Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

April 24, 2026

Indigenous Peoples' Scissor-Sharp Words Slice Through Failures at the United Nations

 Indigenous Peoples' Scissor-Sharp Words Slice Through Failures at the United Nations

Indigenous representatives from Mexico, Hawai'i, New Zealand, and Vietnam deliver the fire of their words, in defense of their people, at the U.N. Permanent Forum of Indigenous Issues in New York. Images by Censored News

The Smokescreens are Exposed, as Indigenous Peoples Call out the Systematic Racism and Violence, and the Terrorism of Extractive  Industries

By Brenda Norrell, (c)Censored News, April 24, 2026

NEW YORK -- Cristina Bautista was murdered after she testified at the U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues. A young Native Hawaiian family ran for their lives from the fires in Hawai'i as their ancestral homeland burned to the ground. In the MeKong Delta of Vietnam, Buddhist Monks and women rights defenders are imprisoned, and the government of New Zealand is imprisoning Maori women and stealing the future of Maaori children.

With the fire of their words, Indigenous People peeled back the hypocrisy of the governments of the world at the United Nations -- revealing the false guarantees of governments who claim to be upholding Indigenous rights.

For the Indigenous youths in Mexico, Colombia and all across the South, testimony at the United Nations Permanent Forum has meant imprisonment or death.

"Our sister Cristina Bautista participated in this forum shortly before being murdered and for defending autonomy, and is present," an Indigenous rights defender from Tijuana, Mexico, told the U.N. Permanent Forum.

"Before being murdered recently, our brother Marcus Aguilar Rojos, who is an Indigenous authority, helped build an autonomous health clinic for the community."

Speaking during the first week of the two week session, she described how in Chiapas, the Mayan Zapatistas have developed their own autonomous health system over the past 30 years.

When Indigenous communities build their own autonomous health systems, she said they are attacked with violence.

"Who protects us but not if not ourselves."

"The State is silent, where do we turn?" She said the killings are driven by extractive interests and lithium mining. These acts of violence carried out without free, prior and informed consent -- and systematic racism.

"I speak today with grief -- but conviction."

Em-Haley Kukutai Walker (Waikato, Ngaati Tiipaa) Image Censored News

In the heart of the Pacific, the New Zealand government ignores the violence perpetuated on Maaori women and girls.

The government of New Zealand is not progressing with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. They are carrying out a race-based agenda and under-reporting abuse, Em-Haley Kukutai Walker (Waikato, Ngaati Tiipaa) told the Forum .

"The incumbent right-wing is disempowering my people."

The plague and rage of colonization since the 1800's continues to sicken her people.

Maaori women comprise 63 percent of the prison population, despite representing only 8 percent of the population. The government has abandoned prison reduction targets. Generations of babies are disconnected from their lineage in state care by the government.

The lack of trust in police, and the fact that Maaori women are disbelieved indicate the severe under-reporting of abuse.

"Hear the cry of my people."

 Independent Nation of Hawai‘i Representative De Andre Makakoa. Image Censored News

Speaking for the independent Nation of Hawai‘i, De Andre Makakoa's powerful words described how he ran with his pregnant wife and son to escape the fires, fires enabled by the theft of sovereign land and precious water.

Makakoa described the illegal overthrow of the sovereign nation of Hawai'i by the United States, and the theft of land and water that now imperils his people with fires and floods. If there was free, prior and informed consent, his homeland would be flourishing right now.

Makakoa said his people do not need A.I., artificial intelligence -- they need ancestral knowledge.

Paele Kiakona of the delegation said in his statement, "I stand before you as a native representative of an occupied sovereign nation whose overthrow in 1893 remains un-remedied under international law. Many know our homeland as the 50th state of the United States. We know it as the Nation of HawaiĘ»i." 

"I am here today representing my hometown of Lahaina, which in August 2023 was devastated by wildfire."

"Lahaina was once the capital of the Hawaiian Kingdom but now has the reputation as the place where the deadliest wildfire in recent U.S. history took place."

"More than 13,000 people were displaced and scattered overnight including Native Hawaiian families, immigrants, and multi-generational households."

On that day, over 100 people lost their lives and many are still not home.

