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NATIVE DELEGATION PARTICIPATES IN
GLOBALTREATY ON TOXIC CHEMICALS
PRESS RELEASE
30 November 2000
Bemidji, Minnesota - American Indian and Alaska
Natives are departing this week to Johannesburg, South Africa, to take
part in a United Nations international meeting on a group of life
threatening chemicals called POPs - persistent organic pollutants.
Starting next week, over 120 countries, including the United States,
will begin their final negotiations on a global and legally binding
treaty for the elimination of
toxic chemicals. The final signing of the treaty is scheduled for May
2001 in Stockholm, Sweden.
Since the 1940's, more than 100,000 chemicals have been introduced
globally into the environment. With mounting scientific evidence that
the worst of these toxics are deadly in small amounts, travel long
distances via air currents, cause life threatening illnesses, and
endanger people and wildlife all over the world, the United Nations
Environmental Program mandated the world governments create a legally
binding treaty banning the worst of these pollutants. For example,
dioxin was sited in a 1985 US Environmental Protection Agency report
as "the most potent carcinogen ever tested in a laboratory." Dioxin is
an unintentional by-product of industry that is still being produced
and released in the US. Currently the treaty focuses on 12 of the most
deadly chemicals, including PCB, DDT, and other pesticides. Dioxin and
furans are also included in the treaty. "Our tribes are
disproportionately affected by these chemicals because of our
cultural, physical and spiritual tie to the land," says Charlotte
Caldwell, a POPs organizer with the Indigenous Environmental Network.
"As a Menominee woman that resides in the Great Lakes, dioxin
contaminants are poisoning our fish. Our ceremonies call for eating
fish and other traditional foods. But when the fish is contaminated,
so are our women and our babies." Caldwell is one of the participants
attending the meeting that has been active educating tribal
governmental leaders in the Great Lakes about this international
treaty and the dangers of these chemicals. Scientific studies found
these chemicals, even in small releases, bioaccumulate in the
environment, in food sources and are transferred to the unborn fetus.
Industrialized countries and industry, including the US, Canada,
Australia, and Japan have been major obstacles during the treaty
negotiations. Many countries, non-governmental organizations, and
concerned scientists are demanding a strong treaty that supports
language to eliminate the production of these chemicals. "The US has
been back pedaling on the word elimination," said Tom Goldtooth,
director of IEN. "The US has been taking a position for language of
reduction with a number of loopholes and exemptions. These chemicals,
including dioxin cannot be managed or controlled. There is no middle
ground, this is too serious of a matter that affects the health of our
future generation. We demand environmental justice. World governments
must support the ultimate elimination of these chemicals," Gold tooth
added. POPs tend to migrate towards colder regions of the north. POPs
are trapped by the cold air and accumulate in the fat tissues of
animals such as fish, seals, polar bears and human populations that
live in the colder arctic regions. In some parts of the arctic, Alaska
Natives are exposed to levels of POPs that exceed established
standards for consumption. "Our land is a sinkhole for these
contaminants," states, Evon Peter, of the Venetie tribe of Arctic
Village, Alaska, who will be in attendance at the South Africa
meeting. "Elimination is the only solution to stop the northern flow
of these chemicals which are disrupting the delicate balance of nature
here in the arctic, " said Pam Miller, director of Alaska Community
Action on Toxics, based in Anchorage.
IEN will be taking to the meeting, over 40 tribal governmental and
intertribal resolutions supporting the elimination of POPs. Last year
at
the National Congress of American Indian convention, over 250 tribes
approved a NCAI resolution supporting the elimination of POPs and
requesting for tribes to be consulted by the US Department of State on
this international treaty. At the eleventh hour, during the past
month,
the Department of State attempted to have consultation with tribes in
the Great Lakes and Alaska region on the POPs treaty. In both Alaska
and the Great Lakes, the response of the tribes was the same - they
wanted elimination with no exemptions or loopholes on POPs production.
"Our people need to be present at these meetings and speak out on
these issues. These issues affect our treaty rights. What good are
treaty rights if the fish and game are contaminated," says Ester
Nahgahnub, elder and chair of the Ceded Territory Committee of the
Fond du Lac Band of Ojibwe in Minnesota.
-30-
For more information:
Jackie Warledo, Indigenous Environmental Network (405) 878-6051
Pam Miller, Alaska Community Action on Toxics, (907) 222-7714
Tom Goldtooth, Indigenous Environmental Network, (218) 760-0442
INDIGENOUS ENVIRONMENTAL NETWORK - PO BOX 485 - BEMIDJI, MINNESOTA
56619 USA
TEL: (218) 751-4967 FAX: (218) 751-0561 EMAIL:
ien@igc.org WEB:
www.ienearth.org |

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Conferencia de CITI de 2008 en
Guatemala, nueva informacion para participantes
IITC 2008 Conference in Guatemala,
new information for participants
UNPFII 7th
Session, April 21st - May 2nd 2008, Interventions
and Statements
2008
International Indian Treaty Conference, Guatemala
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(PDF 555K)
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PEOPLES’ BORDER SUMMIT OF THE AMERICAS II SAN XAVIER
DISTRICT TOHONO O’ODHAM NATION NOVEMBER 7-10, 2007
Live Web Casts from the Indigenous
Peoples’ Border Summit II, San Xavier, Arizona
November 7 – 10, 2007
PUBLIC FORUM, Local Indigenous Environmental and
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Link for the
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Treaties, the UN Treaty Study Expert Seminars
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