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Ten
Thousand Things
Multicultural Webfinds
"Ten
Thousand Things" is a Buddhist expression representing the dynamic
interconnection and simultaneous unity and diversity of everything in
the universe.
Prior
to the G8 Summit in Japan, indigenous peoples from around the world gathered
in Hokkaido (Ainu Mosir). This is their official
declaration.

"Iramkarapte" – "Let me touch your heart
softly in greeting" in the Ainu language.
We, Indigenous Peoples from Japan and around the world have gathered
in Ainu Mosir, known as Hokkaido, Japan, in the traditional land of the
Ainu people, for the 2008 Indigenous Peoples Summit in Ainu Mosir in advance
of the G8 Summit in 2008. We represent over 600 participants from Ainu
Mosir (Hokkaido), Uchinanchu (Okinawa), the United States, Canada, Hawai’i,
Guam, Australia, Bangladesh, the Philippines, Norway, Mexico, Guatemala,
Nicaragua, Taiwan, and Aotearoa (New Zealand).
We are united as Indigenous Peoples because we share each other’s
fundamental values and understandings of our place in the world which
includes our reciprocal relationship with nature. The theme of our summit
is Mawkopirka which means in Ainu “Good Luck”
or “Be Happy,” and which underscores our Indigenous values
and notions of well-being, and illustrates the good faith in which we
approach this Summit and all the peoples gathered.
This is the first time that we, Indigenous Peoples, have gathered around
a G8 Summit, to reflect on the issues addressed by the G8 and analyse
how these relate to us. This Summit was made possible by the Ainu through
the Indigenous Peoples Summit Steering Committee and we thank and congratulate
them for their commitment and work to make this happen.
With our collective wisdom and knowledge we discerned and agreed on the
key messages we would like to relay to the G8. We learned more about the
situation of the Ainu and about each others situation and aspirations.
We are also gathered to celebrate the adoption of the UN Declaration on
the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) on September 13, 2007 by the
United Nations General Assembly. This is a historic landmark and a collective
achievement of Indigenous Peoples movements from the local to the global.
We welcome the “Resolution calling for the Recognition of the Ainu
as Indigenous Peoples of Japan” passed by the Japanese House of
Councillors and the House of Representatives on June 6, 2008, and accepted
by the Prime Minister’s office also on June 6, 2008. We celebrate
this gain with the Ainu people which results from their centuries’
old struggle.
OUR ISSUES AND CONCERNS
We want to express our profound concern over the state of the planet.
Mother Nature nurtures us. We believe that the economic growth model and
modernization promoted by the G8, which suggests that we can control and
dominate nature, is flawed. This dominant thinking and practice is responsible
for climate change, the global food crisis, high oil prices, increasing
poverty and disparity between the rich and the poor, and the elusive search
for peace, the themes which the G8 nations precisely want to address in
this Hokkaido Toyako Summit. Some of our issues and concerns are the following;
continuing egregious violations of our civil, political, economic,
cultural and social rights
• militarization of our communities, arbitrary arrests, extrajudicial
killings of indigenous activists and use of national security and anti-terrorism
laws to criminalize legitimate resistance actions against destructive
projects leading to increasing conflicts in our territories •
grabbing of our lands by the state, corporations and landlords •
continuing racism and discrimination against us and against our use of
our own languages and practice of our cultures •
non-recognition of our collective identities as indigenous peoples •
theft of our intellectual property rights over our cultural heritage,
traditional cultural expressions and traditional knowledge, including
biopiracy of genetic resources and related knowledge. •
desecration and destruction of sacred and religious sites.
adverse impacts of climate change and actual and potential negative
effects of climate change mitigation measures which include
• displacement from our lands because of expansion of biofuel
monocrop production, establishment of carbon sinks in our forests, building
of more large scale hydro-electric dams. •
market-based mechanisms such as emissions trading leading to more centralized,
top-down management of our forests under the reduced emissions from deforestation
and degradation (REDD) scheme.
food crisis and increasing hunger due to:
• decreased control and access to sources of subsistence
(forests, hunting grounds, agricultural lands, waters, grazing lands,
etc.) and basis of traditional livelihoods. •
dumping of highly subsidized, cheap agricultural products from the rich
countries to the poor countries. •
the shift away from production of food crops to crops for biofuels •
hoarding and speculation on food commodity prices •
aggressive promotion of chemically intensive industrial agriculture and
use of genetically-modified seeds
increased extraction of oil, gas and minerals from our territories,
in violation of our free, prior and informed consent, leading to more
environmental degradation, forced displacements and poverty in our midst.
increasing loss of indigenous languages and cultures
decreasing further the cultural and linguistic diversity of the world.
