
Asian countries which is a home to around 260-300 million indigenous population
is most culturally diverse region in the world where cyclones, hailstorms, sea
level rise, floods and prolonged droughts are occurring more often severely impacting
the lives of indigenous peoples. Further, the economy, social organization,
identity, and cultural and spiritual values of the indigenous peoples are closely
linked to their biological diversity. Therefore, climatic uncertainties cause
specific effects such as demographic changes, loss of livelihoods and food
security; land and natural resource degradation; water shortages, health
problems, loss of traditional knowledge, housing, forest and natural resource
management; and human rights etc.
In
addition to these direct impacts, change in government’s development policies
such as land & forest policies, climate change policies and measures
relating to mitigation and adaptation have serious adverse implications to
indigenous peoples. For instance, in India, Bangladesh, Philippines, Burma,
Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand etc there are many cases of forced evictions or
displacement of indigenous peoples from their homelands as a result of
mitigation measures such as construction of large dams, bio-fuel plantations
and creation of Protected Areas in their territories without their (community)
consent. Several Asian countries have legislations that to some extent protect
the rights of indigenous peoples, but these rights are, however, systematically
watered down, often simply ignored or overruled.
While
many argue that there is no scientific proof for climate change caused by
greenhouse gas emission and climate change is natural for many reasons, for the
indigenous peoples “issues related to territory, land, forest and natural
resources, seas, rivers, are today the soul of indigenous rights,” says Nobel
Peace Prize Laureate Ms Rigoberta Menchú Thump, an indigenous Guatemalan woman activist.
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Ms Rigoberta Menchú |
However,
indigenous peoples should not be looked upon as just ‘vulnerable people’ to climate
change. What is being missed out is that Indigenous peoples are ecosystem
peoples who have sound knowledge and intimate relationship with their
environment. Indigenous knowledge is unique to a given culture and environment
as they are acquired through generations of empirical experiences to improve
the anticipated adverse consequences associated with climate change. These rich
knowledge systems and practices can be tapped to provide solution to many
mitigation and adaptation measures to climate change.
Many
indigenous peoples are taking their own initiatives in coping with climate
change in the form of identifying the changes that are occurring in climatic
patterns and the ensuing challenges. In some cases, indigenous communities have
developed specific coping strategies to extreme variations of weather, such as
crop diversification to minimize risk of harvest failures – such as shifting to
river bank, high mountains or close to higher forest; improving food
preservation methods and techniques, maintenance of food and seed banking with
the network of different communities, change of food habits – such as gathering
more forest produces during bad harvest, introduction of multi-cropping system,
conservation of forest, water shed and restoration of eco-systems, awareness
raising, designing culturally appropriate adaptation and mitigation development
plans as required and defined by the communities etc.
Both
the New York Declaration on Forests and the Outcome Document of the WCIP 2014
acknowledges several of the problems referred to indigenous population and
their rights over land forest and resources. In particular, the draft Outcome Document
acknowledges (a) the right to free, prior and informed consent on legal and administrative
measures and the acknowledgment, advancement and adjudication of our land rights;
(b) indigenous peoples knowledge, innovations, technologies and practices on
sustainable livelihoods and occupations, eco system management and
biodiversity; (c) IPs justice systems; and (d) inclusion of IPs rights,
priorities and strategies in the Post-2015 UN Development Agenda process
(article 32). Finally at the international level, several other corresponding measures
are needed, including (a) an effective UN monitoring mechanism to review the
progress of the Outcome Document; (b) implementation of UN system resolutions
and policies, including the indigenous peoples mandated mechanisms; and (c) monitoring
of multilateral and bilateral treaties, agreements and other constructive
arrangements. Equally important, countries need to review their constitutional,
treaty-based, legal, policy and implementation mechanisms and processes, in a
respectful and effective partnership with Indigenous Peoples.
Chhattisgarh Traditional Healer Association
•
The association empowers “village botanists” to serve as agents of positive community-level
change by showing them how to use traditional medicinal plants to meet modern
medical needs. Work also focuses on getting formal scientific certification
to traditional medicines that are proving effective in treating fever, colds,
arthritis, malaria, gastro-intestinal diseases, and a range of public health concerns.
Health services are provided to more than 50,000 families across 500 villages
in 12 districts, and the average medical costs in communities served has been
reduced by 70%. More than one million trees and half a million medicinal seedlings
have been planted in 100 villages, restoring rare and threatened flora and
fauna and improving local health and livelihoods in the process. (Courtesy:www.equatorinitiative.org)
•
Winner of 2014 Equator Prize by UNDP for taking an inventive approach
reducing infant mortality, improving maternal health, and facilitating local
access to medical care in a region characterized by hunger and malnutrition,
poor water and hygiene, and high communicable disease rates.
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[Note: There is a continuing debate on the appropriateness and use of term “indigenous peoples” because it is politically problematic to identify indigenous peoples in India. “adivasis” which literally means “original inhabitants’ is an umbrella term for a heterogeneous set of ethnic and tribal groups believed to be the original or indigenous population in India. In some countries, they are called tribes, first peoples/nations aboriginals (Canada, New Zealand), ethnic groups, adivasi (Bangladesh,India), janajati (Nepal), Native or Indians (Americas). Occupational and geographical terms like hunter-gatherers, nomads, peasants, hill people, etc., also exist and for all practical purposes can be used interchangeably with “indigenous peoples”]
First Published in Indian Currents, 13 - 19 October, 2014, pgs. 38-41
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