Press
Release No.2002-52
INNOVATIVE MEASURES
REQUIRED TO PROTECT INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE
Paris, August 22 - International
interest and demand for knowledge developed by indigenous peoples
is at an all time high - politically, culturally and financially.
Yet this demand often results in abuse, rather than respect, for
the communities and individuals involved, according to UNESCO.
Driven by the demand for new drugs, plant and animal varieties,
and commercial products, scientists, corporations and governments
across the globe are tracking traditional knowledge. The healing
powers of medicinal plants known to the indigenous Guaymi people
of Costa Rica; the ingredients used by traditional healers in
South Africa that may help to stem the tide of AIDS-related tuberculosis
- has, understandably, sparked much interest abroad. But the needs
and concerns of the indigenous communities that hold this knowledge
have often been ignored.
As controversies surrounding indigenous
intellectual property rights simmer, UNESCO will hold a major
event at the World Summit on Sustainable Development (August 26
to September 4) to highlight innovative approaches to protecting
and sharing traditional knowledge. Indigenous peoples, Third World
activists and a wide range of scientific and legal experts from
Ethiopia to Thailand will lead the discussions, scheduled for
August 29, at the Ubuntu Village, (Wanderers Club, Water Berry
Room) from 9.30a.m. to 6.30p.m. This forum will be organized jointly
with the International Council for Science (ICSU), Tebtebba Foundation
(an indigenous institute for international research and policy
based in the Philippines) and in cooperation with the International
Chamber of Commerce.
On this occasion, UNESCO and ICSU
will release a much-awaited report on traditional knowledge to
resolve a heated debate within the international scientific community.
Ten years ago at the "Earth Summit" in Rio, government
representatives pledged to protect and respect the knowledge and
practices of indigenous and traditional communities through article
8(j) of the Convention on Biological Diversity as well as Agenda
21. However, progress in this field has fallen short of expectations.
Just defining the concept of traditional knowledge has proven
explosive. In 1999, during ICSU's 26th General Assembly meeting
in Cairo (Egypt), a small but influential group of scientists
expressed concern that official recommendations concerning "traditional
and local knowledge" might open the door to anti-science
and pseudo-science, according to reports by the scientific journal
Nature (October 14, 1999).
In particular, delegates from the
United States feared that the documents and recommendations emanating
from the World Conference on Science (organized in Budapest by
UNESCO in 1999) could encourage the spread of creationist ideas
concerning human origins, especially in schools, to the detriment
of evolutionary theory. The International Astronomical Union also
expressed concern that new measures to protect traditional knowledge
would be manipulated to demand inappropriate support for the pseudo-scientific
approach of astrology at the expense of astronomy. So, before
offering blanket support of "traditional knowledge",
the assembly requested that a study group offer more precise information
concerning its definition and protection. This final report, prepared
by ICSU and UNESCO, will be released on August 29.
In addition to the report's release,
there will be three major sessions focusing on the links between
traditional knowledge and natural resources management, formal
education and the threats to cultural diversity as well as the
need for innovative measures to protect the intellectual property
rights of indigenous peoples.
The first session will highlight
the most important and controversial agreement over indigenous
rights that was recently brokered between the Grand Council of
the Cree and the Quebec government in Canada. Romeo Saganesh of
the Grand Council will lead the discussions by explaining why
the Cree communities agreed in February to end 25 years of opposition
to construction in the James Bay territory (northern Quebec).
Since 1975, the Cree have fought a series of legal battles to
thwart government attempts to further develop hydropower in this
remote wilderness region. The Cree maintained that the dams would
wreak environmental havoc and destroy a traditional way of life,
in which hunters trap beaver, hunt caribou and moose during winter
and fish and hunt geese throughout the year. The Cree mobilized
tremendous international support, becoming an icon for native
peoples around the world.
Yet in February, the Grand Council
brokered a deal with the Quebec government in which the nine Cree
villages in James Bay will receive US$16 million this year, US$30.7
million in 2003, and then US$46.5 million a year for 48 years.
In return, the Cree will drop their lawsuits totalling US$2.4
billion against the government over existing hydro schemes on
their land. In addition, they will no longer oppose plans to build
new dams on the Eastman and Rupert rivers, subject to environmental
approval. These new schemes will increase Quebec's electricity
supply - much of which is exported to the US - by about eight
percent. The deal also guarantees the Cree a proportion of the
newly created jobs (an estimated 8,000) and greater control over
logging and other sectors of their economy. Seventy percent of
the Cree living in James Bay endorsed the agreement in a referendum
in February.
