Indigenous Peoples' Kyoto Water
Declaration
3rd World Water Forum, Kyoto,Japan
March 18, 2003
Relationship to Water
1.
We, the Indigenous Peoples from all parts of the world assembled
here, reaffirm our relationship to Mother Earth and responsibility to
future generations to raise our voices in solidarity to speak for the
protection of water. We were placed in a sacred manner on this earth,
each in our own sacred and traditional lands and territories to care
for all of creation and to care for water.
2.
We recognize, honor and respect water as sacred and sustains all
life. Our traditional knowledge, laws and ways of life teach us to be
responsible in caring for this sacred gift that connects all life.
3.
Our relationship with our lands, territories and water is the
fundamental physical cultural and spiritual basis for our existence.
This relationship to our Mother Earth requires us to conserve our
freshwaters and oceans for the survival of present and future
generations. We assert our role as caretakers with rights and
responsibilities to defend and ensure the protection, availability
and purity of water. We stand united to follow and implement our
knowledge and traditional laws and exercise our right of
self-determination to preserve water, and to preserve life.
Conditions of Our Waters
4.
The ecosystems of the world have been compounding in change and in
crisis. In our generation we see that our waters are being polluted
with chemicals, pesticides, sewage, disease, radioactive
contamination and ocean dumping from mining to shipping wastes. We
see our waters being depleted or converted into destructive uses
through the diversion and damming of water systems, mining and
mineral extraction, mining of groundwater and aquifer for industrial
and commercial purposes, and unsustainable economic, resource and
recreational development, as well as the transformation of excessive
amounts of water into energy. In the tropical southern and northern
forest regions, deforestation has resulted in soil erosion and
thermal contamination of our water.
5.
The burning of oil, gas, and coal, known collectively as fossil fuels
is the primary source of human-induced climate change. Climate
change, if not halted, will result in increased frequency and
severity of storms, floods, drought and water shortage. Globally,
climate change is worsening desertification. It is polluting and
drying up the subterranean and water sources, and is causing the
extinction of precious flora and fauna. Many countries in Africa have
been suffering from unprecedented droughts. The most vulnerable
communities to climate change are Indigenous Peoples and impoverished
local communities occupying marginal rural and urban environments.
Small island communities are threatened with becoming submerged by
rising oceans.
6.
We see our waters increasingly governed by imposed economic, foreign
and colonial domination, as well as trade agreements and commercial
practices that disconnect us as peoples from the ecosystem. Water is
being treated as a commodity and as a property interest that can be
bought, sold and traded in global and domestic market-based systems.
These imposed and inhumane practices do not respect that all life is
sacred, that water is sacred.
7.
When water is disrespected, misused and poorly managed, we see the
life threatening impacts on all of creation. We know that our right
of self-determination and sovereignty, our traditional knowledge, and
practices to protect the water are being disregarded violated and
disrespected.
8.
Throughout Indigenous territories worldwide, we witness the
increasing pollution and scarcity of fresh waters and the lack of
access that we and other life forms such as the land, forests,
animals, birds, plants, marine life, and air have to our waters,
including oceans. In these times of scarcity, we see governments
creating commercial interests in water that lead to inequities in
distribution and prevent our access to the life giving nature of
water.
Right to Water and Self Determination
9.
We Indigenous Peoples have the right to self-determination. By virtue
of that right we have the right to freely exercise full authority and
control of our natural resources including water. We also refer to
our right of permanent sovereignty over our natural resources,
including water.
10.
Self-determination for Indigenous Peoples includes the right to
control our institutions, territories, resources, social orders, and
cultures without external domination or interference.
11.
Self-determination includes the practice of our cultural and
spiritual relationships with water, and the exercise of authority to
govern, use, manage, regulate, recover, conserve, enhance and renew
our water sources, without interference.
12.
International law recognizes the rights of Indigenous Peoples to:
Self-determination
Ownership,
control and management of our traditional territories, lands and
natural resources
Exercise
our customary law
Represent
ourselves through our own institutions
Require
free prior and informed consent to developments on our land
Control
and share in the benefits of the use of, our traditional knowledge.
13.
Member States of the United Nations and international trade
organizations, international and regional financial institutions and
international agencies of economic cooperation are legally and
morally obligated to respect and observe these and other related
collective human rights and fundamental freedoms. Despite
international and universal recognition of our role as caretakers of
Mother Earth, our rights to recover, administer, protect and develop
our territories, natural resources and water systems are
systematically denied and misrepresented by governmental and
international and domestic commercial interests. Our rights to
conserve, recreate and transmit the totality of our cultural heritage
to future generations, our human right to exist as Peoples is
increasingly and alarmingly restricted, unduly impaired or totally
denied.
14.
Indigenous Peoples interests on water and customary uses must be
recognized by governments, ensuring that Indigenous rights are
enshrined in national legislation and policy. Such rights cover both
water quantity and quality and extend to water as part of a healthy
environment and to its cultural and spiritual values. Indigenous
interests and rights must be respected by international agreements on
trade and investment, and all plans for new water uses and
allocations.
Traditional Knowledge
15.
Our traditional practices are dynamically regulated systems. They are
based on natural and spiritual laws, ensuring sustainable use through
traditional resource conservation. Long-tenured and place-based
traditional knowledge of the environment is extremely valuable, and
has been proven to be valid and effective. Our traditional knowledge
developed over the millennia should not be compromised by an
over-reliance on relatively recent and narrowly defined western
reductionist scientific methods and standards. We support the
implementation of strong measures to allow the full and equal
participation of Indigenous Peoples to share our experiences,
knowledge and concerns. The indiscriminate and narrow application of
modern scientific tools and technologies has contributed to the loss
and degradation of water.
