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Indigenous Use of Ancestral Lands Threatened


Environment  (tags: American Indians, Native Americans, Environment, destruction, conservation, habitatdestruction, pollution )

Kat
- 24 days ago - indiancountrytoday.com
BOULDER, Colo. - Climate change may be only the latest of many challenges facing Indian country, but it is having devastating effects in parts of the far North where at least one Native village faced with inundation by melting polar ice is suing...
Comments

Kat Y. (347)
Tuesday November 3, 2009, 7:53 am
Here is the article:

BOULDER, Colo. – Climate change may be only the latest of many challenges facing Indian country, but it is having devastating effects in parts of the far North where at least one Native village faced with inundation by melting polar ice is suing energy companies it says are responsible.

John Echohawk, executive director of Boulder-based Native American Rights Fund, said the village of Kivalina, Alaska, located on the Chukchi Sea coastline, is suing energy companies for contributing to the public nuisance of global warming it says is going to force the community to relocate to avoid being flooded out.

The Native village’s case may be strengthened by a ruling Sept. 21 in the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York City which was brought for similar reasons, he said.

The U.S. Supreme Court ‘will not help us; they will go out of their way to reinterpret the laws in ways that are detrimental to us.’
– John Echohawk, Native American Rights Fund executive director


The federal appeals court upheld eight states and the City of New York and others in their suit against six power companies which operate fossil fuel-fired power plants in 20 states and which, the plaintiffs contend, contribute to the damage caused by climate change.

Legal experts warn, however, that utilities in similar cases could return to the lower courts to defend against the charge they are contributing to a public nuisance in the form of global warming, or they could appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. Too, a district court in California on Sept. 30 dismissed a lawsuit by the Native Village of Kivalina against ExxonMobil Corp. on issues of the litigants’ standing to bring suit and the nature of the political question, according to the Constitutional Accountability Center.

Echohawk traced the environmental and legal challenges faced by the indigenous peoples of this continent from European contact through early treaties, attempted assimilation and termination, and decades of Supreme Court rulings as part of an international panel on indigenous rights Sept. 23 at the University of Colorado Law School.

“Climate change is a huge issue that affects us all,” he said, “and it will affect our lands.” Kivalina, a primarily Inupiat community, was traditionally protected against the severity of winter storms by sea ice formed from fall through spring, but the village may have to relocate to avoid being washed away as a result of climate change, he said.

Kivilina would ask the power and energy companies to pay relocation costs, an action supported by the 2nd Circuit, which said there is a legal right to be protected from a public nuisance. Nine oil companies, 14 electric power companies, and one coal company are involved.

Ice melt in the Arctic is already changing the migration patterns of animals that people hunt, and some parts of the Russian tundra are flooding, said panelist Alexander Arbachakov, a forestry/wildlife expert and member of the Shor tribe of Siberia. Another panelist, Samuel Nnah Ndobe, Center for Environment and Development, Cameroon, said vast forests in the Congo on which indigenous populations and their cultures depend could disappear with climate change.

Tracing the relationship over time between Natives and non-Natives in North America, Echohawk told the panel that “European nations came to realize that we were Indian nations and came and dealt with us through treaties – they recognized we were sovereign nations” along with states and foreign nations.

With the end of treaty-making in 1871, the U.S. “continued to recognize sovereign status” although in the 1880s it began a policy of assimilation through ignoring treaties and breaking up sovereign lands. Assimilation, downplayed in the 1930s, resurfaced in the 1950s with attempted tribal termination, and in the 1970s NARF began to get support in the court system to change “wrong-headed political policies” of assimilation and termination to a recognition of the right to self-determination and self-government.

Today, 562 tribal nations have sovereign authority over 100 million-plus acres of land, he told the panel, but that amount represents only about two percent of original holdings “and our rights are under attack all the time.”

Tribes used to find support in the U.S. Supreme Court, but now the makeup of the court is “different – they will not help us; they will go out of their way to reinterpret the laws in ways that are detrimental to us,” he said, noting that tribes are attempting to resolve disputes outside the high court “because if you go there, you’re probably going to lose and hurt everybody.

