|
22/11/2002
Development Projects Must Respect Indigenous Peoples' Rights
Dam-building,
new mines, road construction and other large-scale development projects
should only be allowed after a thorough assessment of their impact
on indigenous peoples, the senior United Nations environment official
said this week in Nairobi, Kenya.
Addressing
the Fourth International Conference of the International Alliance
of Indigenous and Tribal Peoples of the Tropical Forests, the Executive
Director of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), Klaus Toepfer,
said big schemes as well as insensitive tourism projects were either
forcing indigenous communities from their lands or causing cultural
conflicts.
Throwing
his support behind a call by the Alliance to assess cultural damage,
the UNEP chief said, "The more we lose diversity, both culturally
and in the natural world, the more we run the risk of instability,
the possibility of disasters such as crop failures and basic knowledge
on coping with natural disasters such as drought."
Mr.
Toepfer said studies carried out by UNEP and its partners had found
a firm link between cultural and linguistic diversity and biodiversity.
"On a global level we have less than 7,000 languages and of
those up to 2,500 are on the 'Red List' of endangered languages,"
he noted. "If you correlate this to biodiversity - the wealth
of animal and plant life on the planet - you see that where you
are losing cultural diversity, you are losing biodiversity, and
visa versa."
Pledging
to address the issue, he said UNEP's Governing Council would take
it up in February. "Genetic resources and indigenous knowledge
are too often treated as a common public good," Mr. Toepfer
said. "This has to re-considered and UNEP will do all it can
in its power to see that happen."
©EuropaWorld 2002
- Copyright Policy / About
us / Endorsements / Contact
us |