TIOHTIÀ:KE – MONTREAL – Today, Indigenous leaders from around the world, including Brazil, Canada, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Cameroon and Indonesia, gathered in Montreal (Tiohtià:ke) to voice their expectations for the decade-defining negotiations on nature protection that kick off tomorrow. 

The UN Biodiversity Conference (CBD COP15) is the long-awaited moment that will define how nature and wildlife will be protected for the next decade – the stakes are extremely high. With 1 million species at risk of extinction worldwide, it is clear that nature is in crisis. So, it needs protection. A clear indicator of success for these negotiations will be how much they enshrine Indigenous knowledge as a science of the land in its own right.

Since time immemorial, Indigenous communities have lived in harmony with nature. Comprising less than 5% of the world’s population, Indigenous People manage to protect 80% of the world’s existing biodiversity, despite ongoing rights violations and criminalization of their traditional practices. A new contract between humans and nature must therefore shift the colonial paradigm that centers around extraction and decolonize our approach to nature protection by upholding the rights of Indigenous Peoples.

Adrienne Jérôme, Chief of the Lac Simon First Nation, said: 

“In Canada, habitat loss has pushed many species to the brink of extinction. The caribou, an essential species in aboriginal cultures and traditions, is an iconic example. But it is not just the caribou that is threatened, it is all life that depends on it. Aboriginal peoples are being forced to change their regimes and lifestyles and the result is that communities are suffering physically, mentally and spiritually.

But the disregard of the rights of indigenous communities to protect nature is a form of systemic and environmental racism. This must be changed at COP15. It is time for the voices of Indigenous Peoples to be heard.”

Dinamam Tuxá, Executive Coordinator for the Articulation of Indigenous Peoples of Brazil, said: 

“It is impossible to talk about biodiversity conservation without mentioning Indigenous Lands. Globally, areas managed by Indigenous Peoples are among the most conserved, even though we, Indigenous Peoples, represent a small part of the population. However, we remain outside the decision-making process and without our rights to our territories. We hope that this COP15 will recognize our rights and that it will create more space for our official participation.”

Orpha Yoshua, an Indigenous Namblong woman from West Papua, Indonesia, said: 

“It is just as arrogant and wrong for the government to give our forest over to palm oil companies as it is to grab it for ‘conservation’. No one knows better than us the value of our forest – its food plants, game, birds of paradise and all the other unique creatures, and no one knows better how to protect it. Recognize our rights and our expertise, and we will do as we always have – keep the forest safe and protect the land we come from, not only for ourselves but for every being on earth.”

Valentin Engobo, Lokolama Indigenous community leader, Congo Basin, said: 

“The only ethical and ecologically viable way to protect nature is to recognize the rights of the Indigenous Peoples who live there and who have used their traditional knowledge to protect it for decades. To be effective, the new Global Biodiversity Framework must guarantee the full involvement of Indigenous Peoples and local communities in the management and decision-making concerning forest areas. It’s as simple as that!”

ENDS

Notes to editors: 

For more information, please contact:

Dina Ni,
Communications Officer, Greenpeace Canada

[email protected]; +1 (416) 820-2148