A/HRC/39/17/Add.3
IV. Principal areas of concern
A.
Rights of indigenous peoples over their lands, territories and natural
resources
29.
As repeatedly stated by international and regional human rights bodies, the basic
underlying cause of the problem affecting the indigenous peoples in Guatemala is the lack
of protection of their rights to their lands, territories and natural resources in conformity
with the relevant international human rights standards. Guatemala lacks a legal framework
or an allocation mechanism to identify and apply the collective ownership rights of
indigenous peoples in accordance with their traditional land tenure systems.
30.
The disturbing failure to protect these rights arises out of a context of extreme
inequality in the distribution of land and the insecurity of tenure, together with an
inadequate registration system that enables third parties to be given title to indigenous
ancestral lands. Moreover, there are no appropriate mechanisms to settle conflicts of
ownership, which means that disputes tend to come before the courts.
31.
This situation has deep historical roots. It began with conquest and colonization in
the sixteenth century, continued after independence and was exacerbated during the armed
conflict, when 1.5 million people, the vast majority belonging to indigenous communities,
were displaced by the violence. In 1982, declaring that their lands had been voluntarily
abandoned, the Government nationalized them and distributed them to landowners and the
military. The Peace Secretariat has stated that there has been little progress in implementing
the 1994 Agreement on Resettlement of the Population Groups Uprooted by the Armed
Conflict, which should have resolved the situation.
32.
The land issue was a central component of the Agreement on Identity and Rights of
Indigenous People and the subject of the Agreement on Social and Economic Aspects and
the Agrarian Situation. Measures intended to develop a new legal framework, to make land
available and to provide support for agriculture in rural and indigenous communities have
not been properly implemented. In the area of legislation, only the Land Registry Act
referred to above has been adopted, but even that has been weakened by subsequent
amendments. The Land Fund has stated that it lacks the necessary budget to comply
effectively with its mandate of facilitating affordable access to lands. Up until 2016, of the
800,000 landless families applying for land, only 13,162 — of whom 10,719 were Maya —
had received any.
33.
Despite the progress made with the jurisprudence of the Constitutional Court, there
are no proper mechanisms for the recognition of communal lands to address indigenous
territorial claims. The Secretariat for Agrarian Affairs has reported that 1,425 disputes are
currently on file, affecting more than a million people. Some of these disputes have arisen
out of the shortcomings of the system itself, such as overlapping registers, which occurred
in the case of the Choctún Basila community in Alta Verapaz.
34.
The inefficiency of the system means that people frequently apply to the ordinary
courts or engage in criminal activity to resolve territorial claims. In many cases, court
rulings disregard the rights of the indigenous peoples and indigenous claims are not heard
as promptly as those of other parties. Previous rights are being ignored, including in
situations in which a community has a recognized ownership title, as in the case of the
Copones. Communities that submit claims are often the victims of criminal activity and
violence, as in the case of the Q’eqchi’ and Ch’orti’ communities. Communities often have
to resort to amparo in order to safeguard their territorial rights.
Mining, energy, infrastructure, conservation and other activities that affect
indigenous lands, territories and resources
35.
The insecurity of land tenure suffered by indigenous peoples is exacerbated when
licences are issued without prior consultation or consent, and in contravention of the
country’s international obligations, for mining, energy, agro-industrial, infrastructure,
conservation and other activities, that affect their traditional lands and resources. The legal
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