Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

September 2, 2007

New Mexico dignitaries to visit Dooda Desert Rock on Tuesday

New Mexico dignitaries who have spoken out against the proposed Desert Rock power plant will meet with Navajo resisters at the site near Shiprock, N.M., on Tuesday. Desert Rock power plant would be the third power plant on the Navajo Nation. Nearly all of the power goes to non-Indians in the Southwest, while many Navajos continue to haul water and live without electricity. Navajos live with the environmental degradation and disease from the pollution.

By Elouise Brown
Dooda Desert Rock
http://www.desert-rock-blog.com/


Dooda (NO) Desert Rock to Host New Mexico Dignitaries

Ram Springs, N.M. near Burnham, N.M.— Dooda (NO) Desert Rock (DDR) will host political dignitaries from New Mexico at 9:00 AM on Tuesday, September 4th, at the DDR resistance campsite in the area targeted for construction of the proposed Desert Rock Energy Project. Staff of Presidential candidate New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson and Secretary of the Environment Ron Curry will be attending to meet with local Navajo elders to discuss their concerns about violations of environmental justice orders and potential adverse health impacts of Desert Rock. Senator Pete Domenici and New Mexico Attorney General Gary King have been invited.
The meeting will include a tour of the Sithe Global, LLC drill site as well as the adjacent BHP Navajo Mine. During the meeting, the elders plan to request that the Governor write a letter to Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley proposing an alternative to construction of the Desert Rock plant.
"Now is the time to impress upon our elected leaders the severity of the threat we face," said
Pauline Gilmore, a Navajo elder with DDR. "Our health and homeland are at risk from a third massive coal-fired power plant in the Four Corners area."
Governor Richardson has expressed "grave concern" about the potential adverse environmental impacts of Desert Rock, and DDR members have voiced alarm that tons of airborne toxins will seriously jeopardize the health and futures of their families.
“Like old fashioned snake oil peddlers, promoters of Desert Rock claim these poisons will actually improve our air quality," said Elouise Brown, DDR President. "But, we know better, and we would rather be poor and healthy than financially well-off and sick in bed. Our health is far more valuable to us than any tainted profit or misbegotten financial gain."
Both Senator Domenici and Attorney General King have expressed an interest in objections to the Project and will learn more about the disproportionate adverse impacts befalling Navajo families in the area.
“Hearing about the severe threats we face is one thing," said Ken Quinn, "but witnessing these conditions first hand with their own two eyes will undoubtedly concentrate their attention on our worsening plight."
The Desert Rock Energy Project is a proposed 1500 megawatt power plant planned for the Navajo Nation in northwest New Mexico. Desert Rock would be the third major coal-fired facility within a 15 mile radius in the San Juan Basin. The Project would accelerate environmental degradation in the Four Corners, a National Sacrifice Area notorious for runaway energy development and lax environmental oversight.

(Photo Top) Dooda Desert Rock resistance camp/Indigenous Action (Photos 2 and 3 US EPA) The Navajo Generating Station near Page, Ariz., and the Four Corners Power Plant in the Four Corners area of Shiprock, NM, both on the Navajo Nation. Photo 4: Carlan Tapp/Navajos protest at Navajo President Joe Shirley's inauguration.

The Four Corners region is where unreclaimed uranium tailings are scattered from the Cold War uranium mining, resulting in widespread cancer and respiratory deaths for Navajos. Oil and gas wells are now widespread, creating a toxic soup for the air, water and land. The region of northwest New Mexico is also the place of Dinetah, the sacred place of origin for Navajos. --bn

September 1, 2007

Indigenous Border Summit of the Americas 2007

By Brenda Norrell
Narcosphere

The Indigenous Border Summit of the Americas 2007 will be held Nov. 7 --10, 2007 at the San Xavier Distrct on the Tohono O'odham Nation.

Narco News
By Brenda Norrell

SAN XAVIER, Ariz. -- The Indigenous Border Summit of the Americas will be held at San Xavier District on the Tohono O'odham Nation near Tucson, November 7 -- 10, 2007, Wednesday through Saturday.
Opposition to the militarization of the borders in Indigenous territories, including the US/Mexico border wall and the United States spying on private citizens, is a focus of the summit.
The foundation of the discussion will be the sacred duty to protect Mother Earth.
Indigenous rights of passage, Indigenous deaths in the borderzone and the universal rights of Indigenous Peoples will be discussed.
The United States' new border crossing requirements will be on the agenda, with Indigenous pressing for the recognition of tribal identification cards, as opposed to U.S. passports, for American Indian tribal members.
Land and water rights and human rights in the Americas will be the focus of sessions.
Special invitations are extended to the spiritual leaders, chiefs, tribal leaders and other Indigenous Peoples from Alaska, Canada, Central America and South America.
The first planning session for this year's summit was held on Friday, August 31, with Tohono O'odham from Arizona, O'odham from Mexico, Salt River Pima, Navajo and Hopi/Pueblo tribal members attending.
Tohono O’odham Mike Flores is organizing the summit.
The San Xavier District of the Tohono O'odham Nation passed a resolution on July 10, 2007 to host the summit again this year.

