From: First Peoples Human Rights Coalition 
[mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: September-25-13 5:35 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Human Rights Council 24th session Half-day panel discussion on the 
World Conference on Indigenous Peoples

>From the opening remarks below: "Human rights must therefore be at the heart 
>of the World Conference."

... "With the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as our road map, 
let us proceed with a shared purpose and commitment to prepare in the next 12 
months a World Conference that will take our work on and with indigenous 
peoples to a new level."


______________________________
United Nations Human Rights
Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights

Opening remarks by Ms Flavia Pansieri, United Nations Deputy High Commissioner 
for Human Rights to the Human Rights Council 24th session Half-day panel 
discussion on the World Conference on Indigenous Peoples

http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=13760&LangID=E

 17 September 2013, 15:00 - 18:00Room XX, Palais des Nations, Geneva
Mr. President, Excellences, Ladies and Gentlemen,
It gives me great pleasure to open this panel and to welcome the distinguished 
representatives of indigenous peoples and other panelists to a timely and 
important discussion on the High Level Plenary Meeting of the General Assembly 
to be known as the World Conference on Indigenous Peoples.
Today's panel is not only an occasion to highlight the significance of the 
World Conference to be held in September 2014, but also an opportunity to 
explore how to make sure that the process and the outcome of the Conference 
yield concrete results, results that resonatewell beyond New York and Geneva 
and truly improve the lives and advance therights of indigenous peoples, 
including women and children.
Over the years, there have been several landmark events advancing the efforts 
to place the rights of indigenous peoples firmly on the UN agenda. These have 
ranged from the first international NGO conference of indigenous peoples on UN 
premises, held here in Palais des Nations in 1977 (and marked just last week 
with a colloquium) to the adoption of the UN Declaration on the Rights of 
Indigenous Peoples by General Assembly in 2007. I am confident that if we all - 
representatives of States, indigenous peoples, UN, regional organisations and 
others - work hard in a true, constructive partnership, the World Conference 
will become such a landmark.
The first steps have been promising. The World Conference preparatory process 
has already inspired innovations and generated energy and enthusiasm that bode 
well for the event itself. For example, theimportance of ensuring that the 
World Conference is not only about indigenous peoples but prepared with them 
has been repeatedly underlined by this Council and others. This commitment was 
also reflected in a commendable decision of the President of General Assembly 
to appoint an indigenous co-facilitator, John Henriksen of the Sami Parliament 
of Norway, who joins this panel today, to conduct with Ambassador Luis Alfonso 
de Alba of Mexico first consultations with governments and indigenous peoples 
on the World Conference. We have also been pleased to see how indigenous 
peoples from all regions have organised themselves and actively engaged in the 
process, including through the Indigenous Global Coordinating Group, which is 
represented in this panel by Ms Tania Pariona. The Global Indigenous 
Preparatory Conference - organised in Alta, Norway, in June of this year - was 
a prime example of this engagement, resulting in a substantial and detailed 
outcome document. At OHCHR, we are also committed to advancing participation of 
indigenous peoples in the World Conference and its preparatory process, 
including by ensuring direct support to such participation through the UN 
Voluntary Fund on Indigenous Populations.
Ladies and gentlemen,
Robust indigenous participation in the World Conference process is essential 
not only as a reflection of the rights contained in the UN Declaration on the 
Rights of Indigenous Peoples and other human rights texts, but also to ensure 
that the Conference addresses those themes, issues and challenges that are 
truly priorities for indigenous peoples. Indigenous peoples have already put 
forward a number of valuable recommendations in this respect, including calls 
to address such key themes as land rights and the principle of free, prior and 
informed consent. Important proposals have also been made in recent sessions of 
the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the Permanent 
Forum on Indigenous Issues, and I am pleased that both bodies are represented 
in this panel (by, respectively, Chief Wilton Littlechild and Mr Devasish Roy).
Virtually all key themes and issues proposed so far have an important human 
rights dimension, linked to the standards contained in the UN Declaration on 
the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and human rights treaties. Human rights must 
therefore be at the heart of the World Conference. I am confident that this 
panel as well as preparatory meetings such the one to be hosted by the 
Government Mexico will help us reach that goal.
In its modalities resolution, the General Assembly decided that the World 
Conference shall result in "a concise, action oriented outcome document". In 
line with this commitment, we must work towards an outcome that goes beyond 
reaffirming the importance of the rights of indigenous peoples and identifying 
good practices and challenges that remain in this respect; it must also prompt 
enhanced action to meet these challenges, action to implement the Declaration 
and other key standards.
Since the adoption of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in 
2007, we have seen such action in a number of countries in all regions. New 
laws and policies devoted to indigenous peoples have been introduced, in 
several cases coupled with mechanisms facilitating the participation of 
