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SPECIAL REPORTS
- Thursday
20 January 2005
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WORLD
SOCIAL FORUM:
Indigenous Peoples Claim Their
Own Space
Mario
Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO, (IPS) - ''We are
the other world,'' declared the
organisers of the indigenous
segment of this year's World
Social Forum in Porto Alegre,
Brazil, the fifth global
gathering of non-governmental
groups under the theme,
''Another world is possible''.
Since 2001, the World Social
Forum (WSF) has been held
annually as a civil society
counterpoint to the World
Economic Forum, which brings
together the world's political
and business elite in the Swiss
resort town of Davos every year.
For the first time ever, this
year's WSF, taking place Jan.
26-31, will feature a specific
space and activities for
indigenous participants.
''We live as members of a
community, devoted to the
principle of reciprocity, which
includes a solidarity economy,
respect for diversity,
responsibility towards future
generations, protection of the
environment, and building a
world different from the
predominant capitalist model,''
Rona Dos Santos, of the
Coordinating Body for Indigenous
Organisations of the Amazon
Basin (COICA), told IPS.
As the head of COICA's
institutional reinforcement
programme, Dos Santos is already
in Porto Alegre overseeing the
organisation of the ''Puxirum of
Indigenous Arts and Knowledge'',
a special forum that will bring
together 400 representatives of
roughly 100 indigenous ethnic
groups from around the globe.
'Puxirum' means ''a joining of
efforts for a common goal'' in
Tupi-Guarani, the main
indigenous language in Brazil.
''There are participants coming
from all over the world,'' said
Dos Santos, adding that the 400
participants expected so far
could be joined by many more if
they manage to overcome the
difficulties of transportation
at the last minute, as has
happened at previous meetings.
Within the area that will serve
as the WSF venue this year, on
the banks of the Guaíba River,
there will be an ''indigenous
territory'' made up of four
tents. They will house an
arts-and-crafts fair, booths
serving traditional indigenous
food, and ''diversity
dialogues'' for discussion of
issues relevant to the
participating indigenous
communities.
The most important theme of this
meeting, said Dos Santos, will
be that of indigenous peoples'
rights.
For 20 years, she noted, the
United Nations has been working
on a Draft Declaration on the
Rights of Indigenous Peoples,
which has still not been
adopted. The Organisation of
American States (OAS) has
delayed the adoption of a
similar document for over ten
years, while the Brazilian
Congress has been debating an
Indigenous Peoples' Statute for
11 years, she added.
Without instruments like these,
''there are no guarantees,''
since the only existing
international legislation --
International Labour
Organisation (ILO) Convention
No. 169, which recognises the
rights of indigenous and tribal
peoples to their own territory,
culture and languages -- lacks
the power to oblige governments
to adopt the corresponding
policies, Dos Santos explained.
She blamed the lengthy delays of
these legal instruments on the
governments of the countries
affected, who fear territorial
autonomy on the part of
indigenous peoples and the
recognition of aboriginal
communities as ''peoples'' with
certain rights, such as
specialised education, health
care and other social benefits.
The participants in the WSF
indigenous programme will
express their demands in what
promises to be original methods,
based on traditional spiritual
ceremonies.
Printed copies of draft
declarations will be ''buried''
on the opening day of the forum,
Jan. 26. On Jan. 28, a ceremony
will be held on the burial spot
to ''summon the spirits'' that
will have left the ''earthly
bodies'' of the documents upon
burial, and thus need to be
called back.
On the next day, a Saturday, the
documents will be ''exhumed'',
symbolising the resurrection of
indigenous rights.
The Puxirum of Indigenous Arts
and Knowledge will include the
display and sale of traditional
crafts, ''fashion shows'' of
ethnic costumes, and a mix of
live performances and video
presentations of music, dance
and spiritual rites.
Meanwhile, the diversity
dialogues will address the
problems and aspirations of
aboriginal peoples from around
the world. The agenda will
include such issues as land
rights and sustainable
settlements, traditional
knowledge, constitutional
rights, autonomous systems of
justice and self-government, and
diversity as a dimension of
democracy.
The creation of a specific
programme of activities for
indigenous peoples within the
WSF will lead to a higher number
of aboriginal participants than
ever before, say organisers. At
past forums, indigenous
representatives have been few in
number, and have generally taken
part on an individual basis or
as invited guests at events
organised by other organisations.
The indigenous forum has been
organised by COICA, a network
founded 20 years ago that links
nine organisations from an equal
number of Amazon region nations,
namely Bolivia, Brazil,
Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru,
Suriname, Venezuela and French
Guiana, an overseas department
of France.
COICA estimates that there are
roughly 2.8 million indigenous
people living in the Amazon
region, distributed among 390
communities.
Some 120,000 participants from
close to 100 countries are
expected to join together in
Porto Alegre, the capital of the
southern Brazilian state of Rio
Grande do Sul, for this year's
WSF.
Special activities for young
people have been an integral
part of the WSF since its
inception, and this year an
estimated 30,000 youth
representatives from various
parts of the globe will gather
in the ''tent city'' set up for
this purpose.
In keeping with another WSF
tradition, a number of parallel
events will take place in Porto
Alegre around the same dates,
including the Forum of Local
Authorities and the fourth World
Forum of Judges, at which an
estimated 800 delegates will
meet Jan. 23-25 to seek ways to
democratise the justice system.
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