OUR PROPOSALS TO THE G8
•It is in our values
of reciprocity, mutual respect, regard for the earth as our mother and
all creation as our relatives, collectivity and solidarity; in our indigenous
cosmologies and philosophies; in our traditional livelihoods, lifestyles
and sustainable consumption practices that we can find the most effective
paths to a sustainable world. We sadly note that these values and practices
are being marginalized in a highly commercialized, consumerist, atomized
and individualistic world when they could instead be a guide not only
for Indigenous Peoples but for the rest of humanity. We therefore call
on the G8 to do the following;
1. Effectively implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights
of Indigenous Peoples and use this as the main framework to guide the
development of all official development assistance (ODA), investments
and policies and programmes affecting Indigenous Peoples.
2. That the Governments of Canada, the United States and Russia, respect
the demands of the Indigenous Peoples in their countries that they adopt
the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and press the
Governments of New Zealand and Australia to do likewise.
3. Ensure and facilitate the effective participation of Indigenous Peoples
in all the processes of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) and establish a Working Group on Local Adaptation and Mitigation
Measures of Indigenous Peoples.
4. Jointly assess and evaluate with Indigenous Peoples the adverse impacts
of climate mitigation measures on them and their communities and undertake
actions to address these
5. Remove, as part of renewable energy sources, large hydro-electric dams
and stop all funding for these. Reject proposals to include nuclear energy
as clean energy.
6. Promote and support the development of small-scale, locally-controlled,
renewable energy projects using the sun, wind, water and ocean tides in
our communities through technical and financial assistance.
7. Reform migration laws to allow for the migration of Indigenous Peoples
who are forced to leave their countries because of the impacts of climate
change, such as the submersion of small-island states and low-lying coastal
areas, the erosion and destruction of their lands due to melting of permafrost,
strong typhoons and hurricanes, and desertification due to droughts.
8. Provide financial support for our campaigns to get corporations and
national governments to compensate us, through financial and other means,
for the environment services (clean air, clean water, fertile soils, etc.)
we are providing to the world because of our sustainable management and
use of our forests, watersheds, and our conservation of biological resources
to ensure maintenance of biodiversity.
9. Protect, respect and ensure our rights to food, to subsistence, to
practice of our traditional livelihoods, and to self-determined development.
This means the following;
• Ensure our control
and access to our sources of subsistence and traditional livelihoods such
as rotational agriculture, pastoralism, hunting, gathering and trapping,
high mountain agriculture, marine and coastal livelihoods, handicraft
development, etc.
• Stop the dumping
of cheap, highly subsidized agricultural products in our communities.
• Implement a moratorium
on the expansion of biofuel production on our territories unless our free,
prior and informed consent is obtained.
•Strictly regulate
speculation on food commodity prices.
• Criminalize hoarding
of food by food cartels and syndicates.
10. Stop the promotion of chemical-intensive industrial agriculture in
our communities and the dissemination of genetically modified seeds in
our territories. The continuing use and export of banned toxic chemicals,
fertilizers and pesticides to Indigenous communities, especially in the
developing countries should be banned and criminalized.
11. Stop facilitating the entry of transnational corporations involved
in extraction of minerals, oil, gas, coal, etc. in our communities without
ensuring that the free, prior and informed consent of the affected communities
are obtained. Corporations from G8 countries which have been involved
in environmental destruction of our territories and who have committed
human rights violations against us should be brought to justice and should
be required to compensate the communities where they have polluted or
otherwise caused damage.