“The speculation is, of course, that the (Supreme) Court’s not going to change much in the foreseeable future,” he said, noting that the more conservative justices are younger. Indian cases may be helped by the appointments to vacancies in other judgeships throughout the federal system, an issue on which NARF is working with the National Congress of American Indians.

Arbachakov, of Russia’s Taiga Research and Protection Agency, said the country’s 200,000 indigenous people have seen the loss of their resources and suffer high rates of disease, with a male average life expectancy of only about 42 years. Although current thought is to establish political areas where indigenous peoples could live, there is an “enormous amount” of resistance from the government.

Ndobe said 40 million people depend on the forests of the Congo Basin, where the rights of farmers have been more readily recognized than those of indigenous residents and where crude oil extraction and transport have had “huge environmental and social consequences.” A victory was won when management plans for newly created, protected national park areas included the rights of indigenous peoples, he said.

The panel was convened as the culminating event of nonprofit Global Greengrants Fund’s biennial Global Advisors Retreat and was co-sponsored by the Center for Energy and Environmental Security of the University of Colorado School of Law and the CU departments of anthropology and geography.

 

Mary Ann Clark (58)
Tuesday November 3, 2009, 8:32 am
This is truly a shame.It seems that as a sovereign nation this issue could be tried in an international court through the United Nations and under their jurisdiction.Thanks for the information Kat.
 

liz c. (204)
Tuesday November 3, 2009, 8:38 am
I hope that they win the lawsuit. It sounds good for them. but it is so sad to consider uprooting an entire community. Thank you Kat.
 

Karen S. (97)
Tuesday November 3, 2009, 9:03 am
Thanks Kat. This sounds like the beginning of a steep uphill battle. With the recognition of the injustices of the past on our Native population, why are the courts poised to repeat them?
 

Rhonda Maness (450)
Tuesday November 3, 2009, 10:57 am
Thank you, Kat
 

Bee Hive Lady (304)
Tuesday November 3, 2009, 12:33 pm
Thanks, Kat. Your long description of the situation was very useful.
 

Deborah B. (60)
Tuesday November 3, 2009, 1:27 pm
And the White Man just continues to take and take away . . .
 

Tom M. (804)
Tuesday November 3, 2009, 3:11 pm
THANKS KAT!
 

Joy No Messages Bergstrom (373)
Tuesday November 3, 2009, 4:27 pm
Its a never changing for the Native Tribes but, umm let it be some one else yelling for help and oh heck yes they would be there in a snap of the fingers. Its ok for we will not give up as always fight the good fight. Thanks Kat.
 

Barbara Liebowitz (877)
Tuesday November 3, 2009, 7:02 pm
noted welcome back
 

JOSSIE ROSS (59)
Tuesday November 3, 2009, 10:50 pm
THANKS KAT......
 

Simone D. (883)
Tuesday November 3, 2009, 11:41 pm
Great to see you back here Kat.
 

Cheree Million (126)
Wednesday November 4, 2009, 1:53 am
Noted, Thanks
 

Chaz Gaily Berlusconi (251)
Wednesday November 4, 2009, 5:08 am
Thannxxx.. I hope these people sue the pants off those that are responsible.. indirectly this is another violation of the indian people's rights... there needs to be more justice for them...
 

Gayla S. (51)
Wednesday November 4, 2009, 9:35 am
Tks. Kat, Note to all: Native Americans will never stop fighting for what is legally and legitimately oursa.
 

Cynthia Davis (228)
Thursday November 5, 2009, 6:21 am
TY Kat
 

Carole W. (47)
Thursday November 5, 2009, 6:22 am
Noted. Very sad story, so much so, I could not read it all, as I hate to hear of injustice and I also hate to read of the turmoil the planet is in.
 

Brigid C. (34)
Thursday November 5, 2009, 12:42 pm
THanks Kat, I hope the Native AMerican people win this battle, that they should not have to fight in the first place.. sad situation and unjust.
 
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