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THE INTERNATIONAL
CANCUN DECLARATION
OF INDIGENOUS
PEOPLES
5th WTO
Ministerial Conference - Cancun, Quintana Roo, Mexico, 12
September 2003
We, the international
representatives of Indigenous Peoples gathered here during the 5th
WTO Ministerial Conference in Cancun, Mexico from 10-14 September
2003 wish to extend our thanks to the Indigenous Peoples of Mexico,
particularly the Mayan Indigenous Peoples of Quintana Roo, for
welcoming us.
We share the concerns
of our Indigenous brothers and sisters, as expressed in the
Congreso Nacional Indigena Declaration of Cancun. We join our
voices to this CNI Declaration and its conclusions and
recommendations.
We wish to especially
recognize and honor the sacrifice of our Korean brother, Mr.
Lee-Kyung-Hae, made here in Cancun. His act of self-immolation was
a dignified cultural expression profoundly reflecting the daily
reality of the effects of Globalization and liberalized trade on
peasants and Indigenous Peoples throughout the world.
We have come to Cancun
to address critical issues and negative impacts of the WTO Trade
Negotiations on our families, communities and nations.
With the creation of
the World Trade Organization (WTO) and with the continuing
imposition of the structural adjustment policies of the World Bank
and International Monetary Fund, our situation, as Indigenous
Peoples, has turned from bad to worse. Corporations are given more
rights and privileges at the expense of our rights. Our right to
self-determination, which is to freely determine our political
status and pursue our own economic, social and cultural
development, and our rights to our territories and resources, to
our indigenous knowledge, cultures and identities are grossly
violated. Some of the prime examples of the adverse impacts of the
WTO Agreements on us are the following:
- Loss of livelihoods of
hundreds of thousands of indigenous peasants in Mexico
who are producing corn because of the dumping of
artificially cheap, highly subsidized corn from the
USA and tens of thousands of indigenous vegetable
producers in the Cordillera region of the Philippines
because of dumping of vegetables. The contamination of
traditional indigenous corn in Mexico by
genetically-modified-corn is a very serious problem
for Indigenous Peoples. All these are due to the
liberalization of trade in agriculture and the
deregulation of laws which protect domestic producers
and crops required by the WTO Agreement on Agriculture
(AOA). The structural adjustment policies of the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund are the
foundations for liberalization, privatization and
deregulation. High export subsidies and domestic
support provided to rich agribusiness corporations and
rich farmers in the United Statesthe European Union
have also made this possible.
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- The increasing
impoverishment of indigenous and hilltribe farmers
engaged in coffee production in Guatemala, Mexico,
Colombia, Vietnam, etc. because of the drop in
commodity prices of coffee.
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- The increasing conflicts
between transnational mining, gas and oil corporations
and Indigenous Peoples in the Philippines, Indonesia,
Papua New Guinea, India, Ecuador, Guyana, Venezuela,
Colombia, Nigeria, Chad-Cameroon, USA, Russia,
Venezuela, among others, and the militarization and
environmental devastation in these communities due to
the operations of these extractive industries. The
facilitation of the entry of such corporations are
made possible because of liberalization of investment
laws pushed by the TRIMS (Trade-Related Investment
Measures) Agreement and WB-IMF conditionalities,
regional trade agreements like NAFTA and bilateral
investment agreements.
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- The militarization of
Indigenous Peoples’ lands and territories, and the
many cases of assassination and arbitrary arrests and
detention of indigenous activists and leaders and
people who are supporting them, as well as the
criminalization of Indigenous Peoples’ resistance,
all significantly increased.
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- The upsurge in
infrastructure development, particularly of mega
hydroelectric dams, oil and gas pipelines, roads in
Indigenous Peoples territories to provide support to
operations of extractive industries, logging
corporations, and export processing zones. The
infrastructure development, for instance, under Plan
Panama has destroyed ceremonial and sacred sites of
Indigenous Peoples in the six States of Southern
Mexico and in Guatemala.
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- The patenting of
medicinal plants and seeds nurtured and used by
Indigenous Peoples, like the quinoa, ayahuasca,
Mexican yellow bean, maca, sangre de drago,
hoodia , yew plant, etc. Such biopiracy and
patenting of life-forms is facilitated by the TRIPS
Agreement.
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- Soaring prices of
pharmaceutical products and inaccessibility of cheaper
drugs for diseases like tuberculosis, malaria, AIDS
which are diseases in Indigenous Peoples communities
and decreasing public health services in these
communities.
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- Privatization of basic
public services such as water and energy in several
countries which has spurred massive general strikes
and protests such as those led by Indigenous Peoples
in Bolivia. The General Agreement on Services (GATS)
whose coverage is being expanded to include
environmental services (sanitation, nature and
landscape protection), financial services, tourism,
among others, allowed for this.
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- The undermining of
international instruments, constitutional provisions,
and national laws and policies which protect our
rights.
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All these developments
are alarming. This global situation has undermined self-sufficient
economies of Indigenous Peoples leading to food insecurity,
worsening poverty and loss of land, culture and identity. We,
Indigenous Peoples’ representatives, present in Cancun during
the event of the Fifth Ministerial Meeting of the WTO, are asking
the governments to do the following:
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Recognize and
protect our territorial and resource rights and our right to
self-determination. The human-rights framework should underpin
trade, investment, development and anti-poverty policies and
programmes . Investment
liberalization rules like the TRIMS Agreement,
conditionalities by the WB and IMF which push countries to
liberalize their investment laws, regional trade agreements
and bilateral investment agreements which give more protection
and rights to corporations than to Indigenous Peoples should
be changed. Many of these facilitate the displacement of
Indigenous Peoples and the appropriation of our lands, waters,
resources and knowledge. Indigenous peoples who have been
displaced from their lands because of militarization,
infrastructure projects, extractive industries, export
processing zones and other development schemes should be
repatriated back to their lands or should be justly
compensated. International human rights and environmental
standards should be upheld by governments and should guide the
way trade agreements are formulated and implemented. The free
and prior informed consent of Indigenous Peoples should be
obtained before any project is brought into their communities.
