Showing posts with label UNPFII. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UNPFII. Show all posts

Friday, June 6, 2014

UCTP Participation at the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues

UCTP Participation at the 13th session of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII)

June 6th, 2014

By: Tai Pelli

Kasike Múkaro Borrero and Tai "AnaYuísa" Pelli  at the United Nations Headquarters, NY


The 13th Session for the UNPFII was scheduled for May 12th, 2014 through May 23rd, 2014. As we have for many years, the UCTP was an active participant.

This year, Kasike Múkaro Borrero and myself had the opportunity to be part of Tribal Link’s Project Access Team for the Global Capacity Building Training, coordinated to take place from May 7th, through May 9th, with a final evaluation meeting to be held on May 16th, 2014. We worked along participants chosen from Africa, Asia, the Pacific, Central America /South America/ Caribbean and North American Regions.

Although I do not intend to address all the things our Kasike has been working on this past year, I do want to stress two key elements; Post 2015 Sustainable Development Goals and Protection of Sacred Sites. During the Training, he spoke about the importance of indigenous peoples’ engagement in the process of the Post 2015 Development Goals, since after this, it will be approximately 15 years before the issue is brought to the table again at the United Nations.

As one of the Leaders handling the development of Interventions to be presented by Project Access at the Permanent Forum, I decided to work on an intervention related to the Post 2015 –Development Goals which was one of the items on the UNPFII agenda. My team had representatives from Africa, the Pacific, Asia and Latin America & the Caribbean Regions, although the issues we present/ the message require the approval of all members of Project Access,  given the fact that the individual organizations we represent sign on supporting the intervention itself. This was an excellent opportunity to emphasize on the importance of: knowing the mandate of the UNPFII, the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), Free, Prior, Informed Consent (FPIC), and the Right to Self-determination. Our chosen reader (Lucia Owies from South Africa) was able to read the impactful intervention to the Forum.

I also was designated as the Reader for an intervention on the Report of the Expert Group Meeting on Sexual and Reproductive Health. Although I did not get an opportunity to read on the floor, the intervention was submitted to the Permanent Forum.

In addition, I worked on another intervention along with Berenice Sánchez, Nahuat – Otomí, from Mexico, regarding “Environmental Racism” under the agenda Item for Human Rights. I exposed the situation in Arecibo with the incinerators and the contamination of air, soil, life, including the lead contamination of 140 children from a nearby Head Start Program.

I also participated at the Global Indigenous Women’s Caucus and the Global Indigenous Peoples Caucus as well as several Side events, particularly on Environmental Violence by the International Treaty Council  and Sacred Sites by Tribal Link which Kasike Múkaro moderated.

The issues regarding the High Level Plenary Meeting (HLPM) to be known as the World Conference on Indigenous Peoples (WCIP) has been one to create much turmoil and confusion. Although Indigenous Peoples kept waiting for concise information from the President of the General Assembly (PGA), that did not happen. On the last day of the forum, May 23rd, we all awaited this information and after having been told of a message to be given us by the PGA’s representative, it was just a statement to say that they still had no consensus from the states (governments). Russia, India and apparently some African states were opposing the full, effective and equal participation of Indigenous Peoples. A number of states read statements to the PGA representative in support of Indigenous Peoples. The North American Region has withdrawn totally form this process. The main concern being that this meeting will end up with an outcome document and without the equal full and effective participation of Indigenous Peoples in this process, no one will know for sure what will end up being on that outcome document and how it will impact Indigenous Peoples in the future.

On December 3rd, 2013, I was selected to be the Negotiating Team Representative for the Global Indigenous Women’s Caucus. The Negotiating Team, to be composed of 10 members, one for each of the United Nations Designated Regions of the World, one for the Global Indigenous Peoples Caucus (GIPC), one for the Global Indigenous Youth Caucus (GIYC) and one for the Global Indigenous Women’s Caucus (GIWC), is a Team that is to Negotiate with states and diplomats so that the Alta Outcome Document be supported as well as in the case of the GIWC, the Lima Declaration on the World Conference of Indigenous Women. These documents were prepared by Indigenous Peoples of the World and Indigenous Women of the World, and the items contained therein are of the essence to ensure Indigenous Peoples Rights in the Outcome Document of the HLPM/WCIP.

Upon my return from the UNPFII, I had to go through a number of tests and due to my medical condition, it was with great regret that I resigned from my position as Negotiating Team Representative for the Global Indigenous Women’s Caucus, since my 4 month assignment in NY conflicts with the treatment I will be receiving. Still, I consider that the selection in itself was a great milestone for us to reach as Caribbean Indigenous Peoples. I received the support of Women from all parts of the World, which is very humbling as a Taíno Woman.

