[CircleUp] [Indigenous Notes] Issue 3 2009

Pamela Standing pamelastanding at msn.com
Sat Nov 7 13:01:41 EST 2009


Indigenous Notes



 
      If you have trouble reading this email go to www.indianlaw.org Issue 3 2009 
      
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            Reactions to the November 5th White House Tribal Nations Conference 

                  Rob Capriccioso/Indian Country Today photo  

            President Obama met with Indian leaders on November 5th, and promised the over 400 in attendance that he would make sure First Americans, along with all Americans, get the opportunities they deserve. 

            "The first step should be a commitment by the Administration to respect and promote our most fundamental rights as Indian nations and individuals - something that the United States has refused to do up to now by refusing to endorse the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples," says Lucy Simpson, a senior staff attorney with the Center. 

            Listen to Lucy's full reaction to the White House Tribal Nations Conference. Joe Kennedy, chairman of the Timbisha Shoshone Tribe of the Western Shoshone Nation, and Ben Shelly, vice president of the Navajo Nation, who both attended the meeting with the President also shares their thoughts.   (More...) 
           
            Inter-American Commission on Human Rights hears about human rights abuses stemming from IIRSA  

            Center attorney Leonardo Crippa, joined by Indian leaders from Peru, Bolivia and Brazil, testified earlier this week before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights about a series of development initiatives in South America that is putting indigenous peoples at risk.        

            Today, South American governments and multilateral development banks, such as the Inter-American Development Bank, are promoting the economic integration of all South America through a massive web of interconnected projects.  (More...) 

                
            Infrastructure development -- highways, dams, oil pipelines and other transmssion lines -- is wreaking havoc on indigenous communities and the environment. Oil pipeline leak in Peru, Ben Powless photo; road construction in Bolivia, Indian Law Resource Center photo.
              
           
            Oil and gas development threatens environment at Fort Belknap   
            The first natural gas ever produced on the Fort Belknap Indian Reservation flowed to market earlier this year, and more oil and gas development is on the horizon for this north-central Montana Indian community.  While natural resource development could provide a much-needed boost to the local economy, if left unchecked it threatens to undo the decades of work the Assiniboine and Gros Ventre Tribes have invested in cleaning up their lands and waters that were destroyed by previous resource extraction.    (More...)
             

             


            Photo © Fort Belknap Indian Reservation 
           
            Dates set for further negotiations on the Draft American Declaration 
            Negotiations on the draft American Declaration are scheduled to start up again in November.  The negotiation meetings will be the first to take place since President Obama took office, leaving many indigenous rights supporters eager to see if and when the new administration will abolish the Bush-era refusals to participate in the Declaration negotiations.  

            The Working Group charged with preparing the draft American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples will resume negotiations on November 30 through Dec 2.  The session, the Twelfth Meeting of Negotiations in the Quest for Points of Consensus, will be the first negotiations held since 2007, and the first of what will likely be two negotiation sessions that will take place before the General Assembly meets in Peru in June 2010. 

            Go to the OAS Permanent Council website for the agenda, the current status of the draft Declaration, and other important documents. 
              
           
            Now online:  Using international advocacy to help end violence against Native Women   
            The Indian Law Resource Center, in coordination with the NCAI Task Force on Violence Against Native Women, has launched a series of new web pages on how to use international advocacy to end violence against Native women.  

            International bodies such as the United Nations and the Organization of American States have condemned violence against women as a human rights violation, meaning the United States government's failure to respond to the epidemic of violence against Native American women is a human rights violation under international law.  We are working to raise awareness among the international community about the staggering rates of violence against Native women in the United States, and increase the international pressure on the U.S. to respond to this crisis.  

            Go to the new web pages   

            Join our campaign to educate the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.  
           
            Fellowship, Intern and Staff News  
            FELLOWS AND INTERNS: The Center, committed to developing and encouraging new talent in the fields of Indian law and international human rights law, hosted seven extraordinary interns over the past year.  Take a look at the women who made important contributions to our work to secure justice for indigenous peoples!  (More...)   

            APPLICATION DEADLINE: Applications to the Center's Fellowship program are being accepted through November 14.   (More...)  

            NEW STAFF: The Center is pleased to welcome three new staff members: Juanita Cabrera-Lopez, Barbara Anthony, and Ginny Underwood.   (More...)  
           
           
     
      The Indian Law Resource Center is a non-profit law and advocacy organization established and directed by American Indians. We provide legal assistance to Indian and Alaska Native nations who are working to protect their lands, resources, human rights, environment and cultural heritage. Our principal goal is the preservation and well-being of Indian and other Native nations and tribes.  
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