https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO0912/S00446/survival-celebrates-40-years-of-success.htm
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Survival Celebrates 40 Years Of Success
Wednesday, 16 December 2009, 10:24 am
Press Release: Survival International
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Survival Celebrates 40 Years Of Success In Campaign For
Tribal Peoples' Rights
The human rights organization
Survival International celebrates its
40th birthday this month, and is highlighting the huge
advances in tribal peoples’ rights since 1969.
Survival
focuses on supporting tribes under threat, and its campaigns
alongside tribal people and local organizations have
achieved many remarkable successes, including:
- The
creation of the Yanomami Park in Brazil in 1992. A fifth of
the Yanomami Indians had died in seven years
after goldminers invaded their land, but since their
territory was legally protected their numbers have recovered
and are increasing
- India’s recognition of the
Jarawa tribe’s right to choose their
own future, 2004. The Indian government had planned in the
1990s forcibly to settle the isolated Jarawa of the Andaman
Islands in villages outside their forest, which would have
destroyed them
- The Kalahari Bushmen’s landmark court
victory in 2006. The Bushmen were evicted from the Central
Kalahari in 2002 to make way for future diamond mining. With
Survival’s support they fought and won a case in the
Botswana High Court, which affirmed their right to live on
their land. Survival’s campaign with the Bushmen also
targeted De Beers diamond company, which abandoned its exploration on the Bushmen’s
land.
As the only organization dedicated to
campaigning for tribal peoples worldwide, Survival has also
supported tribal people in bringing about broader changes
which help them better defend their rights. Survival’s
director Stephen Corry says, ‘Tribal peoples’ rights are
now enshrined in international law, and in the constitutions
of many countries, particularly in South America. The
indigenous movement worldwide is more vocal and powerful
than it has ever been. Uncontacted tribes threatened with
extinction are the focus of international public attention
for the first time.
‘Attitudes are changing too: tribal
peoples, once reviled as ‘primitive’ or patronised as
‘noble savages’, are much better understood now as the
vibrant, contemporary societies they really are.
‘All of
these things have changed for the better since 1969. Yet we
continue to see the extinction of entire tribes. Tribal
people are still disregarded, thrown off their land, and in
too many cases, killed by those who want their land or
what’s underneath it.
‘I’m incredibly proud of
Survival’s many successes in the defence of tribal
peoples’ rights. But there is a long way to go before we
can say our job is done.’
Notes for editors:
Survival
International does not claim sole responsibility for the
developments listed above or below. Survival works closely
with indigenous communities and organizations, and its
campaigns serve to amplify existing indigenous struggles on
a global stage. Other organizations and individuals also
played a part in many of the victories cited here.
In
addition to those mentioned above, notable successes
include:
- 1974: Helping the Andoke tribe of
Colombia, decimated during the rubber boom, buy themselves
out of debt bondage.
- 1987: The World Bank ceased
its funding of the Indonesian government’s hugely
controversial ‘Transmigration’ programme, which moved
millions of Indonesians from the central islands to remote
areas such as Papua, displacing Papuan tribes from their
land.
- 1989-1990: Survival funded an emergency
healthcare project for the Yanomami in Brazil, stemming the
spread of malaria that was decimating the tribe. The project
was later developed by Brazilian NGOs, who trained Yanomami
as healthcare workers.
- 1993: The Colombian
government created a reserve for the nomadic Nukak Indians. The reserve was enlarged
in 1997.
- 1997: The Bangladeshi government signed
a Peace Accord with the Jumma tribes of the Chittagong Hill
Tracts, committing the government to removing military camps
from the area and ending violence and theft of the Jummas’
land. Most of the provisions of the accord have yet to be
implemented, but the current government has committed itself
to doing so.
- 1999: A regional governor issued a
five-year moratorium on all oil licences on the land of the
Yugan Khanty hunter-gatherers in Siberia. Such
exploration in other areas had polluted forests and rivers,
and made the land uninhabitable for the Khanty.
- 2002: India’s Supreme Court ordered the
closure of a highway running through the land of the Jarawa
tribe. However, the road remains open, in violation of the
court order.
- 2003: Following a twenty-year
campaign by Survival, the Brazilian government legally
protected the land of the nomadic Awá tribe, some of whom are
uncontacted. Invasion of their land by outsiders had brought
disease and violence, killing many Awá.
- 2007:
The conservation organization African Parks withdrew from
its agreement with the Ethiopian government to manage the
Omo National Park, home of the Mursi and other tribes. African
Parks had failed to consult the tribes, and had banned them
from hunting and cultivating food in the
park.
ENDS