peoples.353 Neither is reference made to the need to respect
indigenous peoples’ customary laws and practices
regarding land tenure systems when deciding on
indigenous peoples’ claims to their traditional lands.
The HRC and the exploitation of natural
resources located in indigenous peoples’ lands
With regard to the exploitation of natural resources
located in indigenous peoples’ traditional lands, the HRC
assesses the conformity of these activities with indigenous
peoples’ right to cultural integrity in light of a twofold
criterion, that is the ‘sustainability’ of the activity in
relation to the culture of indigenous peoples which would
be affected by these initiatives and the ‘participation’ of the
indigenous communities concerned in the decisionmaking about the projects to be carried out in their
lands.354 In this latter respect, it is worth noting that in its
2008 Concluding Observations on Panama the HRC
expressed its concern about the ‘absence of a process of
consultation to seek the prior, free and informed consent of
communities to the exploitation of natural resources in
their territories’ (emphasis added).355
The recent case Poma Poma v Peru summarizes very
well the HRC’s approach to the issue, including the role of
free, prior and informed consent. In its considerations of
the merits, the HRC recognizes that:
‘a State may legitimately take steps to promote its
economic development. Nevertheless, it recalls that
economic development may not undermine the rights
protected by article 27. Thus the leeway the State has
in this area should be commensurate with the
obligations it must assume under article 27. The
Committee also points out that measures whose
impact amounts to a denial of the right of a
community to enjoy its own culture are incompatible
with article 27, whereas measures with only a limited
impact on the way of life and livelihood of persons
belonging to that community would not necessarily
amount to a denial of the rights under article 27.’ 356
The HRC then goes on to highlight that:
‘the admissibility of measures which substantially
compromise or interfere with the culturally significant
economic activities of a minority or indigenous
community depends on whether the members of the
community in question have had the opportunity to
participate in the decision-making process in relation
to these measures and whether they will continue to
benefit from their traditional economy. The
Committee considers that participation in the
decision-making process must be effective, which
36
requires not mere consultation but the free, prior and
informed consent of the members of the community.
In addition, the measures must respect the principle of
proportionality so as not to endanger the very survival
of the community and its members.’ 357
The Committee on the Elimination of
Racial Discrimination
The CERD is charged with monitoring the
implementation of the ICERD. To this purpose, states are
required to submit to the CERD periodical reports which
will be the subject of the CERD’s ‘Concluding
Observations’, containing some specific recommendations
to states. In addition to that, the CERD can examine
inter-state complaints, individual complaints and establish
early-warning procedures.
The issue of indigenous peoples’ rights to traditional
lands is dealt with by the CERD under Article 5 (d) (v) of
the ICERD prohibiting racial discrimination with respect
to the enjoyment of property rights. In its General
Recommendation No. 23 on indigenous peoples 358 the
CERD has spelt out that the ICERD requires states to:
‘recognize and protect the rights of indigenous peoples
to own, develop, control and use their communal
lands, territories and resources and, where they have
been deprived of their lands and territories
traditionally owned or otherwise inhabited or used
without their free and informed consent, to take steps
to return those lands and territories. Only when this
is for factual reasons not possible, the right to
restitution should be substituted by the right to just,
fair and prompt compensation. Such compensation
should as far as possible take the form of lands and
territories.’
This interpretation is regularly reflected in the CERD’s
Concluding Observations.
In its Concluding Observations, the CERD has
further called upon states to identify and demarcate
indigenous peoples’ lands 359 and, in particular, to
discharge this duty ‘in co-operation with the indigenous
and tribal peoples concerned’.360 Additionally, it has
recommended that states ‘establish adequate procedures,
and … define clear and just criteria to resolve land claims
by indigenous communities within the domestic judicial
system while taking due account of relevant indigenous
customary laws’ (emphasis added).361 Pending this
procedure – the same holds true for the procedures of
identification and demarcation of indigenous peoples’
lands – the CERD tends to require that the state adopt
‘freezing measures’, that is, refrain from and suspend the
MINORITY GROUPS AND LITIGATION: A REVIEW OF DEVELOPMENTS IN INTERNATIONAL AND REGIONAL JURISPRUDENCE