In closing, it has also been very humbling to see that our efforts and hard work have not been in vain and that the issues we are working on, are of international concern. We must continue working hand in hand with our Indigenous brothers and sisters of the world for the defense of our Indigenous, Human and Environmental Rights and Justice.





Thursday, June 5, 2014

Realities on Indigenous and Human Rights through the eyes and heart of our Youth

Víctor Anthony López-Carmen – Realities on Indigenous and Human Rights through the eyes and heart of our Youth

June 5, 2014

By: Tai Pelli

Jemimah Lemerketo,  Víctor A. López-Carmen, and Doreen Bennet on their second day of Project Access Training

What a lively personality! One of those people that the second you see them, you are just engaged by their contagious energy and great attitude! Víctor Anthony López-Carmen, is a Crow Creek and Yaqui young man. The minute I saw him, I could also tell he was thirsty for knowledge, had great disposition, was kind with his peers and grasping everything that was going on in his surroundings. He did not want to miss a thing! He was to be the youngest participant in Project Access Global Capacity Building Training and eventually the youngest at the Global Indigenous Youth Caucus.

This curly-haired handsome young man, could have chosen to brag about his connections within the Indigenous movement at the United Nations, after all, his aunt is a well-known indigenous, human and environmental rights advocate who has dedicated over 40 years to the movement, but Víctor is not that way at all. Quite the contrary, this young man is very humble. He is a freshman at Ithaca College in New York, studying Medicine with a Minor in Native American Studies. Victor is also a Martin Luther King, Jr. Scholar at Ithaca College, a very prestigious and competitive position that allows for recipients to travel and perform independent research in an area of their interest. Víctor has chosen to research health of Indigenous Peoples, access to healthcare and the interconnection between health and their sovereignty as Indigenous Peoples.

On his first day at Project Access, he addressed his peers as if he had known them forever. He spoke calmly yet enthusiastically. It was here when I first noticed that thirst for knowledge. I saw him ready to learn and absorb all there was to be learned like a sponge! He spoke about: his desire to work with the youth in his community, the importance of the revitalization of Language and the Preservation of Culture.

The training in Project Access is intense and time is always of the essence, every minute is important and the preparation process requires many dedicated hours, (day and night), in order for participants to be ready with the interventions that would be presented at the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues session on behalf of Project Access and the different organizations within represented. Victor worked diligently with his intervention team. He also participated proactively in the Global Indigenous Youth Caucus and was chosen to be the reader of one their interventions at the Forum.

By the opening of the 13th session of the UNPFII, on May 12th, 2014, we had seen the first transformation. This one was physical. The curly hair was gone and he had a conventional haircut that projected the first sign of the many changes that were taking place within Víctor. He now looked more mature, more serious, although maintaining his kind, approachable personality and pleasant look in his face.

As we were walking towards the UN, from the hotel most of us were staying at, I caught up with Víctor. I wanted to know about his experience so far. His answer was definitely not one I expected. He touched on something I had experience years earlier, and something I know many of us get to experience as we learn more and more about the current realities of Indigenous Peoples of the World and the number of human rights violations that seem unending. Was I waiting for the: “Everything is so great! I am so excited. So much to learn!”? His reply was: “It is great, but it is very emotional. I was not prepared for that.” I noticed the change in his face as he said this. His words made me wonder if I had become hardened in some way. For I know we see and hear of things that the media does not publicize, things that are unfolded openly during these couple of weeks in New York, by representatives of communities that are being destroyed, displaced, abused, killed, starved, raped, just to name a few. His eyes did not seem like those of the young man, he had seen something that touched his very soul. Victor had grown years within a matter of a few days.

I saw how important it is to keep that in mind. As advocates of Indigenous, Human and Environmental Rights, we come in touch with images, information, or hear first hand stories that are heart-wrenching. No, it is not that I had become hardened, or any of us for that matter, much less over-sensitivity on Víctor’s part. It is called “humanity”. It is the process that makes us more determined to do what we must, to contribute to the many causes, to network in a fashion that we become a strong global force for the benefit of Indigenous Peoples, Humanity and Mother Earth, while having to balance our own emotions and our own humanity, opening the eyes wider, perhaps to hide the tears and pursing our lips, when the images become too much to bear.

