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AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL
Press Release
Americas:
Indigenous people at high risk of human rights violations
AI Index: AMR 01/008/2001
Publish date: 09/08/2001
As the world
marks the International Day of the World's Indigenous People, native
peoples continue to be the victims of human rights violations --
including killings and "disappearances" -- in many parts of
the Americas, Amnesty International said today.
"Intimidation, harassment and violent attacks against indigenous
communities are frequent occurrences in countries including Honduras,
Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico and Venezuela," the
organization added, calling on governments throughout the region to
ensure the rights of indigenous people are fully respected.
In Colombia, indigenous communities find themselves increasingly caught
up in the spiralling civil conflict and are targeted for attacks and
killings both by army-backed paramilitaries and armed opposition groups
accusing them in turns of collaborating with the other side.
Violence and threats against indigenous populations often take place in
the context of disputes relating to the lands they live on and to the
exploitation, by national and multinational companies, of natural
resources on indigenous territories.
For instance, the Pemón indigenous community in Venezuela is paying a
high price for opposing the construction of an electricity supply
network running pylons and high-voltage cables across their lands.
Members of the community have repeatedly received death threats and one
of its leaders, Silvano Castro, was severely beaten and arrested in
March this year as he was trying to film the army attacking non-violent
Pemón protesters with tear-gas and gun-pellets.
In Brazil, leaders and members of indigenous communities are targeted
with threats and violent attacks by local land-owners acting with the
complicity of the authorities. The violence is rooted in the slow
federal process of legalization of indigenous territories, which is
fiercely opposed by land-owners.
In Colombia, members of the Embera-Katío communities of Córdoba
department have come under increasing attack from paramilitaries for
their campaign against plans to build a dam which would destroy much of
their ancestral lands. One of their leaders, Kimy Pernia Domico,
"disappeared" nine weeks ago after being abducted by
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.
"In many countries in the Americas, indigenous people constitute
the most marginalised and dispossessed sector of society, and are the
victims of prejudice and discrimination," Amnesty International
said.
"This extends to the administration of justice, where non-Spanish
speaking indigenous people are often questioned by police and have their
statements taken without the assistance of an interpreter," the
organization added, pointing to examples of this in Guatemala and
Mexico.
"Even when there are laws in place to protect them, the rights of
indigenous people are still denied in practice," Amnesty
International said, citing, the case of the Mexican state of Oaxaca
where discrimination and human rights violations against indigenous
communities continue despite the passing of the ground-breaking Law of
Indigenous Customs in 1998.
In the Mexican states of Chiapas and Oaxaca, indigenous people and their
community organizations often suffer human rights violations in the
context of armed forces operations against insurgent groups or
drug-trafficking rings.
"Human rights
violations against indigenous people go virtually unchecked, which feeds
a vicious circle of impunity and more violations by sending perpetrators
a message that they will not be held to account," Amnesty
International noted.
In Guatemala --
where those responsible for the mass-scale massacres of indigenous
people during the country's long civil conflict are still walking free
-- disturbing evidence indicates that former members of the civil
patrols involved in past human rights violations are now carrying out
attacks against indigenous communities.
In Honduras, the government's commitment to set up a special programme
of investigation into at least 25 killings of indigenous leaders has so
far remained on paper, and impunity continues to prevail.
Against this
region-wide trend of reigning impunity, in May 2001 a court in the
Brazilian state of Amazon sentenced 13 men to between 15 to 25 years'
imprisonment for the death of 14 people in a gun attack on a Ticuna
indigenous community in 1988.
"It has taken 13 years of tireless efforts for the Ticuna people to
see justice done," Amnesty International said. "Sadly, this
case remains an exception, both in Brazil and in the rest of the
continent," the organization added.
"Challenging impunity is one of the crucial steps governments in
the Americas must take if they want to show they are serious about their
obligation to ensure the full protection of the human rights of
indigenous people."
Background
Ten countries
in the Americas (Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador,
Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Paraguay and Peru) are State Parties to the
Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention known as Convention 169,
adopted on 27 June 1989 at the General Conference of the International
Labour Organisation. The treaty aims, among other things, to protect
indigenous people, to ensure their participation in any decisions which
pertain to them, and to preserve their cultures. It also indicates
measures which governments should adopt in order for the indigenous
people to enjoy on equal terms with all other sectors of the population,
the rights and opportunities that the law grants them.
\ENDS
public document
For more
information please call Amnesty International's press office in London,
UK, on +44 20 7413 5566
Amnesty International, 1 Easton St.,
London WC1X 0DW
web : http://www.amnesty.org
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