indigenous peoples in decision-making. Often neglected issues, including 
discrimination and other human rights problems faced by indigenous women and 
persons with disabilities, have also received increased attention. Progress has 
been achieved in all regions, including where conceptual challenges have at 
times complicated efforts to advance indigenous peoples' rights, and I look 
forward to learning from Ms Soyata Maiga, the Chair of the Working Group on 
Indigenous Populations/Communities of the African Commission on Human and 
Peoples' Rights, how this work is being pursued in Africa.
You can see numerous examples of such positive initiatives in the report that 
the Expert Mechanism, with support from OHCHR, prepared for this session of the 
Human Rights Council on best practices andimplementation strategies to attain 
the goals of the Declaration. At the same time, the report, together with many 
findings of treaty bodies and other human rights mechanisms, shows that only a 
limited number of States have introduced comprehensive strategies or national 
action plans devoted to the implementation of the Declaration. In many cases, 
implementation measures introduced coveronly some, selected provisions of the 
Declaration, and the approach pursued is at times more ad hoc than strategic. 
The rights contained in the Declaration are so interdependent and interrelated 
that their realization requires comprehensive approaches and action. For 
example, efforts to implement the right to culture are likely to fail if land 
rights are ignored; indigenous peoples' right to participate in decision-making 
will never be fully realized without efforts to combat discrimination against 
indigenous women; and trueprogress in fields ranging from education to language 
rights requires respect for indigenous peoples' right to self-determination.
The World Conference would be an excellent opportunity to encourage the 
introduction of such comprehensive approaches through implementation strategies 
and/or action plans, to be developed, implemented and monitored in close 
partnership with indigenous peoples. They can be pursued as separate 
initiatives or as a component of the human rights action plans or action plans 
against racial discrimination, as long as all the rights contained in the 
Declaration and the specific human rights challenges faced by indigenous 
peoples receive focused attention and action.
Our office, together with its partners, stands ready to support the development 
of such strategies and action plans, as wehave successfully done, for example, 
in the context of national action plans to combat racism, called for by the 
Durban Declaration and Programme of Action.
Ladies and gentlemen,
The World Conference is also an opportunity to examine and advance the 
engagement of the United Nations in the area of indigenous peoples' rights, in 
line with Articles 41 and 42 of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous 
Peoples, which call upon the various components of the United Nations system to 
contribute to and promote the full realization of the rights affirmed in the 
Declaration.
We can celebrate many achievements in this respect. Thanks to the tireless 
advocacy of indigenous representatives and their allies and partners in 
governments and elsewhere, indigenous peoples' rights have gradually moved from 
obscurity to visibility in the UN, and theadoption of the Declaration has 
further stimulated this process. Consider, for example, that -indigenous 
peoples' rights are today regularly raised in human rights mechanisms, 
including in the UPR process, human rights treaty bodies and special procedures 
-three UN mandates devoted to indigenous peoples are actively engaging states 
and indigenous peoples to promote the Declaration and other standards - OHCHR 
and other UN agencies are working closely together, and with indigenous 
peoples, both at headquarters and in the field, to advance indigenous peoples' 
rights, including through the inter-agency support group and the UN Indigenous 
Peoples Partnership Initiative (UNIPP).
As we celebrate these and other steps, we must also acknowledge that indigenous 
peoples' rights could, and should, be embedded even more firmly in the work of 
the United Nations.  The World Conference can provide an important boost to 
these efforts, and encourage attention toindigenous peoples in the post-2015 
development agenda and other key contexts. The Alta outcome document suggests 
various new initiatives and mechanisms aimed to bolster such work within the 
UN. But as we study proposals for new tools, let us also consider how we can 
make the existing mechanisms stronger, ensuring that their profile and, most 
importantly, positive impact on human rights are maximized. As far as human 
rights specific mechanisms are concerned, the World Conference process could, 
for example, help to galvanize further support to the crucial work of the 
Special Rapporteur on the Rights of indigenous Peoples and the Expert Mechanism 
on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and stimulate moreconsistent follow-up to 
their findings.  It can also help to boost inter-agency initiatives on 
indigenous peoples, so that they will live up to their full potential, filling 
knowledge and capacity gaps that still exist within the UN system and advancing 
indigenous peoples' rights, including at the field level.
Ladies and gentlemen,
The World Conference is a tremendous opportunity which we need to seize 
together. With the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as our road 
map, let us proceed with a shared purpose and commitment to prepare in the next 
12 months a World Conference that will take our work on and with indigenous 
peoples to a new level. Thank you for your attention.
*****
(c) OHCHR 1996-2013<http://www.ohchr.org/EN/AboutUs/Pages/Copyright.aspx>


Newly required opt-out policy:

If you no longer wish to receive our emails, return this one
To [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
with the word
"UNSUBSCRIBE" in the subject line.






Reply via email to