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Americas: Indigenous peoples --
Second-class citizens in the lands of their ancestors
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11 October 2002
Ten years ago, on the 500th anniversary of the arrival of the first
Europeans in the American continent, the descendants of the continent's
indigenous peoples vocally reclaimed their rights and identity. Today, they
remain among the most marginalised and poorest communities, discriminated
against and often exposed to grave abuses of their fundamental rights,
Amnesty International said today.
The statement came on the eve of the day -- known as Columbus Day, Día
de la Raza or Native American Day -- in which several countries in the
Americas celebrate the continent's multicultural heritage.
"More than half the countries on the continent recognize the
multicultural character of the state and guarantee indigenous rights in
their constitutions and legislation. However, this is in stark contrast with
the reality faced by the vast majority of indigenous people from Canada,
through Central America, down to the very tip of Chile and Argentina, who
are often treated as second-class citizens," Amnesty International
said.
"Basic rights of indigenous communities, including the right to land
and to cultural identity -- in the use of language, education and the
administration of justice -- are systematically violated in a variety of
countries," the organization added.
"At the same time, racism and discrimination entrenched in most
societies make indigenous people more vulnerable to human rights violations
including torture and ill-treatment, "disappearance" and unlawful
killings."
Amnesty International believes that governments throughout the American
continent are clearly lacking the political will to make indigenous rights a
reality, as demonstrated, among others, by the failure of the Guatemalan
government to address the genocide of its indigenous people during the
country's lomg-term civil conflict.
Other examples include failure to implement agreements reached with the
indigenous community in Honduras in 2000, or the adoption in Mexico of
inadequate and controversial Indigenous legislation which indigenous
communities and organizations have rejected as violating their fundamental
rights. The failure of this legislation to meet the indigenous communities'
expectations has undermined efforts to protect human rights and end the
conflict in the state of Chiapas.
"This lack of commitment is further demonstrated by the way governments
have been dragging their feet in regards to the adoption in the
Inter-American system of the American Declaration on Indigenous
People," the organization added, urging governments in the region to
comply with this year's OAS General Assembly's resolution on this important
issue and move ahead on it .
Amnesty International also called on governments to take immediate and
concrete actions to turn their rhetoric on multiculturalism and indigenous
rights into reality. The organization reminded governments of the
commitments they made at last year's World Conference against Racism in
Durban, South Africa, which set specific goals for actions on indigenous
people's rights.
"This means ensuring real representation of indigenous communities and
promoting respect of the full range of indigenous rights not only in the
legal, judicial and political system, but throughout society as a
whole," the organization said.
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Examples of violations of indigenous people's rights known to Amnesty
International include:
Violations related to land and the environment
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In countries
including Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Guatemala and
Nicaragua, indigenous people are reclaiming the lands of their
ancestors, coming up against violent opposition from land-owners and
companies exploiting natural resources, often supported by the
authorities.
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Across the region,
large-scale projects for the construction of infrastructure or the
extraction of natural resources on indigenous lands, threaten the
communities' livelihood and survival, and are being planned and carried
out without real and transparent consultation. Examples include the Plan
Puebla-Panamá, set to create infrastructure and industrial projects
in the southern states of Mexico and Central America with inevitable
impact on indigenous communities; a project to dig a dry canal joining
the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean through sacred indigenous land in
Nicaragua; the Urrá dam in Colombia, situated in the ancestral lands of
the Embera Katío people, which some members of the community have been
campaigning against; and projects for the construction of an oil
pipeline in Ecuador.
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In Brazil, Hipãridi
Top'Tiro, an Xavante indigenous leader from the Sangradouro indigenous
reserve in Mato Grosso state, was forced to leave his land due to the
death threats he received on account of his environmental campaigning
and of a legal action he brought against local landowners for
deforesting part of an indigenous area. According to reports, he
received threats and intimidation from the regional administrator of the
National Indigenous Foundation, the government's body set up to protect
indigenous people, who has strong links with local landowners. Hipãridi
was later informed by the federal government that he should leave the
country as they were unable to offer him protection.
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In Colombia,
indigenous leader Kimy Pernia Domicó, of the Embera Katío community
campaigning against the Urrá dam, "disappeared" in June 2001
after being abducted by army-backed paramilitaries. Other community
members campaigning for his safe return have suffered harassment and one
of them, Pedro Alirio Domicó was murdered also after being abducted by
paramilitaries. The whereabouts of Kimy Pernia remain unknown and nobody
is known to have been brought to justice in either case.
