In a message dated 12/04/1999 7:29:33 PM Eastern Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<<  AMERI-ADVOCATE -
http://members.tripod.com/~ellis_smith/ameri-advocate.html
 INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' SEATTLE DECLARATION
 on the occasion of the
 Third Ministerial Meeting of the World Trade Organization
 November 30-December 3, 1999

 We, the Indigenous Peoples from various regions of the world, have come to
 Seattle to express our great concern over how the World Trade Organization
 is destroying Mother Earth and the cultural and biological diversity of
 which we are a part.
 Trade liberalization and export-oriented development, which are the
 overriding principles and policies pushed by the WTO, are creating the most
 adverse impacts on the lives of Indigenous Peoples. Our inherent right to
 self-determination, our sovereignty as nations, and treaties and other
 constructive agreements which Indigenous nations and Peoples have negotiated
 with other nation-states, are undermined by most of the WTO Agreements. The
 disproportionate impact of these Agreements on our communities, whether
 through environmental degradation or the militarization and violence that
 often accompanies development projects, is serious and therefore should be
 addressed immediately.
 The WTO Agreement on Agriculture (AOA), which promotes export competition
 and import liberalization, has allowed the entry of cheap agricultural
 products into our communities. It is causing the destruction of ecologically
 rational and sustainable agricultural practices of Indigenous Peoples.
 Food security and the production of traditional food crops have been
 seriously compromised. Incidents of diabetes, cancers, and hypertension have
 significantly increased among Indigenous Peoples because of the scarcity of
 traditional foods and the dumping of junk food into our communities.
 Small-scale farm production is giving way to commercial cash-crop
 plantations further concentrating ancestral lands into the hands of few
 agri-corporations and landlords. This has led to the dislocation of scores
 of people from our communities who then migrate to nearby cities and become
 the urban homeless and jobless.
 The WTO Forests Products Agreement promotes free trade in forest products.
 By eliminating developed country tariffs on wood products by the year 2000,
 and developing country tariffs by 2003, the Agreement will result in the
 deforestation of many of the world's ecosystems in which Indigenous Peoples
 live.
 Mining laws in many countries are being changed to allow free entry of
 foreign mining corporations, to enable them to buy and own mineral lands,
 and to freely displace Indigenous Peoples from their ancestral territories.
 These large-scale commercial mining and oil extraction activities continue
 to degrade our lands and fragile ecosystems, and pollute the soil, water,
 and air in our communities.
 The appropriation of our lands and resources and the aggressive promotion of
 consumerist and individualistic Western culture continue to destroy
 traditional lifestyles and cultures. The result is not only environmental
 degradation but also ill health, alienation, and high levels of stress
 manifested in high rates of alcoholism and suicides.
 The theft and patenting of our biogenetic resources is facilitated by the
 TRIPs (Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights) of the WTO.
 Some plants which Indigenous Peoples have discovered, cultivated, and used
 for food, medicine, and for sacred rituals are already patented in the
 United States, Japan, and Europe. A few examples of these are ayahuasca,
 quinoa, and sangre de drago in forests of South America; kava in the
 Pacific; turmeric and bitter melon in Asia. Our access and control over our
 biological diversity and control over our traditional knowledge and
 intellectual heritage are threatened by the TRIPs Agreement.
 Article 27.3b of the TRIPs Agreement allows the patenting of life-forms and
 makes an artificial distinction between plants, animals, and
 micro-organisms. The distinction between "essentially biological" and
 "non-biological" and "microbiological" processes is also erroneous. As far
 as we are concerned all these are life-forms and life-creating processes
 which are sacred and which should not become the subject of private property
 ownership.
 Finally, the liberalization of investments and the service sectors, which is
 pushed by the General Agreement of Services (GATS), reinforces the
 domination and monopoly control of foreign corporations over strategic parts
 of the economy. The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund impose
 conditionalities of liberalization, deregulation and privatization on
 countries caught in the debt trap. These conditionalities are reinforced
 further by the WTO.
 In light of the adverse impacts and consequences of the WTO Agreements
 identified above, we, Indigenous Peoples present the following demands:
 We urgently call for a social and environmental justice analysis which will
 look into the Agreements' cumulative effects on Indigenous Peoples.
 Indigenous Peoples should be equal participants in establishing the criteria
 and indicators for these analyses so that they take into consideration
 spiritual as well as cultural aspects.
 A review of the Agreements should be done to address all of the inequities
 and imbalances which adversely affect Indigenous Peoples. The proposals to
 address some of these are as follows;
 For the Agreement on Agriculture
 a. It should not include in its coverage small-scale farmers who are mainly
 engaged in production for domestic use and sale in the local markets.
 b. It should ensure the recognition and protection of rights of Indigenous
 Peoples to their territories and their resources, as well as their rights to
 continue practicing their indigenous sustainable agriculture and resource
 management practices and traditional livelihoods.
 c. It should ensure the food security and the capacity of Indigenous Peoples
 to produce, consume and trade their traditional foods.
 With regard to the liberalization of services and investments we recommend
 the following:
 a. It must stop unsustainable mining, commercial planting of monocrops, dam
 construction, oil exploration, land conversion to golf clubs, logging, and
 other activities which destroy Indigenous Peoples' lands and violate the
 rights of indigenous peoples' to their territories and resources.
 b. The right of Indigenous Peoples to their traditional lifestyles, cultural
 norms and values should likewise be recognized and protected.
 c. The liberalization of services, especially in the areas of health, should
 not be allowed if it will prevent Indigenous Peoples from having access to
 free, culturally appropriate as well as quality health services.
 d. The liberalization of finance services which makes the world a global
 casino should be regulated.




