Presentation Materials
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Presentation Materials
Whose land Is It? The many faces of Indigenous Rigths and Land Claim DEMARCATION AND ENTITLEMENT OF INDIGENOUS TERRITORIES OF NICARAGUAN CARIBBEAN COAST A result of the autonomous process Por Por:: Green Bay November 2005 1 Content Nicaragua historical background and the indigenous and afro descendants peoples Legal frame of the demarcation and entitlement Execution of law 445 Caribbean voices documentary 2 3 The Caribbean Coast… before Nicaragua “Before the annexing of our regions to this country, the Caribbean people were prosperous. There was abundant food, each family had their own home. The minerals were remain. The green of the forest cover extended across the territory and the marine life was rich. The people and ideas flowed freely from one community to another, and the extent family was strongly based in unity. Communities were self sufficient and the people lived in harmony with their environment. There were differences among peoples and ethnic communities. But most of them were solved through dialogue and compromise. (Ray Hooker, in the IV International Symposium on Autonomy, 2004) Tribes allocated in the Mosquitia of Nicaragua 1500 (Doctoral Thesis of Karl Offen 1998) 5 Tribes allocated in the Mosquitia of Nicaragua 1800 (Doctoral thesis Karl Offen 1998) 6 Different history Center/Pacific Caribbean Coast Spanish colony Termination of Indigenous people, culture, and language Catholic evangelization Private property development Economy based on Agrarian products export British protectorate Alliance with people, language preservation Moravian Evangelization Communal Property conservation Economy based on Natural resource exploitation 7 The annexation process 1860 The Managua Treaty 1894 Military forced annexation or The Moskitia reincorporation 1905 The Harrison-Altamirano Treaty Land take away Cession to the transnational companies “Castellanización - Turning spanish” projects 8 “Since 1,906 land entitlement commissions were organized to implement the terms of the treaty…… yet there were few titles delivered and the abuses continue…” Goet 2,004 9 ……..Until 1960 Some titles were given, and these are the background to present claims. The Harrison-Altamirano Treaty appears as the unique instance where the historical claims of indigenous and afro descendant people were considered as legitimate, even partially This period is coincident with the presence of Standard Fruit Company, at that time one of the largest concessionaries with enormous activity and the protection of US marines 10 Miskitus and Sumus alliance ´70 Intents of modernization based on the development of agro industry, raising cattle, and export industry. Natural resources are the main motor to Nicaragua development. The state promote significant changes on the Land tenure and arouse the concept of “national lands”…… the argument is that there are “empty lands that no one uses” Huge forestry projects came with funding from IADB New efforts to mobilize the indigenous communities came. In the Wangki River, near Honduras border the Miskitu and Sumu People Alliance for Progress, ALPROMISU emerged as a channel for negotiation with Nicaraguan state and become part of the growing international movement that nurture it.. 11 The uprising The Sandinista revolution triumph with popular and nationalist speeches create an environment that favor the development of social and political organization on the Caribbean Coast Coincidently with the international debate, our people claim for land as a fundamental right, and became the main negotiation issue with the sandinista government that did not understand the people demand In midst of a complex situation the uprising against sandinistas broke out, in demand of territory and resources control of the former Moskitia Reserve 12 The autonomy bases Entire communities were displaced from the north border towards settlements in the inner part of the region Other communities were “kidnapped” to Honduras. High human and material cost destruction were overcome as both parts seek for dialogue as an alternative to a non antagonistic conflict. The National Commission for Autonomy was constituted. Dialogue began with the rebels inside and outside the country 1986 the parliament approved a new constitution that recognized the multiethnicity of Nicaraguans and the special rights of indigenous people and ethnic communities. 1987 the approval of the Autonomous Statutes which establish the creation of two autonomous regions and the implementation of the law since 1990. 