A/60/358
urban population. This has various results: a lack of school facilities or, if they do
exist, inferior physical conditions; a shortage of teachers and insufficient teacher
training; a lack of suitable teaching materials; curricula that are not adapted to the
cultural realities of those communities; unmet linguistic needs; and so on. These and
other problems result in high dropout rates among indigenous children, especially
girls, and a progressive decrease in the number of indigenous students in secondary
and higher education. Thus, indigenous young people do not have sufficient skills to
compete with their non-indigenous peers in the job market and are often
inadequately prepared to face the economic and social development challenges of
their own communities. The Special Rapporteur recommends that action to address
this problem be a cornerstone of the programmes launched within the context of the
Second International Decade of the World’s Indigenous People.
53. The Special Rapporteur urges that culturally appropriate indigenous education
be given the priority it deserves, both nationally, in public programmes and budgets,
and internationally, by international agencies responsible for promoting
development and reducing poverty, such as the World Bank and the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP).
54. Indigenous education must urgently be improved in both quantity and quality.
Indigenous people require not merely education, but education which is suited to
their specific cultural and social characteristics. The participation of indigenous
communities in designing, implementing and evaluating educational programmes
and projects is essential. If poverty reduction policies are to have a long-term
impact, progress in primary education is not sufficient; efforts must also be
augmented in the areas of secondary and higher education.
55. Such an approach can greatly help to ensure that new generations of
indigenous children and youth are not excluded from the benefits of economic,
social and human development to which they are entitled and to which they would
have access were they not actively or passively denied the full enjoyment of all their
human rights.
56. Confronted with poverty and with educational services which fail to ensure
their full right to education, indigenous people have not been mere observers; they
have used their creativity, imagination and skills to overcome these obstacles and
promote social and cultural development in their communities. Many of these efforts
have had interesting results, which should be carefully assessed. In working towards
attaining the Millennium Development Goals, it is crucial to draw on the experience
of indigenous peoples, who have generally been excluded from decision-making
processes concerning education policy.
C.
Armed conflicts, human rights and indigenous peoples
57. In all countries where armed conflicts are occurring or have occurred on
indigenous territories (Bangladesh, the Philippines, Nepal, Colombia, Guatemala,
Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, to cite only the most familiar
cases), indigenous populations suffer from injustices related to repeated violations
of their civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights and to a constant failure
to observe the laws and customs of war applicable to internal armed conflicts, or
international humanitarian law. Information received by the Special Rapporteur
suggests that the perpetrators of such violations include both non-State actors and
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