 On the TRIPs Agreement, the proposals are as follows:
 a. Article 27.3b should be amended to categorically disallow the patenting
 of life-forms. It should clearly prohibit the patenting of micro-organisms,
 plants, animals, including all their parts, whether they are genes, gene
 sequences, cells, cell lines, proteins, or seeds.
 b. It should also prohibit the patenting of natural processes, whether these
 are biological or microbiological, involving the use of plants, animals and
 micro-organisms and their parts in producing variations of plants, animals
 and micro-organisms.
 c. It should ensure the exploration and development of alternative forms of
 protection outside of the dominant western intellectual property rights
 regime. Such alternatives must protect the knowledge and innovations and
 practices in agriculture, health care, and conservation of biodiversity, and
 should build upon indigenous methods and customary laws protecting
 knowledge, heritage and biological resources.
 d. It should ensure that the protection offered to indigenous and
 traditional knowledge, innovation and practices is consistent with the
 Convention on Biological Diversity (i.e., Articles 8j, 10c, 17.2, and 18.4)
 and the International Undertaking on Plant Genetic Resources.
 e. It should allow for the right of Indigenous Peoples and farmers to
 continue their traditional practices of saving, sharing and exchanging
 seeds, and cultivating, harvesting and using medicinal plants.
 f. It should prohibit scientific researchers and corporations from
 appropriating and patenting indigenous seeds, medicinal plants, and related
 knowledge about these life-forms. The principles of prior informed consent
 and right of veto by Indigenous Peoples should be respected.

 If the earlier proposals cannot be ensured, we call for the removal of the
 Agreement on Agriculture, the Forest Products Agreements and the TRIPs
 Agreement from the WTO.
 We call on the member-states of the WTO not to allow for another round
 whilst the review and rectification of the implementation of existing
 agreements has not been done. We reject the proposals for an investment
 treaty, competition, accelerated industrial tariffs, government procurement,
 and the creation of a working group on biotechnology.
 We urge the WTO to reform itself to become democratic, transparent and
 accountable. If it fails to do this we call for the abolition of the WTO.
 We urge the member nation-states of the WTO to endorse the adoption by the
 UN General Assembly of the current text of the UN Declaration on the Rights
 of Indigenous Peoples and the ratification of ILO Convention l69.
 We call on the peoples' organizations and NGOs to support this "Indigenous
 Peoples' Seattle Declaration" and to promote it among their members.
 We believe that the whole philosophy underpinning the WTO Agreements and the
 principles and policies it promotes contradict our core values, spirituality
 and worldviews, as well as our concepts and practices of development, trade
 and environmental protection. Therefore, we challenge the WTO to redefine
 its principles and practices toward a "sustainable communities" paradigm,
 and to recognize and allow for the continuation of other worldviews and
 models of development.
 Indigenous peoples, undoubtedly, are the ones most adversely affected by
 globalization and by the WTO Agreements. However, we believe that it is also
 us who can offer viable alternatives to the dominant economic growth,
 export-oriented development model. Our sustainable lifestyles and cultures,
 traditional knowledge, cosmologies, spirituality, values of collectivity,
 reciprocity, respect and reverence for Mother Earth, are crucial in the
 search for a transformed society where justice, equity, and sustainability
 will prevail.



