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Legislation and case law
21.
On occasion the new laws on indigenous issues have the effect of limiting the claims of
indigenous people instead of promoting their rights. The Russian Federation recently adopted
new laws on the preservation and promotion of the cultural rights of the small peoples of
northern Russia, Siberia and the far-eastern area of the country, but did not pay the same
attention to the rights of the indigenous peoples to land and natural resources, which are the
sources of their main problems. Russia also has laws establishing autonomous regimes for the
indigenous peoples, but they have met with resistance from some local and regional
Governments, and as a result have not been effectively enforced.
22.
In recent years some amendments made to existing laws have in fact curtailed indigenous
rights, sometimes in the name of the general interest. In Australia the Native Title Amendment
Act 1998 extinguishes aboriginal land ownership and limits the rights of aborigines to negotiate
certain forms of land use in future. The Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
has repeatedly expressed its concern about this Act. The recent New Zealand Foreshore and
Seabed Act (2004) declares areas falling into that category and traditionally belonging to native
Maoris to be State property, thereby curtailing the Maoris’ ancestral rights (see
E/CN.4/2006/78/Add.3).
23.
In some cases there have been amendments to laws on indigenous rights that negate
previous advances. In 2004 an amendment to a federal law in Russia limited the indigenous
rights that had been legislated only four years earlier. Previously guaranteed free social services
for the indigenous communities were withdrawn, and in an amendment to another law on local
communes the State withdrew its economic support and limited local decision-making powers.
24.
Cambodia’s Land Law displays a paternalistic attitude in granting rights to the
indigenous peoples instead of recognizing them. In Taiwan the 2000 constitutional reform
reaffirms the policy of cultural pluralism and commits the State to preserving and fostering the
development of indigenous languages and cultures and promoting the political participation of
aborigines. Consideration is being given to the idea of establishing autonomous areas for
the 12 recognized indigenous peoples.
25.
Some countries have established public institutions for reviewing their indigenous
legislation and its implementation, such as the Philippines National Commission on Indigenous
Peoples and the Ethnic Minorities Committee in Viet Nam. There are frequent claims that those
institutions are not representative of their communities and peoples, being, on the contrary, made
up of Government officials. In the Philippines they are appointed by the Presidency; in Australia
the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission was abolished and replaced in 2004 by the
National Indigenous Council, a Government-appointed consultative body.
Public administration problems
26.
One of the main obstacles to the enforcement of indigenous rights legislation arises
precisely from the institutional structures of the public administration, which is often riddled
with bureaucratic inertia, rigid regulatory practice, lack of flexibility and creativity, vertical
authoritarianism in decision-making, and absence of popular participation. To these one might
add the difficulty of setting up efficient reporting and results-assessment mechanisms, not to