E/CN.4/2005/88
page 2
Summary
Since the preparation of his third annual report to the Commission on Human Rights, the
Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous
people has undertaken two official country missions, to Colombia (8-17 March 2004) and
Canada (21 May-4 June 2004), to observe the situation of indigenous peoples. The country
mission reports are contained in documents E/CN.4/2005/88/Add.2 and 3 respectively. He has
continued to maintain extensive contact with indigenous representatives throughout the world
and at international meetings. He also continues to cooperate actively with United Nations
bodies and agencies on issues concerning indigenous peoples.
Indigenous peoples are among the world’s most socially marginalized and dispossessed
groups. They are generally the victims of various types of discrimination and denial of their
basic rights. They have been dispossessed of their lands and resources, languages, culture and
forms of government, and are often denied access to basic social services (including education,
health and food, water, sanitation and housing). As education is of critical importance for
indigenous peoples’ full enjoyment of their human rights, the Special Rapporteur has decided to
focus his fourth annual report on this topic. The present report focuses on the obstacles,
disparities and challenges facing indigenous peoples with regard to access to and quality of
education and the cultural appropriateness of educational approaches. It also contains examples
of good practice and initiatives aimed at solving the educational problems of indigenous peoples
in various countries.
The Special Rapporteur recommends to Governments that they attach high priority to the
objectives and principles of indigenous education and that they provide public and private
agencies and institutions involved in promoting indigenous education with sufficient material,
institutional and intellectual resources; he invites them to prepare, in close collaboration with
indigenous communities, programmes for the training of an adequate number of bilingual and
intercultural education teachers during the Second International Decade of the World’s
Indigenous People and invites the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO) and international cooperation partners in general to become involved in
this effort. He further recommends that indigenous universities be expanded and strengthened
and that courses on indigenous peoples (including their history, philosophy, culture, art and
lifestyles) be broadened at all levels of national education, with an anti-racist and multicultural
focus that reflects cultural and ethnic diversity and, in particular, gender equality.
The Special Rapporteur urges that special attention be paid to the relationship between
indigenous peoples and the environment, and that participatory scientific research be promoted
in this area (with special attention paid to vulnerable environments such as the Arctic, the forests
of the far North, tropical forests and high mountain areas). The Special Rapporteur also
recommends that, as part of the effort to strengthen the various kinds of indigenous education,
emphasis be placed on strengthening physical education, special training in the criminal justice
system for indigenous people, education in all areas for indigenous girls and women, distance
learning, adult education and continuing education. It is recommended that universities and
research institutes become more involved in the preparation of special multidisciplinary curricula
for indigenous education.