 Statement by the Indigenous Peoples' Caucus convened and sponsored by the
 Indigenous Environmental Network USA/CANADA, Seventh Generation Fund USA,
 International Indian Treaty Council, Indigenous Peoples Council on
 Biocolonialism, the Abya Yala Fund, and TEBTEBBA (Indigenous Peoples'
 Network for Policy Research and Education), 1 December 1999, Seattle,
 Washington, USA.
 Other indigenous peoples' organizations, NGOs and individuals who wish to
 sign on to this statement, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] or
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 AMERI-ADVOCATE / ONE GLOBAL ONE
 Amsterdam - New York - Montreal
 Santa Cruz - New >>



 AMERI-ADVOCATE - http://members.tripod.com/~ellis_smith/ameri-advocate.html
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' SEATTLE DECLARATION
on the occasion of the
Third Ministerial Meeting of the World Trade Organization
November 30-December 3, 1999

We, the Indigenous Peoples from various regions of the world, have come to
Seattle to express our great concern over how the World Trade Organization
is destroying Mother Earth and the cultural and biological diversity of
which we are a part.
Trade liberalization and export-oriented development, which are the
overriding principles and policies pushed by the WTO, are creating the most
adverse impacts on the lives of Indigenous Peoples. Our inherent right to
self-determination, our sovereignty as nations, and treaties and other
constructive agreements which Indigenous nations and Peoples have negotiated
with other nation-states, are undermined by most of the WTO Agreements. The
disproportionate impact of these Agreements on our communities, whether
through environmental degradation or the militarization and violence that
often accompanies development projects, is serious and therefore should be
addressed immediately.
The WTO Agreement on Agriculture (AOA), which promotes export competition
and import liberalization, has allowed the entry of cheap agricultural
products into our communities. It is causing the destruction of ecologically
rational and sustainable agricultural practices of Indigenous Peoples.
Food security and the production of traditional food crops have been
seriously compromised. Incidents of diabetes, cancers, and hypertension have
significantly increased among Indigenous Peoples because of the scarcity of
traditional foods and the dumping of junk food into our communities.
Small-scale farm production is giving way to commercial cash-crop
plantations further concentrating ancestral lands into the hands of few
agri-corporations and landlords. This has led to the dislocation of scores
of people from our communities who then migrate to nearby cities and become
the urban homeless and jobless.
The WTO Forests Products Agreement promotes free trade in forest products.
By eliminating developed country tariffs on wood products by the year 2000,
and developing country tariffs by 2003, the Agreement will result in the
deforestation of many of the world's ecosystems in which Indigenous Peoples
live.
Mining laws in many countries are being changed to allow free entry of
foreign mining corporations, to enable them to buy and own mineral lands,
and to freely displace Indigenous Peoples from their ancestral territories.
These large-scale commercial mining and oil extraction activities continue
to degrade our lands and fragile ecosystems, and pollute the soil, water,
and air in our communities.
The appropriation of our lands and resources and the aggressive promotion of
consumerist and individualistic Western culture continue to destroy
traditional lifestyles and cultures. The result is not only environmental
degradation but also ill health, alienation, and high levels of stress
manifested in high rates of alcoholism and suicides.
The theft and patenting of our biogenetic resources is facilitated by the
TRIPs (Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights) of the WTO.
Some plants which Indigenous Peoples have discovered, cultivated, and used
for food, medicine, and for sacred rituals are already patented in the
United States, Japan, and Europe. A few examples of these are ayahuasca,
quinoa, and sangre de drago in forests of South America; kava in the
Pacific; turmeric and bitter melon in Asia. Our access and control over our
biological diversity and control over our traditional knowledge and
intellectual heritage are threatened by the TRIPs Agreement.
Article 27.3b of the TRIPs Agreement allows the patenting of life-forms and
makes an artificial distinction between plants, animals, and
micro-organisms. The distinction between "essentially biological" and
"non-biological" and "microbiological" processes is also erroneous. As far
as we are concerned all these are life-forms and life-creating processes
which are sacred and which should not become the subject of private property
ownership.
Finally, the liberalization of investments and the service sectors, which is
pushed by the General Agreement of Services (GATS), reinforces the
domination and monopoly control of foreign corporations over strategic parts
of the economy. The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund impose
conditionalities of liberalization, deregulation and privatization on
countries caught in the debt trap. These conditionalities are reinforced
further by the WTO.
In light of the adverse impacts and consequences of the WTO Agreements
identified above, we, Indigenous Peoples present the following demands:
We urgently call for a social and environmental justice analysis which will
look into the Agreements' cumulative effects on Indigenous Peoples.
Indigenous Peoples should be equal participants in establishing the criteria
and indicators for these analyses so that they take into consideration
spiritual as well as cultural aspects.
A review of the Agreements should be done to address all of the inequities
and imbalances which adversely affect Indigenous Peoples. The proposals to
address some of these are as follows;
For the Agreement on Agriculture
a. It should not include in its coverage small-scale farmers who are mainly
engaged in production for domestic use and sale in the local markets.
b. It should ensure the recognition and protection of rights of Indigenous
Peoples to their territories and their resources, as well as their rights to
continue practicing their indigenous sustainable agriculture and resource
management practices and traditional livelihoods.
c. It should ensure the food security and the capacity of Indigenous Peoples
to produce, consume and trade their traditional foods.
With regard to the liberalization of services and investments we recommend
the following:
a. It must stop unsustainable mining, commercial planting of monocrops, dam
construction, oil exploration, land conversion to golf clubs, logging, and
other activities which destroy Indigenous Peoples' lands and violate the
rights of indigenous peoples' to their territories and resources.
b. The right of Indigenous Peoples to their traditional lifestyles, cultural
norms and values should likewise be recognized and protected.
c. The liberalization of services, especially in the areas of health, should
not be allowed if it will prevent Indigenous Peoples from having access to
free, culturally appropriate as well as quality health services.
d. The liberalization of finance services which makes the world a global
casino should be regulated.




