A/76/202
peoples in urban areas may rather perceive themselves as “an extension of the home
territory”. 65
43. The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples asserts the
right of indigenous peoples to self-determination, to determine their own development,
autonomy and identity. However, urbanization challenges these rights, including when
traditional authorities and systems of justice are replaced with public institutions.
44. Urbanization often involves adverse collective impact on indigenous peoples’
cultural identity. 66 Discrimination against and stigmatization of indigenous peoples in
urban areas may lead them to conceal their indigenous heritage once away from their
communities in order to gain access to economic opportunities in urban areas. In that
context, indigenous peoples may feel unsafe speaking their language or wearing
traditional clothes in public or experience difficulty carrying out religious practices. 67
For example, in the Congo, indigenous peoples “saw their desire for a better life
blocked by discriminatory attitudes that prevented them from being successful at
school, obtaining employment or participating in public life”. As such, “this desire to
integrate and find a better life may act as incentive for relinquishing their indigenous
identity”. 68
45. Indigenous peoples may also encounter difficulties in urban environments
owing to loss of family and community ties. 69 Feelings of assimilation and alienation
can lead to suicide, substance abuse, homelessness, crime and physical and sexual
violence. 70 For example, in Brazil, there are high rates of suicide among the Guarani Kaiowá young people, who were removed from their lands and forced to live in
crowded urban reservations or by roadsides. 71 The majority of indigenous peoples in
Australia, Canada and New Zealand, as well as Greenland and Sapmi, live in urban
areas and have significantly higher suicide rates than the non-indigenous population. 72
46. In some regions, indigenous cross-border migrants settling in urban areas may
be mislabelled by officials as pertaining to non-indigenous identity categories, such
as Latino or Hispanic, owing to language barriers and the lack of awareness about
indigenous peoples and their migratory status. That confusion contributes to the
critical gap in services and resources to address mental health issues, substance abuse
and the revictimization of a historically traumatized community. The misclassification
of indigenous peoples by border security and immigration officials can impede the
communication of asylum claims and requests for urgent medical attention, leading
to life-threatening situations. 73 Moreover, the lack of identity documents can lead to
increased vulnerability when migrating, including difficulties with legalizing entry,
limiting access to public health and education services and restricting freedom of
movement.
47. Indigenous peoples living in urban areas experience language barriers in terms
of access to justice when interpretation services are not provided during judicial
proceedings and they suffer disproportionate conviction rates and overincarceration.
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67
68
69
70
71
72
73
21-10081
Ibid., and submission by the National Association of Friendship Centres.
State of the World’s Indigenous Peoples (United Nations publication, 2009), p. 52.
UN-Habitat, Urban Indigenous Peoples and Migration, p. 40.
A/HRC/45/34/Add.1, para. 31.
United Nations Development Programme, Indigenous Voices in Asia-Pacific: Identifying the
Information and Communication Needs of Indigenous Peoples (Bangkok, 2012), p. 11.
Nathaniel J. Pollock and others, “Global incidence of suicide among indigenous peoples: a
systematic review”, BMC Medicine, vol. 16, No. 1 (2018), pp. 1–17; and Yin Paradies,
“Colonisation, racism and indigenous health”, Journal of Population Research, vol. 33, No. 1
(2016), pp. 83–96.
E/C.19/2021/6; CRC/C/BRA/CO/2-4; and A/HRC/33/42/Add.1, para. 22.
A/HRC/36/46/Add.2, para. 52; A/HRC/27/52/Add.2, para. 29; and A/HRC/18/35/Add.4, para. 61.
Submission by the International Mayan League.
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