A/HRC/54/52
risk of violence threatening the rights to life and to personal integrity, and their physical and
cultural survival.37
24.
These rights may be directly threatened owing to militarization, conflict, and
criminalization of human rights defenders. 38 Intimidation and fear of reprisal prevents
Indigenous Peoples from taking legal action against the military for ongoing and historical
abuses. Killings of Indigenous activists and human rights defenders continue in many places.
In some jurisdictions, Indigenous Peoples regard the military as violently suppressing their
movements for self-determination and autonomy.39
25.
United Nations experts have expressed concern over a reported pattern of extrajudicial
killings of Indigenous Peoples by the military that is occurring with impunity in coal-mining
areas of India, namely Nagaland.40 There are reports that massacres have been used as a form
of collective punishment in Manipur for alleged attacks by insurgents. 41 In Myanmar,
counter-insurgency operations have allegedly resulted in the military burning Indigenous
Peoples’ villages and fields, destroying places of worship, mass displacements, the use of
Indigenous Peoples as human shields, violence, including sexual violence, and extrajudicial
killings. 42 Similarly, there have been reports of threats and intimidation by the Nepalese
police against Indigenous Peoples opposing the Government’s construction of transmission
lines and other infrastructure projects.43
26.
In the Philippines, there are allegations of extrajudicial killings, torture, abduction and
enforced disappearances of known Indigenous activists and human rights defenders, and of
illegal surveillance, searches, arrests and detentions of activists being carried out by the
military forces.44 In the Chittagong Hill Tracts, there are allegations of arbitrary arrests by
the military, raids, torture, and harassment at checkpoints.45 In the Mayangna Sauni territory
of Nicaragua, there are reports of killings and acts of torture against Indigenous Peoples
committed by non-regular armed groups such as settlers or paramilitaries, with the
acquiescence of military and police forces.46 In Colombia, there is an increase of violence
against Indigenous Peoples due to the expansion of different non-State armed groups and
criminal organizations.47
27.
Human rights violations associated with the use of private security and paramilitary
groups to protect extractive projects have been reported in Papua New Guinea, where security
guards and police at Barrick Gold’s Porgera Joint Venture mine were involved in sexually
assaulting and raping women and committing violence against men.48,49
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
GE.23-14759
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, “Indigenous women and their human rights in the
Americas”, 17 April 2017.
See A/HRC/EMRIP/2019/2/Rev.1.
See A/HRC/24/41/Add.3.
See communication IND 3/2022. See also the submissions from the Indigenous Rights Advocacy
Centre, the Global Naga Forum and the Special Rapporteur on the rights of Indigenous Peoples.
Submission from United NGOs Mission Manipur, North-East Development Forum, Imphal, Manipur.
Submission from the International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs.
See communications NPL 2/2022, OTH 36/2022 and OTH 35/2022.
Jill Cariño, Vice-Chairperson for External Affairs of the Cordillera Peoples Alliance, presentation at
the Expert seminar, Geneva, December 2022. See also the submissions from the Legal Rights and
Natural Resources Center and the Panaghiusa Philippine Network.
Joint contribution by the International Chittagong Hill Tracts Commission, the Chittagong Hill Tracts
Citizens Committee, the Bangladesh Indigenous Peoples’ Network on Climate Change and
Biodiversity, the CHT Headmen-Karbari Network, the Women Resource Network, the CHT Women
Headmen-Karbari Network and the Movement for Protection of Forest and Land Rights in CHT.
Maria Luisa Acosta, presentation at the Expert Seminar, Geneva, December 2022.
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in Colombia,
Territorial Violence in Colombia: Recommendations for the New Government (2022), available at
https://www.hchr.org.co/wp/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Territorial-Violence-in-Colombia.pdf.
Submission from Asia Justice and Rights.
Division for Inclusive Social Development of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs, and
Indigenous Peoples and Development Branch of the Secretariat of the Permanent Forum on
Indigenous Issues, State of the World’s Indigenous Peoples: Rights to Lands, Territories and
Resources, vol. 5 (2021).
7