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Dec 8, 2008

By Farah Mihlar

I am feeling slightly apprehensive. A global forum of 8000 environmentalists and conservationists is not familiar territory for a human rights activist like me - but here I am, at the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) forum in Barcelona. For many years there was a clear divide – they were seen to be on one side saving the planet and we on the other protecting humans. In recent years the gap has narrowed and the dominance of climate change on the international political agenda has seen a coming together of activists from all sides. Now even the UN sees climate change as an environmental, development and human rights issue at the same time.

The human rights angle is now undeniable. The organization I work for – Minority Rights Group International (MRG) – recently published research that shows that because of their close relationship to nature small indigenous and minority communities are worst affected by climate change. Changing weather patterns are destroying these communities and threatening to wipe out their cultures and traditions. This will undoubtedly be one of the main topics of discussion at 

After a drenched weekend in London I am tempted to soak up the Barcelona sun, enjoy the art and feast on tapas; but alas duty calls. I am here to promote MRG’s Show of Hands campaign that seeks a better deal for small communities struggling against climate change. We keep hearing bits and pieces in the news of how countries are trying to hammer out a climate change deal with new carbon emission targets. We know the US is being difficult and India and China want the West to make bigger cuts. But with just months to go before the penultimate round of talks in Poznan, Poland, in December and the final round in Copenhagen in February next year, what we aren't hearing are the views of those most affected. Where are the voices of the pastoralists in Uganda who are suffering from erratic droughts, or the Sami Reindeer herders in the arctic whose daily life is affected by melting ice caps? For them climate change is not something of the future: it is real, and a part of their everyday lives. Their voices must be reflected in any eventual international climate change deal.

So I am apprehensive, but also excited. Here in Barcelona I have meetings scheduled with Arctic Inuit leaders and tribal elders from the Amazon. I hope to expand our support base and gather more stories on how climate change is affecting communities. I am also keen to see how many others here share my anxiety that time is running out for these communities.

As a first timer to the IUCN forum I am unsure how it will all come together. With so many people pursuing different agendas, I suspect it will be quite chaotic, but then again so is the climate. Perhaps that will be the common agenda. Over the next three days, we will find out.

Farah Mihlar is MRG’s campaigns and media officer and is working on the Show of Hands campaign

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Posted: Dec 8, 2008 7:37am
Dec 8, 2008
Focus: Environment
Action Request: Petition
Location: United Kingdom

Dear friends and supporters,

 

UN climate change negotiations have begun in Poznan and MRG is supporting the call of indigenous communities for a resolution enabling them to participate in future climate change negotiations.

We are pushing states to pass a resolution before the conference ends this week.

We urgently need your signatures. If you have not already signed up please do so now http://www.minorityrights.org/7117/a-show-of-hands/take-action-now.html

 

Read more http://www.minorityrights.org/620/homepage/homepage.html

See our briefing paper on this issue http://www.minorityrights.org/7491/briefing-papers/voices-that-must-be-heard-minorities-and-indigenous-people-combating-climate-change.html

Thank you!

Shabana Sundaram

MRG Campaigns Team

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Posted: Dec 8, 2008 7:28am
Dec 3, 2008

Check out our new photo's on the Minority Rights Group Flickr photo stream!

http://flickr.com/photos/minorityrights/ 

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Posted: Dec 3, 2008 3:31am
Nov 20, 2008
Focus: Environment
Action Request: Petition
Location: United Kingdom

You can make the difference - we need your signatures urgently.

Take action http://www.minorityrights.org/7117/a-show-of-hands/take-action-now.html

States are meeting in December to negotiate a new climate change deal. Those worst affected by climate change are still shut out of the negotiations.

You can help make their voices heard.

See our campaign http://www.minorityrights.org/6673/a-show-of-hands/a-show-of-hands.html

 

Minority Rights Group International.
54,
Commercial Street ,
London E1 6LT 
www.minorityrights.org  

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Posted: Nov 20, 2008 8:08am
Nov 12, 2008
Focus: Indigenous Rights
Action Request: Petition
Location: Kenya

Please sign our petition to help the Endorois people of Kenya, whose land has been taken by the Kenyan government.

Please Sign and Send it to your friends! Let us know if you want to help!

http://www.minorityrights.org/6775/trouble-in-paradise/add-your-voice.html

 

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Posted: Nov 12, 2008 9:20am
Nov 11, 2008

Emma Eastwood, MRG’s Trouble in Paradise Campaign Manager, rounds off her trip to the Rift Valley discussing Obama ‘the Kenyan wonder boy’ and struts her stuff dancing with the Endorois. Sign our petition to pressure the Kenyan government to guarantee the Endorois community’s traditional way of life.

Today we take yet another bone-shaking ride up a poor excuse for a road to the Mochongoi Forest, which at around 2500m affords us views of the entire Endorois territory, bordered by dark hills swathed in rain clouds on the horizon.

The forest (which represents about one tenth of their land) is as crucial to the Endorois as the land surrounding Lake Bogoria. In the old days during the dry season the community would migrate up here with their cattle to the plentiful pastures – that was until the government gazetted the Forest in the 1970s, depriving them of yet more of their ancestral homelands.

