Indigenous
Peoples, local communities and NGO's outraged at the removal of rights
from UNFCCC decision on REDD
We, the undersigned representatives
of indigenous peoples, local communities and non-governmental organizations
monitoring the progress of negotiations in Poznan are outraged that
the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand opposed the inclusion
of recognition of the rights of indigenous peoples and local communities
in a decision on REDD (Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest
Degradation) drafted today by government delegates at the UN Climate
Conference.
These four countries (often known
as the 'CANZUS Group') want to include REDD in the future climate
agreement, but they oppose protecting the rights of the indigenous
and forest peoples who will be directly affected by REDD measures.
In discussions today, these countries insisted that the word "rights"
and references to the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
be struck from the text.
This is totally unacceptable for
indigenous peoples, local communities and supporting NGOs, as the
forests which are being targeted for REDD are those which indigenous
peoples have sustained and protected for thousands of years. The rights
of forests peoples to continue playing this role and being rewarded
for doing so has to be recognized by the UNFCCC Parties. Any REDD
mechanism that does not respect and protect the rights of indigenous
peoples and local communities will fail.
We therefore demand that an unequivocal
reference to rights and to the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples be reinserted into the Draft COP14 Decision text on REDD.
Poznan, December 9, 2008
Signed by
The Accra Caucus on Forests and
Climate Change, comprised of more than 30 civil society organizations
from three tropical continents
Accion Ecologica
Friends of the Earth International
Indigenous Peoples' Forum on Climate
Change
Rainforest Foundation Norway
Rainforest Foundation UK
Tebtebba Foundation