Niyamgiri的鋁土礦項目需事先徵求Dongria Kondhdick族自由作出的知情同意 |
發佈日期 2010年8月9日
(本頁暫時只備有英文版)
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| Villagers from Balighato village in Kalinganagar, Orissa. © Sanjit Das |
Authorities in India need to establish a process to seek the free, prior, informed consent (FPIC) of Dongria Kondh adivasi (indigenous) communities on the proposed bauxite mine project in Niyamgiri, Orissa, and respect their decision, Amnesty International said today, on the occasion of the United Nations' International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples.
Several adivasi communities in mineral-rich states including Orissa, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Bihar, Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal have been protesting over the potential negative impacts of mining projects on their traditional forest lands and habitats on which they have been completely dependent for centuries. The Indian authorities have often failed to consult the communities to seek their consent or provide them with prior information on the projects. These protests are occurring even as India is considering new legislation aimed at expanding its mining sector.
One such example is struggle of the Dongria Kondh adivasis in the Niyamgiri Hills to resist the bauxite mine project on their sacred sites proposed to be executed by Orissa Mining Corporation and Sterlite Industries India, a subsidiary of the UK-based Vedanta Resources.
Amnesty International has documented the human rights abuses faced by Dongria Kondh and other communities in Niyamgiri. The Dongria Kondh are concerned that the proposed mine project on their traditional lands and habitats will result in violations of their rights as indigenous community to water, food, health, work and other rights to protection of their culture and identity. The only occasion for any consultation by the authorities was a public hearing held seven years ago when the project's environmental impact assessment report was made public, but the Dongria Kondh were never directly informed about the hearing.
Dongria Kondh communities have also informed Amnesty International that the authorities repeatedly overlooked protection measures listed in India's Constitution to avoid social injustice and exploitation of adivasi communities and recent legislations requiring prior consultation with elected village-level councils and guaranteeing registration and recognition of their communities' interests in common forest resources.
In addition, international law to which India is a party - the International Labour Organization's Indigenous and Tribal Populations Convention No. 107 and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, 2007 - requires authorities to recognize indigenous communities' rights over their traditional lands and obtain their consent before any attempt to remove them from their traditional lands. International law also recognizes the special spiritual relationship that indigenous peoples have with their traditional lands, and particularly their sacred sites.
For indigenous peoples, "relations to the land are not merely a matter of possession and production but a material and spiritual element..."
Amnesty International urges the Indian authorities to establish a process to seek the free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC) of the Dongria Kondh before proceeding with the proposed mine project in Niyamgiri. This must
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