Romeo Saganesh of the Grand Council
will discuss the key points in the agreement, notably the clause
assuring Cree participation in environmental assessments of the
new hydro-schemes in James Bay. For Saganesh, the agreement recognizes
indigenous land rights, as well as traditional knowledge of the
environment. A representative of the Quebec government will also
take part in the debate as will Marie Roué, of France's
National Centre for Scientific Research, who headed a research
team recording Cree ecological knowledge.
The second session of the event
will focus on preserving traditional knowledge as a dynamic and
living resource by ensuring its transmission from one generation
to another. "In school, indigenous children are often confronted
with sets of knowledge, world views and values that are foreign
to their own. Implicitly, or explicitly, their own knowledge is
denigrated, contributing to a tremendous sense of alienation that
in many indigenous communities is not unrelated to a high incidence
of youth suicide," says Douglas Nakashima of UNESCO. "While
there is no minimizing the need for education, there is clearly
a problem. If we acknowledge the importance of indigenous knowledge
to sustainable development and cultural diversity, we must set
ourselves the task of finding an appropriate balance between global
and local knowledge in classrooms the world over." Mr Nakashima
will moderate this session during which a diverse panel of experts
will present their work to integrate traditional knowledge in
classrooms in South Africa, Thailand and Vanuatu.
South Africa is now rolling back
the legacy of apartheid in university classrooms where traditional
African knowledge systems and values were systematically rejected
or ignored in favour of European scholarship, according to experts
like Catherine Odora-Hoppers of the University of Pretoria and
Otsile Ntsoane of South Africa's Northwest University. According
to both experts, the aim is not to ignore world scholarship but
to assure space in the lecture halls for African epistemologies.
During the post-colonial phase, there was tremendous enthusiasm
for "Africanizing" education. This interest has proved
difficult to apply on the ground. A two-year investigation found,
for example, that there is not a single university degree programme
offered primarily in an African language.
Discussions will then turn to the
plight of the Karen and other indigenous peoples living in the
hills of northern Thailand. Sakda Saenmi, director of the Inter-Mountain
Peoples Education and Culture in Thailand Association (IMPECT),
will present this NGO's efforts to offer courses specifically
designed for rural Karen youth as opposed to the standard government
curriculum. Karen youth are increasingly suffering from a "cultural
crisis", according to Saenmi. "The number of suicides
among tribal children and youth is also increasing - a clear sign
of a deep conflict within. Youth are taught to respect the Thai
culture of their nation, but are not equally taught to respect
the culture of their peoples. A feeling of inferiority and self-denial
results."
This session will also examine
an ironic situation in Vanuatu. The South Pacific island nation,
governed by its indigenous people, legally recognizes the importance
of traditional knowledge and institutions in governing natural
resources. However, the formal education system has not integrated
indigenous language, knowledge and culture within the curriculum.
"As a result, a worrisome incongruity exists," according
to Russel Nari, a senior policy officer of Vanuatu's Environment
Unit, who will lead discussions during the event. "Schooling
tells indigenous children that their future is rooted, not in
the knowledge of their parents and grandparents, but in the knowledge
imported from a Western pedagogical tradition."
The final session of the event
will focus on the politically-charged issue of bioprospecting,
the continual search, primarily by multinational pharmaceutical
companies, for commercially viable medicinal plant compounds.
For indigenous peoples around the world, "bioprospecting
is synonymous with exploitation," according to Dr Meto Leach
of New Zealand, a Maori and trained biochemist. Along with Hohep
Kereopa, one of the most respected Maori traditional healers or
tuhonga, Dr Leach will present a unique research project to identify
the active compounds of Maori medicinal plants while recognizing
Maori rights to ownership.
New Zealand is rich in biodiversity
and the Tuhoe Maori have developed a sophisticated repertoire
of medicinal plants. This new research project formally recognizes
Maori ownership of the knowledge, practical use and development
of native plants used by Tuhoe. However, if any new drugs or treatments
are developed and commercialized, the benefits will be shared:
40 percent will go to the Tuhoe representative body, another 40
percent will be awarded to a trust board for New Zealand's Maori,
and Waikato University - Dr. Leach's employer - will receive the
remaining 20 percent. Finally, the research will specifically
focus on developing treatments for chronic diseases affecting
the Maori, such as diabetes, high blood pressure and asthma. This
sets the project apart from the vast majority - which seek to
profit from indigenous knowledge of medicinal plants without sharing
financial or medical benefits.
Linking Traditional and Scientific
Knowledge for Sustainable Development
August 29, 9:30 to 6:30 p.m., Ubuntu Village, Wanderers Club,
Water Berry Room
****
Contact:
Amy Otchet, Bureau of Public Information,
in Johannesburg, cell phone: (+27) (0)828 580 718
email: a.otchet@unesco.org
Isabelle Le Fournis,
Bureau of Public Information,
cell phone: (+33) (0)614 6953 72
email: i.le-fournis@unesco.org