Monday, March 30, 2009

We are calling upon the Paraguayan State to demonstrate its commitment to these communities and comply with these overdue rulings.

TO BE NOTED: From LiveWire:

"Campaigning in Paraguay for Indigenous communities’ rights to their traditional land
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Comunidad Indigena Yakye Axa ©Amnesty International

We are here in Paraguay to launch our campaign for the rights of the Yakye Axa and Sawhoyamaxa Indigenous communities to their traditional land, in line with two binding judgements from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. We are calling upon the Paraguayan State to demonstrate its commitment to these communities and comply with these overdue rulings.

Our delegation received an affectionate welcome from President Fernando Lugo on Friday when we went to inform him of our campaign launch on Tuesday 31 March. We handed him a copy of the short report we will be launching with the Yakye Axa and Sawhoyamaxa indigenous communities, “We’re only asking for what is ours”. We also presented the President with a petition of over 3,000 signatures collected over the last two months from 54 countries.

President Lugo listened to our concerns about the Paraguayan state’s limited compliance with two binding judgements from the Inter-American Court of Human rights which, if fulfilled, would see the communities’ ancestral lands returned to them. The delegation told President Lugo that it had seen, at first hand, the deplorable conditions these communities live in when it visited them last November and called upon him to take swift and concerted action.

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Yakye Axa children look at their ancestral land ©Amnesty International

During the meeting President Lugo referred to his past experience working with Paraguay’s Indigenous Peoples in his capacity as a Bishop and acknowledged difficulties in the current institutional framework for addressing their specific needs.

Here in Asuncion today, we are eagerly awaiting the arrival of around 20 representatives from the two communities, who are travelling over 350 kilometres to the capital especially to launch the campaign with Amnesty International. Although we receive news about the communities regularly from our counterparts in Paraguay, the local NGO Tierraviva, we are looking forward to seeing them once again since our visit last November.

The campaign itself was designed after we spent several days working closely with the communities, conducting workshops to understand their key concerns and priorities within the context of the orders of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. Both communities are painfully aware of the consequences that non-compliance have on their daily lives as well as their survival as Indigenous Peoples, and asked Amnesty International to campaign on their behalf.

We know that the campaign we launch with them tomorrow reflects and supports their concerns; this makes us hope all the more that the contribution of Amnesty International and its members will help them in their ongoing struggle for the recognition of their rights.

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