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56. The Permanent Forum invites the Working Group on the use of mercenaries as
a means of violating human rights and impeding the exercise of the right of peoples
to self-determination to conduct a study on the human rights abuses against
Indigenous Peoples of the Sahel region by mercenaries and other non-State armed
actors.
57. Indigenous Peoples are affected also by the legacy of forced evictions and
relocations owing to the establishment by colonial powers of military bases and
installations on their traditional lands and territories. The Permanent Forum
recommends that colonial States, past and present, ensure remedy and reparations for
the affected Indigenous Peoples.
58. Transnational and national extractive industries, at best, consistently disregard
their responsibility to respect Indigenous Peoples’ rights and to engage in free, prior
and informed consent processes. At worst, their practices and behaviours contribute to
serious human rights abuses. The Permanent Forum recommends that Member States,
as duty bearers, ensure that private sector entities respect Indigenous Peoples’ rights
through safeguard and due diligence policies. It further recommends that Member
States ensure the application of the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights:
Implementing the United Nations “Protect, Respect and Remedy” Framework and the
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises of the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development. The Permanent Forum welcomes the ongoing
international efforts to develop legally binding instruments that ensure accountability
and due diligence by transnational companies. The reflection of the United Nations
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in such instruments is essential.
59. The Permanent Forum is dismayed at the criminalization of the linguistic freedom
of Indigenous Peoples. Criminalization jeopardizes the preservation of Indigenous
languages and customs and the integrity of Indigenous Peoples’ culture and traditions.
60. The Permanent Forum heard from many Indigenous women’s organizations and
networks, including the national movement of midwives, Nim Alaxik, of Guatemala,
on its work for the rights of Indigenous women and girls and their contributions to
ensuring access to comprehensive and culturally appropriate health care, including
sexual and reproductive health. The Permanent Forum welcomes the 2019 ruling by
the Constitutional Court of Guatemala on the promotion of actions that guarantee
access to culturally appropriate sexual and reproductive health for women and the
rights of midwives as guardians of ancestral knowledge and practices and
recommends that the ruling be implemented by the State.
61. The Permanent Forum reiterates the regrets that it expressed at its twenty-first
session regarding the very high and inhumane incarceration rates of Indigenous
Peoples globally, which contribute to poor health, poverty and early and preventable
deaths. The Permanent Forum repeats its previous recommendation to the Unit ed
States of America on the grating of clemency to Leonard Peltier. Owing to his age
and poor health, his release is a humanitarian imperative.
62. The Permanent Forum was presented with horrific testimonies of Indigenous
children incarcerated in prisons and other holding facilities. The Permanent Forum
reminds Member States to fulfil their obligations under the Convention on the Rights
of the Child in relation to the arrest, detention, or imprisonment of a child. No child
should be in prison. In that regard, the Permanent Forum notes the finding in 2022 of
the Supreme Court of Western Australia that the extensive solitary confinement and
significant reduction in liberty of children, primarily Aboriginal children, was
unlawful. The Permanent Forum calls upon Australia to respect the Court decision
and remove its reservation to article 37 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
The Permanent Forum recommends that Member States review and reform their child
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