12. Support our campaigns against the militarization of our communities,
extrajudicial killings and stop the labeling of Indigenous activists as
terrorists and the use of laws such as national security acts and anti-terrorism
to curtail our legitimate resistance against destructive projects and
policies.
13. Support, through technical and financial assistance, our efforts to
bring our complaints against States, who are violating our rights, before
the Treaty Bodies of the United Nations, the regional commissions or courts
on human rights such as the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, the
African Commission on Peoples and Human Rights, and the European Commission
on Human Rights.
14. Support the inclusion of UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples in the ASEAN (Association of South East Asian Nations) Charter
on Human Rights and ensure that this becomes an integral part of the newly
established ASEAN Commission on Human Rights.
15. Provide support for establishing more cultural centres and museums
in our communities, and for educational institutions and programmes promoting
intercultural and bilingual education, use of Indigenous learning and
teaching methods – including education through the traditional oral
mediums of Indigenous Peoples and through honouring local ways of learning
and knowing – as well as language courses to teach Indigenous languages.
16. Give effect to the protection of Indigenous Peoples’ sacred
sites in recognition of their human rights and intergenerational responsibilities
to practice, teach, and maintain their spirituality and indigeneity through
their traditional languages, customs, ceremonies, and rituals to ensure
the continuity of the sacred in the futures of those yet to be born.
17. Stop the theft and piracy of our traditional Indigenous knowledge,
traditional cultural expressions (which include indigenous designs, arts,
crafts, song and music), bio-genetic resources including our human genetic
resources, by biotechnology corporations, cultural industry, and even
by States and individual scientists and researchers.
" 18. Reform national intellectual property laws and global Intellectual
Property Rights regimes including the TRIPS (Trade Related Aspects of
Intellectual Property Rights) Agreement of the World Trade Organization
(WTO), the Substantive Patent Law of the World Intellectual Property Organization
(WIPO), among others, to respect and protect the collective traditional
knowledge and cultural expressions of Indigenous Peoples.
19. Stop nuclear proliferation and the use of depleted uranium as a weapon.
Stop the dumping of radioactive nuclear wastes as well as other toxic
waste in Indigenous Peoples' territories.
20. To strongly support the implementation of the Convention on the Elimination
of Discrimination against Women in each nation, and to ensure that the
marginalization of and violence against Indigenous women, minority women,
and all other women will be stopped.
21. Remove US military bases located in Indigenous Peoples territories
and bring to justice the military personnel who have been charged with
rape and sexual assault of Indigenous women. The forced drafting and recruitment
of Indigenous youth to the military should also be stopped.
22. To strongly encourage the Japanese Government, jointly with the Ainu
community, to interpret the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples for implementation in Japan as national law, and to further develop
concrete actions and policy reforms to amplify and clarify the Resolution
recognizing Ainu as Indigenous Peoples. We protest the fact that there
is only one Ainu out of 8 persons included in the panel to discuss further
the implementation of this resolution. We call on the Government to increase
the number of Ainu representatives in the Panel.
PROPOSALS TO OURSELVES, INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
We also discussed what we should do as, Indigenous Peoples, to implement
the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and to strengthen
our solidarity with each other and with support groups and NGOs.
1. Establish a network of Indigenous Peoples to continue the task of organizing
summits in connection with the G8 Summits in the future. Indigenous Peoples
in Canada are encouraged to organize themselves so that they can host
an Indigenous Peoples' Summit during the 2010 G8 Summit in Canada. We
will also encourage the advocates of 6 Indigenous Peoples rights in Italy
to try to organize a summit for Indigenous Peoples at the 2009 G8 Summit
in Italy.
2. Ensure that we, Indigenous Peoples all over the world, take up the
responsibility to implement the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples, themselves, and enter into constructive dialogue with States,
the UN System and the other intergovernmental bodies to discuss how they
can effectively implement the Declaration at the local, national, regional
and international levels.
3. Use the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, the Expert Mechanism
on Indigenous Peoples' Rights, the Special Rapporteur on the situation
of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous people, as mechanisms
to monitor and ensure the implementation of the UNDRIP by the aforementioned
actors.
