CASE STUDIES
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context of Article 13 of Convention No. 107 on land
rights,65 also raised the issue of :
‘the massive influx of non-tribal settlers in the Chittagong Hill Tracts over a number of years and of
numerous reports … [of] violence and extortion in
order to encroach upon land owned by members of
the tribal population’.
This increased ILO attention on the CHT issue and in
1988 there was another Direct Contacts visit to
Bangladesh reporting that no tangible progress had
been made by the Government in resolving the situation in the CHT.
In 1989, the Applications Committee again had
detailed discussions with the Government reiterating
that further steps must be taken, including: the effective examination of violations of human rights, the
recognition and demarcation of land rights, and the
settlement of disputes between the indigenous peoples and the settlers.
The situation in the CHT remained under review by
the Committee of Experts and received Observations
practically every year between 1990 and 1998. In
reviewing the situation in the CHT, the Committee
considered information supplied by the Government
as well as information received from indigenous organizations, NGOs (Anti-Slavery International,
IWGIA, Minority Rights Group International and
Survival International) and UN bodies. This helped to
keep the CHT issue under public scrutiny. In 1997 a
peace accord was signed between the indigenous peoples and the Government of Bangladesh.
The CHT issue remains under review, and recent
comments of the Committee of Experts have focused
on the implementation of the peace accord, in the context of continuing reports of violence. Other issues
raised by the Committee centred on human rights violations, land rights and the repatriation of refugees,
focusing attention on the need to resolve the continuing problems in the CHT.66
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4. Mexico
he following is an illustration of how Convention
No. 169 is monitored, and how workers’ organizations can cooperate with indigenous organizations in
bringing complaints before the ILO.
• During the violent uprising in Chiapas, Mexico, the
Government of Mexico was asked to appear before
the Applications Committee in June 1995. In its 1996
Observation, the Committee of Experts followed up
on the Recommendation of the Applications Committee to consider ILO technical assistance ‘in order to
increase basic protection of indigenous workers’
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rights and to improve working conditions’.67
On 16 February 1996, the Government of Mexico and
the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN)
signed a peace accord in San Andrés as part of the
peace process in Chiapas. The Convention was used
as a point of reference in the negotiations.68
In 1997, the Committee of Experts continued its
scrutiny of the situation in Mexico and commented
on: (i) the nationwide process of consultation on the
rights and participation of indigenous peoples, which
resulted in a Recommendation to more fully align
national legislation with the Convention; (ii) comments from the Authentic Labour Front (Frente
Auténtico del Trabajo) ‘alleging violation of the Convention due to conflicts associated with the construction of a hydroelectric dam in Oaxaca’; and (iii) the
issue of exploitation of indigenous workers by the
practice of enganche (a form of coercive recruitment). The Committee also reiterated the offer of ILO
technical assistance.69
In January 1997, an Article 24 representation was
brought against the Government by the National
Trade Union of Education Workers (SNTE), Radio
Education, alleging non-observance of Convention
No. 169. It was brought by the trade union on behalf
of the Union of Huichol Indigenous Communities of
Jalisco regarding their historical claim to their traditional lands.
The representation was accepted, and a tripartite committee established to examine the case. In June 1998,
the Governing Body adopted this committee’s report,
which found that the Government had not fulfilled its
obligations to safeguard the rights of the Huichol to
lands that they have traditionally occupied. It recommended that the Government should provide effective
protection of the Huichol’s rights of ownership and
possession as required under Article 14 of the Convention; and that it should take special measures to
safeguard their existence and way of life, including
the allocation of sufficient land to the Huichol ‘to
provide the essentials of a normal existence or for any
possible increase in their numbers, in accordance with
Article 19 of the Convention …’.70
In 1999, the Committee of Experts asked the Government what steps it had taken to implement the Recommendations of the tripartite committee.71
In 1998, another Article 24 representation was
brought against the Government by the Radical Trade
Union of Metal and Similar Workers alleging nonobservance of Convention No. 169, with particular
reference to its land rights provisions. This representation was about the construction of the Cerro del Oro
dam in San Lucas Ojitlán, Oaxaca, and involved the
THE INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION: A HANDBOOK FOR MINORITIES AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLES