The Indigenous World 2023 Report (herein, The Report), developed by The International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA), reveals how, globally, many state-driven conservation efforts are not protecting the rights and knowledge of Indigenous Peoples, or practicing Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC). The Report shows how governments, while supporting international policies on the conservation of biodiversity, continue to engage in protectionist conservation practices at the expense of the rights of Indigenous Peoples.

The Indigenous World 2023 Report consolidates reports from regions and countries all over the word, and provides updates from international processes and initiatives, including those driven by the United Nations. The Report provides numerous examples and critiques of state-driven fortress conservation or protectionist conservation practices, that have resulted in violence against, and a refusal of, the rights of Indigenous Peoples.

For example, The Report notes how the government of Tanzania is furthering its efforts to protect and conserve lands, including expanding the Ruaha National Park and the Pololeti Game Reserve; however, in doing so, the government further encroaches into Maasai ancestral lands, demolishing Maasai homesteads, and forcibly displacing Indigenous villagers. The Report also explains how the government did not seek the Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) of Maasai villagers in the expansion of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area in 2022.  The Tanzania Times reports that over 2,000 villagers from Loliondo, located at the border of Tanzania and Kenya, have been displaced due to the expansion of the conservation area. The Maasai took the Government of Tanzania to court to contest the eviction of their villages but lost, “send[ing] a dangerous message that Indigenous [P]eoples can be evicted from their land in the name of conservation.”

The Report also highlights the significance of The Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (KMGBF) (December 2022) which “acknowledges the important roles and contri­butions of Indigenous peoples and local communities as cus­todians of biodiversity and partners in conservation, restora­tion and sustainable use.” The KMGBF is a strategy for nations “to protect and restore biodiversity by 2050.” The Report acknowledges the contradictions between the intentions of the KMGBF and the actions of many countries in protecting Indigenous rights and knowledge, and how there is more work to be done to fulfil the intentions of the strategy. For example, as noted in The Report, the KMGBF was adopted at the COP 15 meeting, chaired by China. However, despite China’s global leadership on biodiversity, domestically, the Chinese government has not acknowledged “the existence and relevance of Indigenous Peoples in the country.” To align with the KMGBF, China’s intentions to establish a national park system would need to recognize the rights and the contributions of Indigenous Peoples to the governance and protection of biodiversity.

While The Indigenous World 2023 Report commends the KMGBF and the efforts of the International In­digenous Forum on Biodiversity (IIFB), it also offers example after example of how state-driven conservation efforts are violating the rights and lives of Indigenous Peoples worldwide.

 

By Leela Viswanathan

 

(Image Credit: Mariola Grobelska, Unsplash)

With wildfires occurring earlier in the Spring and Summer months due to climate change, First Nations in Canada, especially those located in remote locations, face challenges due to limited access to fire prevention and safety services. The First Nations Fire Protection Strategy 2023-2028 provides long-term and short-term actions to “set out a path to improve fire outcomes for First Nations.”

The First Nations Fire Protection Strategy 2023-2028 (herein referred to as “Strategy”) was co-developed by the Assembly of First Nations (AFN) and Indigenous Services Canada. The aim of the Strategy is to establish concrete actions for First Nations’ fire protection and fire prevention. The Strategy also integrates these actions with emergency management measures as per the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction Sendai Framework.

The Strategy is reinforced by six pillars, each with a set of goals, and ends with an appendix that outlines guidelines for “municipal type service agreements.” The strategic pillars are:

  1. Partnership for First Nations fire protection
  2. Fire prevention education
  3. Community standards
  4. Fire service operational standards
  5. Climate change
  6. Critical infrastructure

Wildfires in Canada are at an all-time high in 2023 and are attributed to especially warm and dry conditions. Climate change, as the fifth pillar of the First Nation Fire Protection Strategy 2023-2028, calls for investing in the capacity of First Nations’ fire departments to better respond to fire events and to increasing efforts that reduce the risk of wildfire emergencies in Indigenous communities.

 

By Leela Viswanathan

 

(Image Credit: John Towner, Unsplash)