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19. Indigenous persons with disabilities face exceptionally difficult barriers both
because they are indigenous and because they are disabled. The Permanent Forum
recommends that States develop and provide full access to educational opportunities
on an equitable basis and without discrimination for indigenous persons, as
recognized in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
and in the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. In particular, the
Forum recommends that sign language education curricula be developed, in
consultation with deaf indigenous persons, which reflect their cultures, issues, needs
and preferences. Where there is State or international cooperation on education,
indigenous persons with disabilities should be included. The Forum recommends
that countries that have not yet ratified the Convention on the Rights of Persons
with Disabilities do so urgently.
20. The Permanent Forum recommends that States, in collaboration with
indigenous peoples and United Nations agencies, including UNICEF and UNESCO,
prepare a comprehensive report on the number of indigenous languages spoken in
each State. It is important to identify the current numbers and ages of fluent
speakers of each indigenous language, in addition to measures, including
constitutional, legislative, regulatory and policy measures, as well as financial
support, whether ongoing or project-based, by States, United Nations agencies and
indigenous peoples, to ensure that indigenous languages continue to be used,
survive and thrive and do not become extinct.
Culture
21. The Permanent Forum recognizes culture as the fourth pillar of sustainable
development. Indigenous peoples have always recognized that the three pillars of
sustainable development (economic viability, social inclusion and environmental
balance) are not enough to reflect the complexity of indigenous peoples’ societies.
Indigenous peoples see the cultural pillar as encompassing the cultural and spiritual
traditions of humanity.
22. Indigenous culture and tourism is often seen as a driver of growth and
development for the economies and businesses of indigenous peoples, with
indigenous peoples often trivialized and viewed solely as cultural icons and objects
by others. The Permanent Forum therefore recommends that United Nations
agencies, in collaboration with the indigenous peoples concerned, affirm and make
operational the right of indigenous peoples to determine their own priorities for
development and opportunities concerning indigenous culture and tourism.
23. The Permanent Forum welcomes the recommendations of the international
expert workshop on the World Heritage Convention and indigenous peoples, held in
Copenhagen on 20 and 21 September 2012, and the anticipated establishment by the
World Heritage Committee of a consultative body on the Operational Guidelines for
the Implementation of the World Heritage Convention during its thirty-seventh
session, to be held in Phnom Penh from 17 to 27 June 2013, in order to consider,
among others, revisions to the guidelines relating to the human rights of indigenous
peoples, including the principle of free, prior and informed consent. The Forum
recommends that UNESCO and the World Heritage Committee implement the
Convention in accordance with the rights enshrined in the United Nations
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, taking an approach based on
human rights. The Forum members will endeavour to participate in the thirtyseventh session of the Committee, including the meetings of the consultative body
on the Operational Guidelines, as observers.
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