A/71/229
28. Of particular importance to the rights of indigenous peoples in the context of
conservation is the judgment of the Court in the Kaliña and Lokono Peoples v.
Suriname case in November 2015, relating to three nature reserves established on
their ancestral territory which partly prevented their access. 20 The judgment ordered
the State to implement a series of guarantees of non -repetition, including the legal
recognition of territorial and other rights of all indigenous and tribal peoples in
Suriname. The Court furthermore concluded that respect for the rights of indigenous
peoples may have a positive impact on environmental conservation and therefore
the rights of indigenous peoples and international environmental laws should be
seen as complementary rather than exclusionary rights. In February 2015, the
Special Rapporteur acted as an expert witness in the case and emphasized
indigenous peoples’ right to effective participation in conservation management and
their right to restitution for lands incorporated into protected areas without their
consent. She underlined three basic principles in relation to protected areas, as
follows: first, that States must recognize and protect the rights of indigenous
peoples to own, develop, control and use their communal l ands, territories and
resources; second, that decision-making in relation to all aspects of protected areas
must take place with indigenous peoples’ effective participation and consent where
any restrictions on their rights may be proposed; and third, that indigenous peoples
have a right to restitution and other forms of redress where their lands have been
incorporated into protected areas without their consent. 21
29. In the African human rights system, the African Commission on Human and
People’s Rights held in the case of Endorois Welfare Council v. Kenya 22 that the
rights of the Endorois had been violated when they were denied access to their
traditional lands after the lands were turned into a game reserve in 1973. The
Commission found that the Kenyan State was obliged to recognize the communal
land rights of the Endorois indigenous peoples and provide compensation and
restitution by returning the lands or by providing alternative lands of equal extent
and quality in agreement with the indigenous community. Importantly, the
Commission found that, although their land had become a game reserve, the
Endorois were its ancestral guardians and thus best equipped to maintain its delicate
ecosystem and that their alienation from their land threatened their cultural survival
and thus the encroachment was not proportionate to the public need.
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20
21
22
12/25
Inter-American Court on Human Rights, Kaliña and Lokono Peoples v. Suriname, Judgment,
25 November 2015, ser. C, No. 309. The Court found Suriname responsible for violations of the
right to recognition of juridical personality (article 3 of the American Convention on Human
Rights); the right to collective property and political rights (articles 21 and 23 of the American
Convention); and the right to judicial protection (article 25 of the American Convention).
Expert testimony of the Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Victoria Tauli Corpuz, before the Inter-American Court on Human Rights on the case of Kaliña and Lokono
Peoples v. Suriname, on 3 February 2015, available from http://unsr.vtaulicorpuz.org/site/
index.php/en/press-releases/58-unsrip-conservation-policies.
African Commission on Human and People’s Rights, Centre for Minority Rights Development
(Kenya) and Minority Rights Group International on behalf of Endorois Welfare Council v.
Kenya, communication No. 276/2003, 25 November 2009. The Commission found violations of
the right to property (article 14 of the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights), the right
as peoples to freely dispose of its wealth and natural resources (article 21 of the African Charter)
and the right to development (article 22 of the African Charter).
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