A/77/238
the nomination of sites when indigenous peoples’ human rights are not respected,
UNESCO stresses that the World Heritage Committee has the final say on whether to
include a site in the List and is not obliged to follow these recommendations. 29
44. A number of gaps exist that prevent the meaningful participation of indigenous
peoples in decision-making processes at the international and national levels. The
Operational Guidelines do not require evidence of indigenous peoples’ free, prior and
informed consent to nominations affecting them, and nominations are not made
publicly available before the nomination decision is made. The rules of procedure of
the World Heritage Committee prevent indigenous peoples from participating
effectively in the Committee’s decision-making on issues affecting them in line with
article 41 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and
no official mechanism exists through which indigenous peoples can participate. In
practice, representatives of indigenous organizations cannot address the Committee
until after it has already adopted decisions relating to sites. 30
45. Since 2020, the Special Rapporteur has raised concerns about alleged indige nous
peoples’ rights violations at or in the vicinity of several sites that have been nominated
for or included in the World Heritage List, including in Thailand, Kenya, Nepal, the
United Republic of Tanzania, Botswana, Namibia, Denmark/Greenland and Swede n.
46. In Thailand, Karen indigenous peoples forcibly evicted from the Kaeng Krachen
forest complex continued to face harassment by conservation authorities for asserting
their land rights, and there are ongoing reports of harassment, criminalization and
extrajudicial killings of Karen leaders and community members by national park
officials with impunity. The Special Rapporteur urged the Government of Thailand
and the World Heritage Committee to defer the inclusion of the park in the World
Heritage List because of the failures to protect the rights of the Karen peoples, to
consult and obtain their free, prior and informed consent for the nomination of sites
to the List, to allow independent monitoring in situ and to prosecute violations by
conservation authorities. 31 IUCN also recommended deferral pending the resolution
of the human rights violations. Nevertheless, the Kaeng Krachan forest complex was
included in the List in July 2021. 32 The Special Rapporteur, despite having formally
requested to make a statement on the nomination of the site, was not given the
opportunity to do so until after the Committee had adopted its decision. 33 UNESCO
maintains that issues involving the rights of the Karen community will be closely
monitored through the “reactive monitoring mechanism” under the Convention. 34
47. In Nepal, the Chitwan National Park was included in the World Heritage List in
1984 without the consent of the local indigenous peoples. In 2009, the then mandate
holder raised concerns about the mistreatment, arbitrary detention and sexual abuse
of indigenous peoples in the Park (A/HRC/12/34/Add.3 and A/HRC/9/9/Add.1,
paras. 326–338). In 2020, the Special Rapporteur sent a communication regarding
renewed allegations of forced eviction and torture and ill-treatment of Chepang
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29
30
31
32
33
34
22-11289
Submission by UNESCO to the Special Rapporteur.
Submission by the International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs to the Special Rapporteur.
Communication AL OTH 209/2021 addressed to the World Heritage Committee, available at
https://spcommreports.ohchr.org/TMResultsBase/DownLoadPublicCommunicationFile?gId=26517 ;
communication AL THA 4/2021 addressed to Thailand, available at https://spcommreports.ohchr.org/
TMResultsBase/DownLoadPublicCommunicationFile?gId=26518; www.ohchr.org/en/pressreleases/2021/07/thailand-un-experts-warn-against-heritage-status-kaeng-krachan-national-park; and
A/71/229, para. 63.
World Heritage Committee, decision 44 COM 8, adopted at the extended forty -fourth session of
the Committee in July 2021; and submission by UNESCO to the Special Rapporteur.
His statement is available at www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/2022-03/SR%20statement%
20WHC%20on%20KKFC%2026%20July%202021.docx.
Submission by UNESCO to the Special Rapporteur.
13/20