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traditional knowledge has developed in tune with the forests on their lands and
territories. Indigenous peoples who live in forest areas have clearly defined rights to
land and natural resources, including communal ownership of their ancestral lands,
management of the natural resources on their territories, the exercise of their
customary laws, and the capacity to represent themselves through their own
institutions.
154. Unfortunately, States have considered indigenous peoples’ forests as Statecontrolled forests and converted them for other uses such as logging, agribusiness
plantations and mineral, oil and gas extraction. Such encroachments often force
indigenous peoples out of their territories. Furthermore, some conservation schemes
that establish national parks and wilderness reserves deny forest-dwelling indigenous
peoples their rights.
155. The Permanent Forum recommends that States recognize the right of
indigenous peoples to own, control, use and have access to their forests, and calls on
States to reform their laws and policies that deny indigenous peoples that right. The
Forum is gravely concerned about the continuing eviction of indigenous peoples
from their forests and calls on States and the United Nations system and other
intergovernmental organizations to protect and respect the rights of forest-dwelling
and forest-dependent indigenous peoples and to provide redress to those whose
rights have been violated.
156. The Permanent Forum welcomes the decision taken by the General Assembly
in its resolution 61/193 to declare 2011 the International Year of Forests. The Forum
calls on the United Nations Forum on Forests to work closely with the secretariat of
the Permanent Forum to ensure the full participation of indigenous peoples in the
design and implementation of the activities planned for the International Year of
Forests, including the implementation of the recommendations referred to in
paragraph 23 above.
157. As part of its mandate on the environment, the Permanent Forum has raised
concerns and made recommendations pertaining to indigenous peoples and forests.
The Forum has consistently recommended that the United Nations Forum on Forests
and forest-related United Nations bodies develop effective means to monitor and
verify the participation of indigenous peoples in forest policymaking and sustainable
forest management, and establish a mechanism, with the participation of indigenous
peoples, to assess the performance of governmental and intergovernmental
commitments and obligations to uphold and respect indigenous peoples’ rights (see
E/C.19/2004/23).
158. The Permanent Forum recommends that forests that have been taken by States
from indigenous peoples without their free, prior and informed consent in the name
of conservation policies be restored immediately.
159. The Permanent Forum welcomes the announcement during this session of the
Conservation Initiative on Human Rights by eight global conservation organizations —
the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources, the
World Wide Fund for Nature/World Wildlife Fund, Fauna and Flora International,
Wetlands International, BirdLife International, the Nature Conservancy, the Wildlife
Conservation Society and Conservation International — which aims to promote the
integration of human rights in conservation policy and practice, based on their
common interest in promoting positive links between conservation and rights of
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