E/CN.4/2006/78
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adopted thus far. The Peace Agreement on indigenous rights and culture signed in 1995
should have been incorporated into the Constitution, but was not approved in the
1999 referendum; its implementation was therefore suspended, with adverse consequences for
the rights of Guatemala’s indigenous peoples (see E/CN.4/2003/90/Add.2).
33.
A particularly complex problem arises when different legal provisions relating to
indigenous peoples have not been properly interpreted by various State bodies or when
constitutional principles on the protection of human rights are gradually diluted through
subsidiary legal standards. An illustration of this dilemma can be found in Peru, where
Decree Law No. 22,175 governs the territorial reserves of the indigenous peoples “in voluntary
isolation or in initial contact”. While all five existing territorial reserves have been demarcated,
they have been subject to mining, hydrocarbon or forestry concessions that impinge on some of
the indigenous peoples’ individual and collective rights. The State has still not defined the
policy, legal framework or institutional arrangements needed to protect the rights of the
indigenous peoples of Peru’s Amazon region. There is evidence of the damage caused to these
peoples by various social and economic actors that come into permanent contact with them.
34.
In 2005 the alarming situation of the indigenous peoples of the Amazon region of Peru,
also affected by the gas pipeline that runs across the region, led to the creation of a Special
Commission that drew up a bill on the protection of indigenous peoples in voluntary isolation or
initial contact. But Congress formulated a different bill limiting and dismantling the special
regime for protection of these peoples proposed by the Special Commission. Should this law be
passed, it would leave the indigenous communities in of those reserves unprotected.
35.
In Mexico implementation of the provision of the constitutional reform on indigenous
issues adopted in 2001 is still pending; it neither meets the demands of the indigenous peoples
nor complies with the Government commitments agreed upon in the 1996 peace negotiations
(see E/CN.4/2004/80/Add.2). Although various States of the Republic subsequently adopted
their own legislative reforms on indigenous issues, their implementation has not yielded
significant practical results for the indigenous peoples. The Special Rapporteur recommended in
his report that the debate on constitutional reform on indigenous issues should be reopened at the
national level.
36.
One of the most important topics that call for constant attention is the role of the courts in
the interpretation and application of domestic legislation and international human rights
standards in matters relating to the human rights of indigenous peoples. Significant progress has
been achieved in some countries, such as Canada, Colombia and Venezuela, but in others case
law on indigenous rights appears to be at a standstill. There is a need for greater and ongoing
training of judges and other judicial personnel on this subject. It is important to establish
mechanisms for the effective recognition of legal pluralism; in other words, so that positive law
and indigenous law can exist side by side. In countries based on English common law, in which
case law is built up case by case, rulings and decisions very favourable to the indigenous
communities have been handed down in some courts, while in others discriminatory attitudes are
maintained (for example, the United States of America, Canada, Australia and New Zealand).