A/HRC/15/37/Add.5
region, and that the Government is committed to finding solutions to the concerns of the
affected communities.
B.
Political participation, consultation and self-governance
52.
Indigenous peoples have the right to participate fully in the political life of the State,
and to participate in decision-making in matters that would affect their rights, including, but
not limited to, the right to free, prior and informed consent in legislative and administrative
measures that may affect them.10 Additionally, as a part of their right to self-determination,
they have the right to self-government in matters relating to their internal affairs and the
right to maintain and develop their own decision-making institutions.11 In the context of the
Russian Federation, these entitlements relate to indigenous political representation at the
federal and regional levels, and to autonomous governance at the local and community
level.
53.
Several factors, in addition to the small size of their populations, impede the ability
of indigenous peoples in Russia to engage in effective political participation. Indigenous
people live in remote areas, far from urban centres and from each other, without easy access
to transportation or means of communication, and live in small, often single-family, groups.
Additionally, the traditional indigenous leadership structures were severely damaged in the
1940s as a result of the Soviet regime’s anti-insurgency activities and the subsequent
totalitarian regime. Compounding these factors is that in many places negative attitudes and
stereotypes about indigenous people appear to persist, making indigenous identity a liability
in political processes.
54.
Federal officials assured the Special Rapporteur that when federal executive bodies
make critical decisions affecting the interests of indigenous people they seek the
participation of indigenous representatives; they have further stated that the cooperation
between federal governing authorities and indigenous associations is regarded as one of the
priorities of the national policy of Russia. Consultations with indigenous peoples on
legislation affecting them are not legally secured, however, and consist mainly of extending
opportunities for indigenous representatives to participate in consultative working groups
whenever such groups are created to review new legislation.
55.
Currently, the policy areas that affect indigenous peoples are dealt with by various
ministries and departments without any strategic coordination focused on indigenous issues
or direct indigenous representative participation. Federal policy and social programmes are
developed by the Ministry of Regional Development, fishing policies and regulations are
developed by the Ministry of Natural Resources, while hunting is within the jurisdiction of
the Ministry of Agriculture; further, according to close observers, most legislative processes
occur with no consideration of, or expertise on, indigenous issues.
56.
While in many parts of the Russian Federation indigenous peoples remain
underrepresented in executive and legislative bodies, some regional governments have
shown sensitivity to the factors affecting indigenous peoples’ ability to fully participate in
political processes at the regional level, and have attempted to facilitate and ensure such
participation in various ways. For example, in 1996 the Khanti-Mansiysky Autonomous
Region was the first region in the new Russian Federation, only two years after its
formation, to formalize representation of indigenous peoples through legislation by
statutorily creating the Assembly of Indigenous Peoples as a part of the structure of the
10
11
14
Articles 5, 18 and 19 of the Declaration.
Articles 2, 3, 4, 5 and 18 of the Declaration.
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