"Now we are not here to represent just a single town, but Lahaina's tragedy is an opportunity for the world to see what happens when the fate of our home is out of our hands. Despite our efforts the pattern continues."

In this fragile landscape, there are now floods and fires.

"In both cases of flood and fire, we were left to fend for ourselves by the occupant that has created the conditions we are forced to live in."

Drought in South Sudan. AFP photo

Central African cattle herders told of their hungry and lean cattle killed and their cattle herders kidnapped and tortured for ransom.

The Central African Network told the U.N. Permanent Forum, "The loss of 1,300 cattle not only represents economic devastation -- but a direct threat to cultural survival."

Cattle herders are killed, their animals poisoned and there is no effective response.

In Ecuador, the rivers are filled with metals from oil and gas drilling.

Indigenous Quechua in the Amazon said the government of Ecuador is using the United Nations Permanent Forum as a "Smokescreen" while it mutilates Mother Earth.

"The government is promoting oil projects on Indigenous territories." Ecuador must stop the explosives that are used to clear the land," Quechua elders told the Forum.

The delegation of the Khmer-Krom peoples in Vietnam. Image Censored News

From the Mekong Delta in Vietnam, Emily Hang pointed out, "Health is not just the physical and mental well-being of Indigenous Peoples; It is the inter-connectedness of our culture, spirituality, our land, and our environment with our physical bodies and mental state."

The delegation of the Khmer-Krom peoples in Vietnam said Buddhist Monks are imprisoned, and one of the women human rights defenders is now imprisoned for organizing a women's day celebration.

The most vulnerable Indigenous Peoples from around the world made it apparent that they are not naive. They know their testimony each year at the U.N. Permanent Forum is not resulting in protection for their people.

"On behalf of the Khmer-Krom peoples in Kampuchea Krom of the Southern Mekong Delta in Vietnam, I come to you today to highlight how the health of the Khmer-Krom people is being undermined by economic pressure, environmental degradation, state repression, and extreme exclusion from decision-making," Hang told the Forum.

"Being a community of indigenous farmers means that our livelihoods are dependent on the well-being of our land."

"However, our agricultural practices built on our ancestral knowledge are forcibly erased due to exhaustive, export-driven rice production that pollutes our water and soil with chemicals and fertilizers."

"Physically, our bodies are overworked and abused and the food and water we consume to replenish our spirit is poisoned."


Quechua leaders spoke to the U.N. Permanent Forum on the International Day of Mother Earth, resounding how the health of the people is affected in places of conflict.

"Our lands are being encroached by large-scale mining and oil exploration without prior consent. They are polluting our water and contaminating our food, perpetuating the health problems," Quechua elders told the Forum.

"They are permanently encroaching on our way of life."

Hundreds of Quechua leaders are being interfered with.

"Our leaders bank accounts are being frozen just because they are defending life on our land."

"We need to foster the health of Mother Earth if we want to foster the health of the people."

Quechua leaders said the government of Ecuador is not telling the United Nations how it is undermining the rights of the people.

"In reality they are using this as a Smokescreen to coverup their lack of efforts to fight climate change."

While Ecuador is accelerating its illegal mining, Quechua elders said, "More than 100 leaders have been tried for unjustified embezzlement and accounts have been closed."

Quechua urged unity and persistence and said the ongoing fight for Mother Earth will prevail.

U.N. Special Rapporteur for Indigenous Peoples Dr Albert K. Barume. Image Censored News

U.N. Special Rapporteur for Indigenous Peoples Dr Albert K. Barume, of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, responded.

"Indigenous peoples are being killed, and are under arrest. Many live in hiding."

It is because their land is not protected.

"They are vulnerable -- and this is Latin America, this is in Africa, this is in Asia, this is across the world."

"Those lands are often occupied by drug traffickers, terrorist groups and criminal activities," Dr. Barume told the Forum.

Governments are making conditions worse and increasingly volatile.

"The action of the states is to send in more military, more security, more police."

Calling on governments to shift this paradigm, he pointed out that Indigenous Peoples are being considered accomplices and terrorists.