13 Autonomy: made land demarcation possible Autonomy process began with nation-state against it Various intentions to reduce autonomous rights Agree to a Demarcation Law because agencies pressure Government first draft wanted to give lot by family Indigenous communities and organizations, universities, NGO´s activism led to a wide discussion and approval of the new law in 2002 14 Indigenous People and Ethnic Communities in Nicaragua 2002 15 Indigenous People and Ethnic Communities Vs forestry map 16 Indigenous People and Ethnic Communities VS Protected areas 17 LEGAL FRAME WORK /DEMARCATION PROCEES LAW 445 REGIME OF COMMUNAL PROPERTY OF THE INDIGENOUS AND ETHNIC COMMUNITIES OF THE ATLANTIC COAST AUTONOMOUS REGIONES, AND THE WANGKI, BOCAY, INDIO AND MAIZ RIVERS 18 BACKGROUND TO THE PRESENT DEMARCATION AND ENTITLEMENT HARRISONALTAMIRANO TREATY AND THE ENTITLEMENT COMMISSIÓN IAN INRA SUPLETORIOS TITLES RENTALS 19 LEGAL BACKGROUNDS National Constitution Law 28. Autonomous Statutes of the Autonomous Regions of Nicaragua Atlantic of Nicaragua Municipality Law. / Natural Resources Laws Creation of the National Commission for Demarcation 20 CONTENT Object and specific purpose Definitions Organization Communitarian The relation with municipal, regional and national authorities Property regime for other occupants Procedure for legalization of communal lands 21 OBJECT Regulate the indigenous and ethnic communities property of the Atlantic Coast Autonomous Regions and the Wangki, Bocay, Indio and Maiz Rivers 22 PROPERTY CONCEPT It is the collective property constituted by the lands, waters, forest and other natural resource content, and that traditionally belong to the community. Also the traditional knowledge, intellectual and cultural property, biodiversity resources and other goods, rights and actions that belong to one or more indigenous or ethnic communities. 23 COMMUNITARIAN ADMINISTRATION BODIES OF THE COMMUNAL PROPERTY Communal authority Territory Authority 24 NATURAL RESOURCES For daily sustenance Forestry activities Concessions Exclusive use for fishery Protected areas 25 THE PROPERTY REGIME No mortgage, no prescription, no bargain Collective rights Traditional occupation Rights for third occupants 26 THE CONADETI ATRIBUTIONS The National Commission for Demarcation: Determine and solve demarcation and entitlement requests; Direct the demarcation process; Create technical commission within the territory and regions; 27 STEPS TOWARDS ENTITLEMENT Request Conflict resolution Measurement and signalization Entitlement Debt cleaning 28 LAND TITLE PROCEDURES Request: Identification of the Community or group of communities, legal representation Diagnosis: They can request support to practice it 29 The research interest Socio economic data Demography Ethno-history Cartography 30 Research practice Cartographic Ethnographic map (land use and community tradition related to land use) Overlap maps (the claim of neighbor communities over the community in diagnosis) Maps of Conflict (the presence of other occupants with or without title within the area claimed by the community) Maps of common use zones (areas use by indigenous communities next to the community) Border map (Area claimed by the community according to the information obtained) 31 Methodology Social aspects, territory authorities define the mechanisms METHODS USED Observation Individual interviews Communal workshops, collective assemblies Focal Groups Geographical Information System GIS Global Positioning System G. P. S NEW TECHNOLOGY SUPPORT 32 Cartography First Stage Elaboration Of basic map Digitalización de Ríos, Caminos, cerros, curvas de nivel Second Stage Elaboración Mapa Cognocitivo Mapa etnográfico Uso Third Stage Cross information Field Verification Georeferenciación de los limites Mapa de traslapes Mapa de conflictos Mapa de zonas de uso común Mapa Limite Introducción de la Información de campo Validación de la Información Diseño e Impresión 33 Cartographic outcomes of the Research 34 Cartographic outcomes of the Research 35 Cartographic outcomes of the Research 36 Cartographic outcomes of the Research 37 Cartographic outcomes of the Research 38 Regional outcomes until today – Entitlement of six territories and demarcation process for others – Community learning about the existence and content of the Law 445. – Implementation of the Law, management offices with technical resources and advisors. – Information dissemination for other occupants – Coordination with regional UNIVERSITIES, local institutions and communal autorithies. 39 Regional outcomes until today 40 Trends Centralization of economic resources Delay tactics Political party interests Regional Governments polarization The Law Interpretation 41 LESSONS LEARNED • As various communities share common areas among them, future research should include the neighboring communities. 42 Challenges Establish adequate articulations Decentralize demarcation management to the autonomous regions Build network for mutual support with other peoples and nations How to stop the growing environment degradation? 43 Challenges Accompany communities/territories in the management of their properties Overcome corruption of leaders Exclude inclusion of political parties How to prepare communities to face CAFTA? Increase women’s participation in land issue 44 45