4. Ensure widespread dissemination of the UNDRIP through the use of multimedia,
the translation of this into languages understood by Indigenous Peoples,
and the preparation of popular versions which can easily communicate the
substance of the UNDRIP.
5. Work towards getting the UNDRIP integrated as part of the education
curriculum of schools starting from pre-school to higher learning institutions.
6. Establish and replicate the experiences of the Maori and others in
setting up language nests where Indigenous Peoples can learn how to speak
fluently their languages to arrest the loss of indigenous languages in
the world.
7. Organize and sponsor more education and training-workshops for our
peoples where they can learn more about the UNDRIP, how to implement it
and learn more about the existing instruments and mechanisms within the
United Nations, the regional human rights bodies and courts on human rights
where they may bring their concerns if the UNDRIP is not adequately implemented
by States.
8. Establish international tribunals to hear and address Indigenous Peoples’
issues and adjudicate issues which are not adequately addressed under
domestic and international law.
9. Establishment of an Indigenous Peoples Green Fund to support the initiatives
of Indigenous Peoples to establish and strengthen their traditional livelihoods,
their arts and crafts and other forms of development which are consistent
with their visions of their selfdetermined development.
10. Support the fundamental rights of Indigenous Peoples to practice and
to enjoy their cultural history and the right to protect and to teach
their cultural heritage through the establishment of Indigenous-owned
and controlled cultural centres within states and local jurisdictions.
11. Support the struggle bv Indigenous peoples for land justice and for
the return of forests and traditional lands to the ownership and control
of Indigenous peoples.
The implementation of the Declaration will not only benefit Indigenous
Peoples but will also benefit the earth and the rest of the world. If
we are allowed to continue practicing our sustainable ways of caring for
the earth and caring for our relatives, not only human beings, but also
plants, animals and all other living things, these practices will redound
for the benefit of everybody. If we are able to continue speaking our
languages and practicing our diverse cultures, then the world's cultural
heritage will be enriched. If our diverse economic, cultural, spiritual,
social and political systems are allowed to co-exist with other dominant
systems then we can bequeath to our children and our children's children
a more diverse and viable world.
Agreed upon on July 4, 2008 by the following representatives:
Asia:
Ainu (Japan): Ukaji Shizue, Kayano Shirô, Hideo Akibe, Shimazaki
Naomi, Yûki Kôji, Sakai Mina, Kibata Kamuisanihi, Kibata Hirofumi,
Hitoresi (Kawakami Hiroko), Sakai Atsushi Ami (Taiwan): Sing ‘Olam
Igorot (the Philippines): Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, Chairperson of the United
Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues Kanakana’ey (the Philippines):
Joan Carling Juma (Bangladesh): Dipty The Pacific: Chamoru (Guam): Fanai
Castro Hawai’i: Puanani Burgess, Puaena Burgess Ngati Maniapoto
(Maori, Aotearoa) : Hohepa Rauputu Ngati Ranginui, Ngati Tutwharetoa (Maori,
Aotearoa): Zack Bishara Nga Puhi, Ngati Kahu, Te Rarawa (Maori, Aotearoa):
Eddie Walker Ngai Tahu (Maori, Aotearoa): Steven Kent Taranaki, Te Ati
Awa, Ngati Maniapoto, Te Ati Haunui A Paparangi (Maori, Aotearoa): Liana
Poutu Uchinanchû (Japan) : Nakaima Kenta Yorta Yorta (Australia):
Wayne Atkinson Europe: Saami Nation: Magne Ove Varsi The Americas: Maya
Kachikel (Guatemala): Rosalina Tuyuc Miskito (Nicaragua): Rose Cunningham
Nauha (Mexico): Marcos Matias Alonso Cherokee (USA): Jacqueline Wasilewski
Comanche (USA) : Ladonna Harris and Laura Harris (Americans for Indian
Opportunities) Isleta and Taos Pueblo (USA): Ron Looking Elk Jemez Pubelo
(USA) : Paul Tosa Mohawk Nation (Canada): Ben Powless Lakota Sioux (USA)
Sutikal’h Nation (Canada): Attila Nelson"
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