Points of Discussion: Human rights/Humanitarian aid; Know your rights workshop; Militarization/Surveillance on border; Political prisoners/Detention centers; Environment/Lands territories, natural resources; Women and the border; Traditional mobility/Immigration. There will also be a concert at San Xavier.

Watch for updates:
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com/

Photos of the planning session by Brenda Norrell. More photos:

http://bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2007/09/indigenous-border-summit-of-americas.html

COUNTERPOINT: Friends of Leonard Peltier to Tim Giago

(Photo Akwesasne Press) Center: Dickie Wilson, Chairman of the Oglala Sioux Tribe at the time of Wounded Knee, and Guardians Of the Oglala Nation, or GOONs. More photos:
http://www.certain-natl.org/watsonpics.html

Counterpoint: Friends of Leonard Peltier respond to Tim Giago's recent column:

From the Friends of Leonard Peltier
August 31, 2007
A response to What is the Truth About the Murder of Anna Mae?
Tim Giago, The Huffington Post, August 30, 2007:

“If, Giago is a lover of ‘fact’ and ‘objective’ journalism, as he claims, perhaps he will take the time to actually read and study the thousands of documents produced by [the] FBI... If that isn't enough, Tim Giago can watch reruns of interviews with judges, ex-GOONs describing their FBI support, [and] victims of GOONs’ terror... All of these... are available for anyone truly interested in facts.” -- Leonard Peltier (Letter to the Editor, May 1991 Edition of News From Indian Country)
Read article:
Response to "What is the Truth About the Murder of Anna Mae?" by Tim Giago
--Friends of Leonard Peltier

Urgent: Global consultation, Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

URGENT MATTER - INDIGENOUS PEOPLES - GLOBAL CONSULTATION
IMPORTANT NOTICE
An agreement has been reached over the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The 'Co-sponsors' and the Africa Group of States have now reached agreement over an amended version of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
The Indigenous Peoples Caucus is undertaking an urgent consultation with Indigenous Peoples delegations to determine whether the amended Declaration is to be supported or rejected. This important consultation ultimately means the amended Declaration is to be approved by the General Assembly or not adopted.
The States that are bound in this agreement will represent a clear majority of the UN members and it will guarantee adoption. It is possible that all States will support the amended Declaration, except a few 'hard-line' opponents. We know who those opponents are.
These urgent consultations will determine whether we can live with the amendments, and the Declaration is adopted, OR whether we cannot accept the agreed version, and the Declaration will not be adopted. Your careful scrutiny, combined with priority attention to this consultation, is called for.
NEW DOCUMENTS FOR THE GLOBAL CONSULTATION ON THE DECLARATION(www.docip.org)
NOUVEAUX DOCUMENTS POUR LA CONSULTATION GLOBALE SUR LA DECLARATION(www.docip.org)
NUEVOS DOCUMENTOS SOBRE LA CONSULTA PARA LA DECLARACION, TAMBIEN EN ESPANOL(www.docip.org)
Danica VanzaSecretary assistantdoCip - Indigenous Peoples' Centerfor Documentation, Research and Information14, avenue de TrembleyCH 1209 - GENEVA (Switzerland)Tel.: +4122 - 740 34 33Fax: +4122 - 740 34 54e-mail: danica@docip.org - docip@docip.orgwww.docip.org

Please contact for more information:
Les Malezer
Chairperson, Indigenous Peoples Caucus: les.malezer@faira.org.au
Cell: +1 (646) 338 3029
Website: http://www.ipcaucus.net/
OFFICE
The Church Center
777 UN Plaza
IITC Office, 8th Floor
New York, NY 10017
Tel: +1 (212) 682 3633 ext. 3123
Fax: +1 (212) 682 5354

Indigenous Border Summit of the Americas planning session




Tohono O'odham, Salt River Pima, Navajo and Hopi/Pueblo tribal members gathered to plan the Indigenous Border Summit of the Americas 2007. The second annual gathering will be held at the San Xavier District on the Tohono O'odham Nation near Tucson Nov. 7 --10, Wednesday through Saturday. The summit organizer is Tohono O'odham Mike Flores. The San Xavier District Council passed a resolution again this year in support of the summit, which opposes the militarization of the border and supports Indigenous rights. The first planning session was held August 31 in Tucson. (Photo Brenda Norrell)