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Nations and peoples of the
world are invited to participate on the occasion of the Indigenous World
Water Day on March 22, according to a an article from the main organizers,
which Joel E. Miles, Ph.D., National Invasive Species Coordinator Office
of Environmental Response and Coordination in Palau, sent to media outlets.
The article is a call to action on this important environmental occasion
honoring the water as well as respecting the water, thanking the water
and protect it from harmful effects to human and nature.
The call to action is also for the Indigenous brothers and sisters who
are struggling to defend their ancestral lands of indigenous peoples.
"Free Trade Agreements and neo-liberalism have brought about a rapid
expansion in economic globalization in recent decades. We now see how
poor and indebted countries look to the exploitation of natural resources
as the solution to their economic problems," the article said.
It said that the wealthy and industrialized nations continue this resource
exploitation within their own countries as well as continuing the resource
incursions into other people's lands in other parts of the world.
"In many cases, these resources are found on the ancestral lands
of Indigenous Peoples. Mining, oil, gas, corporation agriculture, and
water extraction, water privatization and pollution are at the heart of
many resource conflicts on and around Indigenous Lands throughout this
Western Hemisphere. In the past, we have been marginalized in the decision-making
processes that end up harming our People and the land we care for."
"Our Indigenous Peoples and communities have known and demonstrated
that we have the knowledge and capacity to take care of the Earth and
various cultural and natural resources that we have been given. Governments
and corporations have sought our indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge
that may be beneficial to their interests. When Indigenous and corporate
interests collide, governments politically, socially, and economically
isolate us into geo-political paradigms where we are forced to make decisions
about the sanctioning exploitation of mineral and fossil fuel resources.
In other situations, water and air pollution come from sources outside
of our territories. This exploitation, privatization and contamination
upset the balance of cultural resources and sacred sites. As Indigenous
Peoples and communities come to better understand the risks associated
to resource exploitation, there is an increasing amount of resistance
to project proposals and/or a growing demand to remedy existing problems.
This has had the effect of forcing governments and corporations to respond
to our concerns.
The occasion is an invitation to your community to participate in an international
event that will raise the Indigenous Voice in defense of Sacred Water.
It consists of organizing in each community a public event according to
your traditions and according to the unique forms of your people. We must
illustrate to the national and international audience, and the media,
that Indigenous Peoples are united to defend water in all places where
it is threatened. We must demand clean up where it is polluted. We must
promote laws that recognize the sacredness of water and inherent customary
rights to water, by Indigenous Peoples. As these events take place in
all regions of the Americas, we will remind the world of the role and
responsibilities as Guardians and Protectors of Water that we, as the
Original Peoples have played since the beginning of time. The world is
out of balance; this is the moment to act on behalf of our Mother Earth,
and the water that sustains all life.
"It is important to invite the press to witness your event. We must
speak individually and collectively to protect the water. Together let's
make an Indigenous Movement to protect water by forming a human chain
holding containers of water or other types of ceremonies and celebrations
throughout the Americas on Indigenous World Water Day.
The Indigenous Environmental Network (www.ienearth.org), along with many
elders and others who care about the legacy we leave for future generations
bring this invitation to you. To add your voice to an international press
release or more information about the event, and to inform us about the
event to be held in your community, please communicate with: Contact,
IEN Mining Organizer, Robert Shimek, toll free US and Canada 1+ 877-436-2121
(1+- 218-751-4967) email rshimek@ienearth.
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