To an outsider it would seem that the Endorois have plenty of space - only 60, 000 people scattered over a huge area, encompassing dry lowland plains dotted with irrigated maize fields and this highland plateau covered with lush grasslands and conifer groves. Playing devil’s advocate I point this out to Kipkazi, but he’s quick to remind me that the crux of the matter lies in the community’s lack of collective title to any of this land - they live daily with the possibility of being kicked out of their homes at any minute (in much the same way as they were from Lake Bogoria in the 1970s).

High up on the plateau we meet the volunteers who run the Human Rights Office, a humble wooden hut festooned with last year’s Christmas decorations and calendars portraying Obama ‘the Kenyan wonder boy’. Politics - everyone we’ve met so far is obsessed with the subject – the only words in Swahili I can ever make out are Obama, Raila, Kbaki and Obama and more Obama.

The main topic of discussion revolves around whether the presidential candidate will bring about change for Kenyans - so many people are pinning so much hope on this one man. Incidentally in Nairobi we found out that Obama’s father’s family are from the indigenous fisher folk community of the northern shores of Lake Victoria, a group MRG recently featured in our briefing on Kenya.

Paul Chepsoi, the Human Rights Office Chairman, looking incongruously smart in the rural surroundings in his suit and tie, takes us through the history of the dispossession of the Endorois from the Mochongoi Forest (and their continued struggle for the return of their lands). He accompanies us on a tour of the area, which is dotted with traditional mud huts (and some newer dwellings made entirely from zinc sheets, which, although easier to maintain, must become ovens in these temperatures during the day).

We meet the Endorois elders from one of the villages who tell us of how they are forced to graze their cattle on barren lands whilst outsiders have been allowed to settle on more fertile plots.

Volunteers at the Mochongoi Forest Human Rights Office

Volunteers at the Mochongoi Forest Human Rights Office

My education in pastoralist culture continues…I’m told that back in the day an Endorois girl’s family would have received ten cows for her hand in marriage, but nowadays she’s worth only four. My companion Neil wonders whether that’s deflation in the value of girls or inflation in the value of cows…Kipkazi says he would have been a rich man in the old days – he has four daughters!

Later that afternoon our visit to the Endorois community is rounded off by a show of traditional song and dance in a shady clearing backed by an enormous termite mound. After a welcome dance we were shown to a gnarled log and seated to enjoy the show - which features songs about the importance of Lake Bogoria and the community’s hopes for the return of their homeland. I am embarrassingly moved to tears by the spectacle and am thankful for my overlarge sunglasses and the distraction of trying to film and record the proceedings (and keep my dignity when obliged to strut my stuff on the dancefloor&hellip

Endorois traditional dance

Endorois traditional dance

We finish off the afternoon by giving impromptu speeches which we hope in some small way can communicate how, with the support of people like you, the Trouble in Paradise campaign can bring about real change for this resilient and courageous community whose traditional culture and livelihood is under threat.

http://www.minorityrights.org/6775/trouble-in-paradise/add-your-voice.html

 

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Posted: Nov 11, 2008 8:28am
Oct 29, 2008
A Show of Hands
 
 http://www.minorityrights.org/showofhands

Climate change is not just destroying our planet - it is threatening the very survival of indigenous and minority communities, their cultures and languages.

States are locked in negotiations to get a climate change deal through in Copenhagen by December 2009 which will set new targets for carbon emissions. Indigenous and minority communites have been left out of these - and other crucial negotiaions - as governments grapple with how to respond to the threat of global warming.

Their voices must be heard.

Please sign up to our letter

  • to show support to communities worst affected by climate change
  • to call on the UN member states to allow minority and indigenous communities to   effectively participate in the current climate change negotiations.
Sign up here: http://www.minorityrights.org/7117/a-show-of-hands/take-action-now.html

Read more: http://www.minorityrights.org/7121/a-show-of-hands/what-you-need-to-know.html

Contact:

MRG Campaigns Team 
shabana.sundaram@mrgmail.org
 
Minority Rights Group International.
54, Commercial Street,
London E1 6LT 
www.minorityrights.org 

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Posted: Oct 29, 2008 9:36am
Oct 22, 2008

Hey Everyone!
Minority Rights Group International has recently launched a campaign to help the Endorois people of Kenya. They are an indigenous group who is being ignored in discussion of further development of their lands for the purpose of tourism.
Please check out the website www.minorityrights.org/troubleinparadise and sign the petition!
Let me know if you have any questions/comments/concerns
Thanks!
-MRG

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Posted: Oct 22, 2008 5:04am
Oct 21, 2008

Check out this really great article about the campaign and the Endorois

http://news.mongabay.com/2008/0922-hance_endorois.html

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Posted: Oct 21, 2008 9:24am
Oct 21, 2008

Thanks for checking out our project! Minority Rights Group International is new to Amazee, and we're still trying to figure out just quite how this works, but in the mean time do us a favor. We're very passionate about the Endorois people, and would really like to see them treated as full and equal members of their nation. For that to happen, we need YOUR help. You don't have to join the group, or send us money, but we would love it if you could sign our petition. Here's the link... http://www.minorityrights.org/6775/trouble-in-paradise/add-your-voice.ht...

If you would like more information, please visit www.minorityrights.org/troubleinparadise, or shoot us an email at press@mrgmail.org.

Thanks!
MRG

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Posted: Oct 21, 2008 9:14am

 

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Minority Rights
female, age 44, single
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