Violations related to cultural identity
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In a number of
countries, including Guatemala and Mexico, non-Spanish speaking
indigenous people are often questioned by police and have their
statements taken without the assistance of an interpreter. In Guatemala,
indigenous people have stood trial in capital cases in Spanish, which
they do not speak. In one case, a non-Spanish speaking indigenous man
was psychologically assessed in Spanish to determine if he was fit to
stand trial.
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On a recent occasion
in Chile, two members of the Mapuche community were found guilty of
"disrespect" and "disorderly behaviour" for shouting
slogans in Mapundung and playing traditional instruments at a court case
in Angol.
Attacks on human rights defenders working with indigenous communities
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In Bolivia, Dr
Leonardo Tamburini, legal advisor to the Chiquitano indigenous community
in their land claim, received telephone threats in September 2002.
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In Nicaragua, Dr María
Luisa Acosta, a lawyer defending indigenous communities in the
Autonomous South Atlantic Region, received death threats connected to
her work. In April 2002 her husband was killed in an attack widely
believed to have been aimed at her, with a weapon belonging to the
lawyer of a US citizen involved in buying and selling land including in
indigenous lands.
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In Guatemala, members
of the Defensoría Indígena (Indigenous Defence body), working
to promote indigenous rights, resolve community disputes through
traditional indigenous practices and promote the recognition of the
authority of traditional Mayan leaders in the state structure, have
received repeated death threats. In September 2002, Manuel García de la
Cruz, was brutally tortured and murdered apparently in reprisal for his
human rights and development work with the indigenous rights
organization CONAVIGUA.
Human rights violations including unlawful killings, torture and
ill-treatment and excessive use of force
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In Honduras, numerous
indigenous leaders have been killed over the past few years. Nobody has
been held responsible for these killings, despite commitments by the
government to indigenous groups, including a promise to set up a program
to investigate killings of indigenous and black people in previous
years. Two years on, the program has not been set up yet.
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In Argentina, during
a raid of the Toba community in Formosa by at least 100 members of the
provincial police, several members of the community, including one
pregnant woman, were beaten and racially abused. Several others,
including a 74-year old man, were detained and ill-treated and
humiliated while in custody.
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In Canada, the 1995
shooting by Ontario Provincial Police of Dudley George, an indigenous
man involved in a land claims protest has still not been the object of
an independent enquiry despite repeated calls including by the UN Human
Rights Committee.
Violations committed in the context of conflict
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In Colombia,
indigenous communities find themselves trapped in the cross-fire between
the army and their paramilitary allies on one side, and guerrilla groups
on the other. The Paeces community, living in the former demilitarized
zone which hosted peace talks until 20 February 2002, was occupied by a
military mobile unit, which has used local school and families' cooking
facilities. They have refused to hand over two of their members who are
suspected of belonging to the guerrilla, and have been accused of being
guerrilla supporters by another community. They also live in fear of a
paramilitary incursion because of these accusations. Eighty per cent of
non-combat politically-motivated killings are carried out by
paramilitary groups which act with the tacit or explicit support of the
security forces. However, members of indigenous communities have also
been killed by guerrilla groups accusing them of siding with the enemy.
In July 2002, Bertulfo Domicó Domicó was killed by the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), in the municipality of Dabeiba,
Antioquia department.
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The killing of 26
indigenous people in Agua Fría (Oaxaca) in May 2002 was a result of the
historical neglect and exploitation of indigenous communities in the
region and of the failure of the state to take seriously threats of
impending violence in the context of community disputes.
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In February 2002
members of the Mexican army allegedly beat and sexually assaulted
17-year-old Valentina Rosendo Cantu, near her home in Guerrero state,
southern Mexico, where the military are carrying out anti-insurgency and
anti-narcotics operations. As with other similar cases in the past,
military jurisdiction has prevented full investigations leaving the
victim still suffering from the consequences of the attack and without
recourse to justice.
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For over three
decades, Guatemala was wracked by internal conflict, with the army
carrying out a scorched-earth counterinsurgency policy systematically
targeted at indigenous communities in the west and northwest of the
country. It is estimated that some 200,000 men, women and children were
killed or "disappeared" during the conflict. The scale of
human rights violations was so massive that the Catholic Church
Commission of Historical Clarification concluded that they amounted to
genocide in at least four areas. The vast majority of these violations
has not been investigated and nobody has been brought to justice for
them.
Background
12 October was chosen to commemorate Christopher Columbus' arrival in the
American continent and is marked, with minor variations in date, in
Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Honduras, Mexico, the Turks
and Caicos Islands, the United States, Uruguay and Venezuela.
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