Consultation
16.
To recover and retain our connection to our waters, we have the right
to make decisions about waters at all levels. Governments,
corporations and intergovernmental organizations must, under
international human rights standards require Indigenous Peoples free
prior and informed consent and consultation by cultural appropriate
means in all decision-making activities and all matters that may have
affect. These consultations must be carried out with deep mutual
respect, meaning there must be no fraud, manipulation, and duress nor
guarantee that agreement will be reached on the specific project or
measure. Consultations include:
a.
To conduct the consultations under the communities own systems and
mechanisms;
b. The means of Indigenous Peoples to fully
participate in such consultations; and;
c. Indigenous Peoples
exercise of both their local and traditional decision-making
processes, including the direct participation of their spiritual and
ceremonial authorities, individual members and community authorities
as well as traditional practitioners of subsistence and cultural ways
in the consultation process and the expression of consent for the
particular project or measure.
d. Respect for the right to say
no.
e. Ethical guidelines for a transparent and specific outcome.
Plan of Action
17.
We endorse and reiterate the "Kimberley Declaration and the
Indigenous Peoples' Plan of Implementation on Sustainable
Development" which was agreed upon in Johannesburg during the
World Summit on Sustainable Development in September 2002.
18.
We resolve to sustain our ancestral and historical relationships with
and assert our inherent and inalienable rights to our lands and
waters.
19.
We resolve to maintain, strengthen and support Indigenous Peoples'
movements, struggles and campaigns on water and enhance the role of
Indigenous elders, women and youth to protect water.
20.
We seek to establish a Working Group of Indigenous Peoples on Water,
which will facilitate linkages between Indigenous Peoples and provide
technical and legal assistance to Indigenous communities who need
such support in their struggles for the right to land and water. We
will encourage the creation of similar working groups at the local,
national and regional levels.
21.
We challenge the dominant paradigm, policies, and programs on water
development, which includes among others; government ownership of
water, construction of large water infrastructures; corporatization;
the privatization and commodification of water; the use of water as a
tradeable commodity; and the liberalization of trade in water
services, which do not recognize the rights of Indigenous Peoples to
water.
22.
We strongly support the recommendations of the World Commission on
Dams (WCD) on water and energy development. These include the WCD
report's core values, strategic priorities, the "rights and
risks framework" and the use of multi-criteria assessment tools
for strategic options assessment and project selection. Its
rights-based development framework, including the recognition of the
rights of Indigenous Peoples in water development is a major
contribution to decision-making frameworks for sustainable
development.
23.
We call on the governments, multilateral organizations, academic
institutions and think tanks to stop promoting and subsidizing the
institutionalization and implementation of these anti-people and
anti-nature policies and programs.
24.
We demand a stop to mining, logging, energy and tourism projects that
drain and pollute our waters and territories.
25.
We demand that the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF),
regional banks like the Asian Development Bank, African Development
Bank, Inter-American Development Bank, stop the imposition of water
privatization or 'full cost recovery' as a condition for new loans
and renewal of loans of developing countries.
26.
We ask the European Union to stop championing the liberalization of
water services in the General Agreement on Services (GATS) of the
World Trade Organization (WTO). This is not consistent with the
European Commission's policy on Indigenous Peoples and development.
We will not support any policy or proposal coming from the WTO or
regional trade agreements like the NAFTA (North American Free Trade
Agreement, Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), on water
privatization and liberalization and we commit ourselves to fight
against such agreements and proposals.
27.
We resolve to replicate and transfer our traditional knowledge and
practices on the sustainable use of water to our children and the
future generations.
28.
We encourage the broader society to support and learn from our water
management practices for the sake of the conservation of water all
over the world.
29.
We call on the States to comply with their human rights obligations
and commitments to legally binding international instruments to which
they are signatories to, including but not limited to, such as the
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the Covenant on Economic,
Cultural and Social Rights, International Convention on the
Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination; as well as their
obligations to conventions on the environment, such as the Convention
on Biological Diversity, Climate Convention, and Convention to Combat
Desertification.
30.
We insist that the human rights obligations of States must be
complied with and respected by their international trade
organizations. These legally binding human rights and environmental
obligations do not stop at the door of the WTO and other regional and
bilateral trade agreements.
31.
We resolve to use all political, technical and legal mechanisms on
the domestic and international level, so that the States, as well as
transnational corporations and international financial institutions
will be held accountable for their actions or inactions that threaten
the integrity of water, our land and our peoples.
32.
We call on the States to respect the spirit of Article 8j of the
Convention on Biological Diversity as it relates to the conservation
of traditional knowledge on conservation of ecosystems and we demand
that the Trade Related Aspects of the Intellectual Property Rights
(TRIPS) Agreement be taken out of the World Trade Organization (WTO)
Agreements as this violates our right to our traditional knowledge.
33.
We call upon the States to fulfill the mandates of the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and to ratify the
Kyoto Protocol. We call for the end of State financial subsidies to
fossil fuel production and processing and for aggressive reduction of
greenhouse gas emissions calling attention to the United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) that reported an
immediate 60% reduction of CO2 is needed to stabilize global warming.
34.
We will ensure that international and domestic systems of restoration
and compensation be put in place to restore the integrity of water
and ecosystems.