On the TRIPs Agreement, the proposals are as follows:
a. Article 27.3b should be amended to categorically disallow the patenting
of life-forms. It should clearly prohibit the patenting of micro-organisms,
plants, animals, including all their parts, whether they are genes, gene
sequences, cells, cell lines, proteins, or seeds.
b. It should also prohibit the patenting of natural processes, whether these
are biological or microbiological, involving the use of plants, animals and
micro-organisms and their parts in producing variations of plants, animals
and micro-organisms.
c. It should ensure the exploration and development of alternative forms of
protection outside of the dominant western intellectual property rights
regime. Such alternatives must protect the knowledge and innovations and
practices in agriculture, health care, and conservation of biodiversity, and
should build upon indigenous methods and customary laws protecting
knowledge, heritage and biological resources.
d. It should ensure that the protection offered to indigenous and
traditional knowledge, innovation and practices is consistent with the
Convention on Biological Diversity (i.e., Articles 8j, 10c, 17.2, and 18.4)
and the International Undertaking on Plant Genetic Resources.
e. It should allow for the right of Indigenous Peoples and farmers to
continue their traditional practices of saving, sharing and exchanging
seeds, and cultivating, harvesting and using medicinal plants.
f. It should prohibit scientific researchers and corporations from
appropriating and patenting indigenous seeds, medicinal plants, and related
knowledge about these life-forms. The principles of prior informed consent
and right of veto by Indigenous Peoples should be respected.

If the earlier proposals cannot be ensured, we call for the removal of the
Agreement on Agriculture, the Forest Products Agreements and the TRIPs
Agreement from the WTO.
We call on the member-states of the WTO not to allow for another round
whilst the review and rectification of the implementation of existing
agreements has not been done. We reject the proposals for an investment
treaty, competition, accelerated industrial tariffs, government procurement,
and the creation of a working group on biotechnology.
We urge the WTO to reform itself to become democratic, transparent and
accountable. If it fails to do this we call for the abolition of the WTO.
We urge the member nation-states of the WTO to endorse the adoption by the
UN General Assembly of the current text of the UN Declaration on the Rights
of Indigenous Peoples and the ratification of ILO Convention l69.
We call on the peoples' organizations and NGOs to support this "Indigenous
Peoples' Seattle Declaration" and to promote it among their members.
We believe that the whole philosophy underpinning the WTO Agreements and the
principles and policies it promotes contradict our core values, spirituality
and worldviews, as well as our concepts and practices of development, trade
and environmental protection. Therefore, we challenge the WTO to redefine
its principles and practices toward a "sustainable communities" paradigm,
and to recognize and allow for the continuation of other worldviews and
models of development.
Indigenous peoples, undoubtedly, are the ones most adversely affected by
globalization and by the WTO Agreements. However, we believe that it is also
us who can offer viable alternatives to the dominant economic growth,
export-oriented development model. Our sustainable lifestyles and cultures,
traditional knowledge, cosmologies, spirituality, values of collectivity,
reciprocity, respect and reverence for Mother Earth, are crucial in the
search for a transformed society where justice, equity, and sustainability
will prevail.



Statement by the Indigenous Peoples' Caucus convened and sponsored by the
Indigenous Environmental Network USA/CANADA, Seventh Generation Fund USA,
International Indian Treaty Council, Indigenous Peoples Council on
Biocolonialism, the Abya Yala Fund, and TEBTEBBA (Indigenous Peoples'
Network for Policy Research and Education), 1 December 1999, Seattle,
Washington, USA.
Other indigenous peoples' organizations, NGOs and individuals who wish to
sign on to this statement, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] or
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
AMERI-ADVOCATE / ONE GLOBAL ONE
Amsterdam - New York - Montreal
Santa Cruz - New



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