On our final meeting, I listened to Victor speak about his overall experience. He had learned many things, among the simplest, that Indigenous Peoples are not limited to the America’s, a perception that millions if not more have, just like a few years back, also in Project Access,  Mama Anna Naramat, (Ogiek Tribe from Kenya, Africa)  spoke about she was shocked that there were Indigenous Peoples that were fair-skinned, for her impression had been that Indigenous Peoples were shades of brown only! A sign that there is much to be done globally when it comes to Education, starting with the very basic. There are approximately over 370 million Indigenous Peoples in the world and although most are facing the same challenges, they come in different colors and shapes.

His experience in Project Access was one that allowed him to communicate effectively with people who have been in the UN system for longer, yet he found he was able to speak at the same level. He was grateful for the opportunity afforded him as a participant as he was able to help others with their own interventions, precisely because of the knowledge he had acquired through Project Access Global Capacity Building Training.

I observed him during our farewell party. I watched his dynamics with his peers, smiling, and sharing stories. The image of the curly-haired young man had now dissipated. I did see a different person, one with the same kind heart and spirit, but one who had matured much during the past couple of weeks. As we said our goodbyes, I realized that this young man who now had short hair, and wore a tie, would become one of the very few; a compassionate doctor that will never forget where and who he came from, one who will never lose his humanity, for he will always be reminded of the realities that touched his heart, that time in May 2014, when he was a young man,  where he was chosen to participate in a training that would prepare him to attend and be a voice for Indigenous Peoples at the United Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues. Those same people that inspired him for his selected studies in the first place!

 
Víctor A. Lopez-Carmen during Farewell Party

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Samwel Naikada; a humble pastoralist with a bright vision for his Maasai Peoples



12/18/2012

This year, I had the privilege to participate in Tribal Link Foundation’s Project Access, a Training Program designed to prepare Indigenous Peoples from around the globe, to participate in the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.

It was on that first day, that I met Samwel Naikada, a humble Maasai pastoralist from Kenya, Africa, as each of us introduced ourselves to the group. When it was his turn, the tall, slim, 39 year old man, stood up in his traditional Maasai attire and spoke in a soft, yet firm and almost regal fashion about his Maasai people, and the menace of deforestation of the Dupoto Forest. This forest has been the livelihood of the Maasai Peoples for time immemorial.

His desire, he expressed, was to develop and promote Eco-tourism as a mean of survival and preservation. The room was quiet and all eyes were on Samwel. He spoke about his teaching young people about taking pride on who they were. Deep inside, I thought: “How could anyone not take pride on being Maasai, with this brother that speaks so proudly about his people and who has such an impressive ability to communicate and who projects that same pride he speaks of!”

We had learned from the representative of the Ogiek Tribe (also from Kenya), how the Maasai were helping them. To me, this was extremely significant, to know that these people who are having struggles of their own, still find the means to help a fellow tribe!

There were many in the group who had achieved all kinds of high-level education. Humbly, Samwel mentioned how he understood he might have not the knowledge as the others, for he did not possess any formal education, perhaps to the level of those in the group. He expressed his desire, his dream of pursuing a degree in Community Development so that he could effectively help his people and achieve the goals he had set forth. Although I understood what he meant, I could not help it but tell him that he could stand in a room filled with Ph.D’s and address them in the same way he had addressed us, for he spoke from the heart and the message was loud and clear.

In times like the ones we are living, very few people have the passion or aspire to dedicate their lives to develop and preserve their communities the way Samwel does.

This past summer, he was able to enroll at Narok University College, Kilgoris Branch in Kenya, to obtain his degree in Community Development. The cost of his education per year is $1,000.00. His first year has been covered through some donations, one of them by Tribal Link Foundation, but he still needs the additional $3,000.00.

Samwel is married to one wife and has six children. He is a pastoralist depending on livestock and is the first and only one to complete secondary education in the whole village, so far. He plans to invest his acquired knowledge in advocating for the rights of his people, assist youth and women to use available resources and skills so that they can economically improve their living standards. His goal, to link his community with National and International Programs that will assist and build their capacity.
I strongly believe, in my deepest core, there is someone out there or a Foundation that would be willing to cover the $3,000.00 needed to cover the remaining balance of his college tuition, hence, helping Samwel Naikada attain the education he is so much committed to complete to improve the quality of life and sustenance of the Maasai Peoples.

For more information about Samwel Naikada, you may contact me at taimar16@yahoo.com .

Tai Pelli
Central Florida Liaison Officer
United Confederation of Taíno People