Copyright Brenda Norrell, Censored News, April 24, 2026

April 22, 2026

Russia Rebuked for Calling Indigenous People 'Mentally Ill' at U.N. Permanent Forum in New York

Indigenous Women Testify on Sterilization and Human Rights Abuses at U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues in New York

Russia Rebuked for Calling Indigenous People 'Mentally Ill' at U.N. Permanent Forum

By Brenda Norrell, Censored News, April 22, 2026


Dine' (Navajo) Jean Whitehorse told the U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues today that she was a victim of the U.S. sterilization program, denying her the right to have more children. Whitehorse said she is a survivor of the boarding school and relocation systems of the colonized U.S. government. At Gallup Indian Medical Center in New Mexico in 1972 she was sterilized without her consent by an Indian Health Service doctor. "I wanted more children," Whitehorse told the U.N.  Describing the impact on the culture and future of the Dine' people, Whitehorse said, "There is no Navajo term for sterilization. In our culture, true wealth is our children. They are the Guardians of our Heritage." Whitehorse said the sterilizations by U.S. doctors is not only an individual loss, but the loss of generations. She said it is a violation of international rights. Speaking as a representative of AIM West, Whitehorse points out Indigenous women have been sterilized in countries from Canada to South America and their struggle for justice continues.

Breaking News -- During this morning's session of the U.N. Permanent Forum, an Indigenous representative responded to the International Fund of Russia's representative who called the majority of Russia's Indigenous Peoples "mentally ill." She said this not only insulted Indigenous people as inferior, but it is "psychological violence," which creates collective trauma and discredits entire cultures. She said this man has been turning the protection of human rights into money making by way of NGOs and personal businesses, and the money is being stolen through schemes. She said he is being prosecuted for the theft of funds for elderly and others in need. "This person is guilty of economic crimes." She points out that this man is a former expert of the U.N. Permanent Forum.
Indigenous in Siberia speak on reprisals at the U.N. Video by Cultural Survival.
Securing Freedom for Indigenous Rights Defenders in Siberia
Live from #UNPFII Indigenous Media Zone: Securing Freedom for Indigenous Rights Defenders in Siberia: Indigenous human rights defenders are being charged with terrorism by Russia.
Organized by the International Committee of Indigenous Peoples of Russia
https://www.facebook.com/culturalsurvival/videos/2430226114143704/


Mohawk Nation News "Predator vs Prey'

Mohawk Nation News "Predator vs Prey'

MNN. MOHAWK NATION NEWS. APR. 16, 2026.  Trump wants to control the economy of the world and to annihilate those who resist him. The US and Israel are carrying out what is called the "final solution to the Indian problem" meaning all original people throughout the world. So far 150 million indigenous of North, Central and South America have been murdered by the Europeans since their invasion of turtle island in 1492. 



Apache Stronghold Wendsler Nosie 'Save the Earth from Destruction for Profit'



Apache Stronghold Wendsler Nosie 'Save the Earth from Destruction for Profit'

Statement from Dr. Wendsler Nosie Sr., Censored News, April 22, 2026


Today, we continue our struggle to save Oak Flat. Through all our past visits to court, we have learned the reach of capitalism and its influence on the efforts to save the earth from destruction for profit, has reached the worry of our judges, who are the ultimate influencers of fair laws for all people and for the earth itself.

We, thank all those who have supported us to save Oak Flat. This struggle touches you and everyone with issues that go beyond just religion. Resolution Copper and the U.S. government have pushed making money and have influenced all to believe they are working in the best interests of all U.S. citizens. It began with efforts to bypass U.S. laws using the plenary powers of the senate, discounting U.S. treaty obligations, devaluing copper on exchange value and pushing all to believe the destruction of Oak Flat was because of an urgent need of American people. These actions validated that you could write anything on a piece of paper as long as you can keep it still. Today, on Earth Day, we pray the District Court will hear our case to right this wrong.

Thank you to all Apache people, all tribes, all religions, and all faith leaders who support Native American religious rights, all organizations including the National Congress of American Indians, the Intertribal Association of Arizona, the Advisory Council of Historic Preservation, all the supporting labor unions and indigenous groups, etc., those who are on the right side of justice.

We ask all to light a candle in prayer for this court case filed today. On Earth Day, although every second of all our days rely on Mother Earth daily for our existence.

Respectfully,

Dr. Wendsler Nosie Sr., Ph.D.
Founder of the Apache Stronghold
Former Chairman of the San Carlos Apache Tribe