Article 8jand 10c of the Convention of Biological Diversity
that protect traditional knowledge and indigenous systems and
practices of land use and land tenure should be the framework
for WTO Agreements. Governments should support the immediate
adoption of the UN Draft Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples that will help ensure the recognition and
protection of our rights.
Stop patenting of
life forms and other intellectual property rights over
biological resources and indigenous knowledge. Ensure that we,
Indigenous Peoples, retain our rights to have control over our
seeds, medicinal plants and indigenous knowledge .
We call for an explicit statement
for the banning of patents on life-forms in the TRIPS
Agreement. We also demand that the patent rights, patent
applications and claims of corporations, individuals or
governments over indigenous medicinal plants, seeds, and
knowledge and even over Indigenous Peoples’ human genetic
materials should be withdrawn. Biopiracy should be stopped and
the free and prior informed consent of Indigenous Peoples
should be obtained before access to their resources is granted.
The issue of protection of indigenous knowledge should not be
dealt with by the WTO TRIPs Agreement because its basic
assumptions contradict the concepts, values and ethics
underpinning indigenous knowledge systems. This can be best
protected under the United Nations and we therefore, urge the
UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues to convene a technical
meeting to explore how the UN can address the issue of
protection of indigenous knowledge.
Ensure Indigenous
Peoples’ basic right to health. The right of countries to
take measures to protect public health and promote access to
medicines should take precedence over their obligations to
protect intellectual property right of corporations. The
patent protection asked by pharmaceutical and biotechnology
corporations should be limited in order to protect public
health and safety and ensure production and easy access to
cheap essential medicines. Health
is a basic human right and Indigenous Peoples should enjoy
this right. Governments should be allowed to use the
flexibilities allowed in the TRIPS Agreement which are
reflected in the Doha TRIPS and Public Health Declaration. An
amendment to TRIPS should be done to simplify and clarify the
procedures for compulsory licensing and parallel importation
and to remove the unnecessary obstacles to the import and
export of medicines needed to provide affordable medicines to
the poor.
No new issues
should be negotiated in this 5th Ministerial
Conference. We support
the position of some developing countries to stop the
launching of a new round or to expand the WTO by negotiating
on new issues such as investments, competition, transparency
in government procurement and trade facilitation. The WTO
should not pursue any negotiation on investment and should
change its existing investment rules which provide excessive
rights to corporations and allow for their unregulated
behavior. Those rules which prevent governments from pursuing
rights-based development and environmentally-sustainable
policies should be abandoned.
Prevent the
expansion of the GATS Agreement and amend the existing
agreement to stop the privatization and liberalization of
health, education, water, energy, and environmental services. The
liberalization and privatization of services in environmental
services (e.g. parks and landscape services), the
commercialization of indigenous cultures and the increasing
monopoly control of the tourism industry in the hands of
international and national travel and tour agencies should be
stopped. We must be allowed to be the managers of protected
areas, parks, forests and waters found in our territories. We
should be able to continue practicing our own indigenous
natural management practices in forests, water, biodiversity
and ecosystem management.
Stop the
negotiations on agriculture which will push for further import
liberalization of agricultural products. Drastically end the
export and domestic subsidies of the US and the EU for their
agribusiness corporations and rich farmers. States
must take decisive measures to promote and protect food
sovereignty and food security, and stop the dumping and
smuggling of artificially cheap and highly subsidized
agricultural products from the US, EU, Canada, Australia and
New Zealand. Ensure the right of indigenous farmers to sustain
their indigenous agricultural systems and to plant and
reproduce their traditional seeds. States must not include
indigenous agriculture systems in the scope of international
trade rules. The rights of Indigenous Peoples to their
traditional livelihoods and to food should be recognized and
protected, thus trade and investment rules which undermine
these rights should be repealed or appropriately amended.
End the
militarization of Indigenous Peoples’ communities and stop
the criminalization of protest and resistance actions of
Indigenous Peoples against destructive industries, projects
and programs . There
should be meaningful and effective investigation of the many
cases of assassinations, arbitrary arrests and detentions,
rapes committed against Indigenous Peoples and their
supporters. Justice should be accorded to the victims and
their families, and the perpetrators punished for their crimes.
Support and
strengthen the sustainable trading systems which have existed
for centuries between the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas. Trade
routes between the various Indigenous Peoples within the
Americas (USA, Canada, Mexico have been existing for centuries
and trading between them is still practiced, Militarization of
borders and other destructive practices have greatly limited
their scale and utility for Indigenous Peoples. Trade between
Indigenous Peoples should be sustained and promoted.
The ministers at this
Fifth Ministerial meeting of the WTO have the responsibility to
represent not only commercial interests but all of the people of
their States, including Indigenous Peoples. Existing human rights,
environmental, social and cultural conventions and covenants
developed within the United Nations system continue to be the
States’ legal if not moral obligation. All international law
including human rights law binds them.
Indigenous peoples are
the subjects of many of these covenants and conventions and their
jurisprudence. Our rights cannot be ignored, nor can their
observance be diminished or compromised by trade agreements and
regimes. We as Indigenous Peoples have the right to participate as
peoples and actors in our own development, consistent with our own
vision and tradition. Our free and informed consent, free of fraud
or manipulation, must be secured through our own traditional means
of decision-making. State sponsored development cannot just be
imposed upon us. Our rights as peoples to our lands and
territories and natural resources must be recognized, respected
and observed. Our survival as peoples depends upon it.
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