Reactions to APA statement are misguided
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The furore surrounding the statement issued by a conference of Amerindian  leaders on land rights is, in the opinion of the Guyana Human Rights  Association, misplaced and unhelpful.
The sensitivity manifest by the  supporters of  the LCDS and REDD+, is uncalled for, the GHRA said in a statement  . Nothing in either statements issued by the conference or later by the APA  suggests lack of support, or even criticism of the LCDS/REDD+ strategies,  indeed, the releases are not primarily concerned with REDD+.
The central  concern of both statements is that developments of any kind, whether in  extractive industries, other projects or in the LCDS/REDD+ not take place until  “fair and transparent policies and actions to resolve our outstanding land  claims must be put in place as a priority.”
What is new or controversial  about this? The call is not to make implementation of REDD+ or other forms of  development dependent on resolution of all land rights claims, but on having  ‘fair and transparent policies in place before implementation which may have  “impacts on our lands, territories and resources.”
Which Guyanese, much less  Amerindian, would not want to see such policies in place?
Those who can  remember life before REDD+ would recall that the issue of land rights is the  most predictable response from the Amerindian community to any significant  development impacting on the hinterland of Guyana.
In the 1990s the invasion  of predatory Asian forestry companies provoked such a response; development of  National Protected Areas, in the late ‘90s was met by land rights claims, mining  permits regularly provoke a similar response.
For this reason, it was more  than predictable - and legitimate - that such a far-reaching proposal as the  LCDS and REDD+, despite their great potential benefits, would trigger land  rights concerns.
The equally predictable response of parading how much has  been done ‘for’ Amerindians can never resolve the land matter. It is instructive  that so many issues such as forestry, mining and pollution which began as  indigenous concerns evolved into national patrimony issues, GHRA said.
Rather  than relief that the call has come in such measured and thoughtful terms, LCDS  proponents are reacting with a degree of arrogance which leaves the on-looker  uncomfortable.
The conference statement is being derided because the media  reports of the conference (SN in particular) focus almost exclusively on the  references in the press release to LCDS/REDD+.
A fact which has been  overlooked by all commentators is that the original Conference release was  signed by some 26 leaders from across the interior, including eight  toshaos.
Rather than hyper-ventilate about a less than politically-correct  welcome to the LSCD/REDD+ strategies, supporters of the policy would do well to  recognize that the threat to land rights – not necessarily from REDD+ - is real  and affects all Guyanese. The March issue of the magazine ‘Grain” (grain.org)  contains an article all Guyanese would do well to read about land-grabbing in  Latin America.
Referring to the problem in Brazil , the article goes on: In  neighbouring Guyana , for instance, the Brazilian Government is financing the  construction of roads, bridges and other infrastructure to open up Guyana’s  ecologically sensitive Rupununi savannah to large-scale agricultural projects  that will export crops to Brazil .
“Some Brazilian rice producers who are now  negotiating with the Government of Guyana for 99-year leases to large areas of  indigenous lands in the Rupununi savannah were recently forced by the Brazilian  Supreme Court to abandon lands that they had taken illegally from indigenous  communities on their own side of the border, in Raposa Serra do Sol.”
“The  multinational seed company RiceTec has approached the government of Guyana for  about 2,000 hectares of land in the same region – a diverse and fragile  ecosystem that is home to several indigenous peoples.
“With this new way of  doing business, the former landlords and invaders get new opportunities to grab  land, with fewer economic and political risks, and a new, “respectable” title of  “foreign investors”.
In their concern about land titles, Amerindians are  demonstrating a greater awareness of what may be down the road than the rest of  the Guyanese community. However, according to the APA statement, the cost of  demonstrating such awareness, apart from criticism from proponents of the LCDS  included harassment from the Ministry of Amerindian Affairs.
Phone calls  demanding to know who were invited to the conference and how it was financed are  forms of intimidation and are unacceptable. Such behaviour should be noted by  the LCDS process monitors.
Both statements make frequent reference to the  phrase ‘free, prior and informed consent‘(FPIC) as the guiding principle for any  engagement between indigenous communities and the government.
The authorities  and proponents of LCDS would do well to take the phrase seriously and negotiate  with the Amerindian communities respectfully.
Society as a whole would also  be well-advised to cultivate the practice of demanding free, informed and prior  consent as a routine matter, not only in relation to REDD+.(GHRA)
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