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RIGHTS-PARAGUAY: Int'l Backing for Indigenous Land Claims
By Natalia Ruiz Díaz
ASUNCIÓN - After 20 years of fighting for their ancestral lands in Paraguay's northwestern Chaco region, the Xákmok Kásek indigenous community's case has reached the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.
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Q&A: Indigenous Rights Appeals Increasingly Reach Inter-American System
Daniela Estrada interviews VÍCTOR ABRAMOVICH, Vice President of IACHR
SANTIAGO - Standards relating to indigenous peoples' rights, laid down by the Inter-American Commission and Court of Human Rights, are increasingly being incorporated into the laws of countries in the region, according to Víctor Abramovich, First Vice President of the Commission.
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CHILE: Indigenous Protests on Several Fronts
By Daniela Estrada
SANTIAGO - The tense relations between the Chilean government of Michelle Bachelet and the country's large indigenous minority are far from easing up.
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CAMEROON: 'Our Lives Are Defined By This Forest'
By Ngala Kilian Chimtom
YAOUNDE - Pauline Siembe, a Baka pygmy in South East Cameroon, comes out of her smoky hut licking her fingers after a meal of pounded yam and bush meat soup.
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PERU: Guinea Pigs Spell Independence for Women
By Milagros Salazar
PUCYURA, Peru - In a rural village in the Peruvian Andes, very near yet so far from the popular tourist destination of Cuzco, the guinea pig, a rodent native to the region, has become "woman’s best friend" – an important means for women to earn money to support their families, as well as to learn how to defend their rights.
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CHILE: Preserving the Kaweshkar Language – In the Nick of Time
By Daniela Estrada
SANTIAGO - Sound files containing recordings of spoken Kaweshkar - a nearly extinct indigenous language of southern Chile – have been put together thanks to the work of ethnolinguist Óscar Aguilera and anthropologist José Tonko, and donated to national and foreign institutions with the aim of preserving the culture of one of Chile’s nine native groups.
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PERU: Environmental Clean-up not Complete, Say Achuar Communities
By Milagros Salazar
LIMA - Leaders of the Achuar people are challenging a decision by the Peruvian government to declare that a clean-up effort by the PlusPetrol oil company in the northeastern Amazon jungle has been completed.
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ENVIRONMENT: Women on Front Lines of Climate Week
By Suzanne Hoeksema
NEW YORK - Women's voices remain highly underrepresented in the climate change debate, say international civil society leaders attending events taking place around the United Nations Climate Summit Tuesday.
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GUYANA: Brazil Opens Gateway to Wider Caribbean
By Bert Wilkinson
GEORGETOWN - Earlier this month, Brazilian President Luis Inacio Lula DaSilva flew more than 1,600 kilometres from his base in Brasilia to a remote state on the Guyanese frontier to formally commission a border river bridge with his country's English-speaking neighbour.
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RIGHTS-BANGLADESH: Glimmers of Hope Amid an Elusive Peace
Catherine Makino interviews leading Bangladeshi human rights activist SULTANA KAMAL
TOKYO - Sultana Kamal dreams of a country "where every single citizen will live in democracy, in equality" and where everyone has "equal share to resources and opportunities." Fulfilling this dream has been her lifelong advocacy as a human rights advocate.
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LAOS: What People Cannot Eat is of Great Importance to Women - Part 2
By Donna Kelly*
VIENTIANE - "When I was born my mother could not eat anything but tiny fish and tea made from herbs for one whole year," says Dr Bhounsouane. "She was so weak that she could hardly walk. Post partum food taboos (phit kam) are a major problem in Laos for women," he said.
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RIGHTS-MALAYSIA: Win Some, Lose Some for Beleaguered Penan Tribe
By Baradan Kuppusamy
KUALA LUMPUR - In wealthy Malaysia that employs over four million Asians to service its high- rolling lifestyle, a tiny indigenous tribe is fighting for its survival against state inaction and bureaucratic apathy, as well as marauding giant multinationals and timber loggers.
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LAOS: Land Legislation Disempowers Women - Part 1
By Donna Kelly*
VIENTIANE - Ki is seven years old but looks more like three. His legs are bowed and skull misshapen. He looked at me with a blank stare. The health worker, Kheo, suggests rickets.
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Indigenous Peoples in RSS
The planet's roughly 350 million indigenous peoples took notable steps on the international stage in the last decade. They got the world's governments to agree to create a body to represent them at the United Nations, the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, and to appoint a special rapporteur responsible for their human rights. In 2007 a Universal Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was approved by the UN. Yet the living conditions of most "tribal", "aboriginal", "native" or "first" peoples remain precarious. IPS, with its network of contributors at the UN and linked to indigenous communities worldwide, is committed to tracking the world community's efforts to do justice to the rights and aspirations of these peoples, with a special current focus on Latin America's 40 million rural indigenous peoples.

Bolivia: Decision Time
Voices in Indigenous Languages

Minga Peridística: Construcción de Reportajes Indígenas en América Latina

Tebtebba Foundation
Asia Indigenous Peoples Pact
International Indian Treaty Council
Inuit Circumpolar Conference
Quechua Network
Saami Council
United Nations and Indigenous People
UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
UN Draft Declaration on the Human Rights of Indigenous Peoples
World Bank
The International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs
Forest Peoples Programme
International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA)
Development Gateway

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IPS gratefully acknowledges IFAD for its support of the IPS programme of work in 2007-2008 for communicating about indigenous peoples of the Americas.