13.4 C
State of Tripura
Saturday, January 17, 2026

Tripura shines Nationally with 347 Governance Awards

Tripura secures 347 national and regional awards...

Tripura CM Announces Push for 100 More MBBS Seats

Tripura government, led by CM Dr. Manik...

Tripura CM Saha inaugurates state-level Tarlak Kut Festival

Chief Minister Dr. Manik Saha inaugurates the...

Devastating rights violations against Indigenous people must end

Tripura Net
Tripura Net
www.tripuranet.com is a daily news, news article, feature, public opinion, articles, photographs, videos etc –all in digital format- based website meant to disseminate unbiased information as far possible as accurate.

Must Read

New York: Indigenous Peoples have the ancestral wisdom to guide humanity towards a more sustainable use of the Earths resources, yet they are systematically discriminated against and excluded, UN rights chief Volker Trk warned on Monday.

He was speaking in Geneva at the annual meeting on the rights of Indigenous Peoples, referencing in-depth conversations he had had in recent months with Indigenous representatives during missions to Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela and Kenya.

He described the unprincipled and devastating impact of extractive industries on the environment and the rights of Indigenous Peoples. Their dispossession from ancestral lands, and the militarization of their territories.

He said they had described the negative impact of the climate crisis on their communities and the scope of systemic discrimination and exclusion.

Its clear that these violations must stop, he told the meeting.

Poverty imbalance

The UN rights chief noted that Indigenous Peoples make up just over six per cent of the worlds population but account for almost a fifth of the worlds poor, according to the International Labour Organization (ILO).

He insisted their voices need to be heard in every relevant national, regional and global conversation and stressed the need to protect Indigenous human rights defenders from violence and reprisals.

Mr. Trk recalled the profoundly moving story of survival by four Huitoto children whose mother died when they were all in a plane crash in the Colombian rainforest last month. They were found alive after 40 days, including a one-year-old baby.

The older children were able to hark back to the lessons of their mother and grandmother. They knew it was possible to understand the rainforest and to co-exist with its animals and plants, despite the risks.

He said Indigenous people were most likely to carry the chain of culture forward: We see this very clearly in the context of climate change, with its unequal impact, often leaving those closest to the land, to experience the worst effects.

This is especially true for Indigenous women, he reminded, hit disproportionately by climate damage and the unprincipled development of megaprojects.

Meeting 45 Indigenous leaders from 30 countries just last week, the rights chief said climate change was referenced often. As the ice melts, our culture and the way of living dies, one participant from Greenland told him.

He said he hoped there would be increasing opportunities for Indigenous Peoples to participate at the UN, including in the Geneva-based Human Rights Council.

Because you have a right to make your voices heard. Because you have the right to participate in decision-making in matters which would affect you, through representatives chosen by you according to your procedures. And because your voices are deeply valuable to every aspect of our work to advance human rights.

- Advertisement -
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Latest News

Tripura shines Nationally with 347 Governance Awards

Tripura secures 347 national and regional awards in eight years, CM Manik Saha says. The state emerges as a...