A/HRC/45/34/Add.1
order to protect themselves from forced eviction, as was the case in the expanding logging
town of Pokola.
2.
Forest code and community forestry
79.
A new forest code, which has been in the drafting process since 2012, would set out
the rights of local communities and indigenous peoples to forest management. Civil society
has criticized the draft, however, for omitting to reflect the special rights of indigenous
peoples recognized in Law No. 5-2011. For example, as of March 2019, the draft did not
expressly include indigenous peoples’ right to free, prior and informed consent regarding
decisions affecting their traditional lands.23
80.
The draft forest code would also provide a legal framework for the burgeoning
practice of community forestry, which allows local communities and indigenous peoples to
collectively manage forest resources and secure some rights over the resources in their
allocated community forest. While the community forestry concept may help mitigate the
stalemate regarding collective land titling for indigenous peoples, such measures must
remain temporary for indigenous peoples, pending recognition of their full and collective
right to their forests based on traditional use and occupation, in accordance with national
law and international standards. Collective ownership of land and resources is crucial to
improve the sustainability of their livelihood.24
81.
The draft national action plan for 2020–2023 does not propose any steps to
recognize or protect the rights of indigenous peoples to their lands and resources. 25 There is
also a need to harmonize laws on land, forests and protected areas to ensure that they are
consistent with Law No. 5-2011.
82.
Mining activities are also reportedly having an impact on indigenous peoples’ access
to traditional lands in northern Congo; further research is needed to assess the degree of
encroachment on indigenous traditional lands by conservation and private actors.
F.
Access to justice
83.
The previous Special Rapporteur recommended that the legal system of the Congo
be strengthened to accommodate indigenous autonomy and acknowledge indigenous
peoples’ traditional dispute mechanisms as legitimate forms of justice.
84.
Law No. 5-2011 recognizes the right of indigenous peoples to administer their own
affairs and to use their customary laws to resolve internal disputes. The Government
recognizes that most conflicts between indigenous peoples are resolved within the
community with the involvement of a traditional chief or the community president. In
accordance with articles 34 and 39 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples, the Government should promote and develop indigenous institutional
structures such as juridical systems and distinctive customs, spirituality, traditions,
procedures and practices.
85.
The Special Rapporteur has observed that many indigenous peoples currently feel
they have nowhere to turn to for effective remedy and reparation when their rights are
violated. This is particularly true for indigenous women who have been raped by Bantu
men or abandoned after giving birth to children by Bantu men. Indigenous communities
have reported that the authorities tend to ignore their complaints, leaving the communities
to seek to resolve violations of their rights by themselves.
86.
Regarding national parks and conservation measures, while indigenous peoples are
frequently arrested by “eco-guards” on charges of poaching, they are reportedly rarely
compensated when wildlife destroy their crops.
23
24
25
This draft is the most recent available draft shared with civil society.
See http://pubs.iied.org/17724IIED.
It only calls for indigenous peoples to be included in the census and for a mapping of indigenous
peoples in the country.
15