A/HRC/12/34/Add.2
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led to suspension of the project because of indigenous opposition. In any case, there appears to
be an absence of a well-defined procedure for consultations that conforms to the relevant
international standards and that indigenous peoples consider will consistently provide them
adequate opportunity to be heard.
57. Major infrastructure projects affecting, in the aggregate, thousands of indigenous peoples
include the construction of dams on the Xingu, Tocantins, Madeira, Estreito, Tibagu, Juluena,
Cotingo and Kuluene rivers, and the transposition of the São Francisco river. The Tucuruí Dam
on the Toncantins River has caused the displacement of numerous indigenous families. The
construction of the Belo Monte hydroeclectric dam on the Xingu river is one of series of
dams that were planned as part of the Complexo Hidrelétrico Xingu project, affecting at least
10 indigenous groups by the environmental changes caused by the dam. Faced with criticism
about the impacts of the project on the environment and indigenous peoples, the Government
reports that it has pledged not to pursue the project beyond the Belo Monte dam. Even so,
indigenous groups and NGOs complain that the Belo Monte project is being carried out without
adequate mitigation measures and consultations with the affected indigenous communities.
58. Indigenous peoples are also being affected by international initiatives for economic
development, such as the South American Integrated Regional Infrastructure (IIRSA) project.
With total investment estimated at $37 billion from the Inter-American Development Bank
and various subregional banks, including the Brazilian Development Bank and the
Andean Promotional Corporation, an underlying project objective is to increase access to
South America’s natural resources and put them at the disposal of foreign markets. For
example, the Madeira River Complex, in the tri-border region of Peru, the Plurinational State
of Bolivia, and Brazil, is one of the anchors of the project and would transform the Madre de
Dios-Beni-Mamoré-Itenez-Madeira river system into a major corridor for energy production and
raw material export. The proposal includes the construction of four hydroelectric dams, most
importantly the Santo Antônio and Jirau dams in Rondônia that will affect numerous indigenous
groups. Adequate consultations with indigenous peoples should be ensured for all these
development initiatives.
IV. INDIGENOUS DEVELOPMENT AND RELATED
HUMAN RIGHTS CONCERNS
A. Policy issues
59. Whereas large-scale development projects and other factors often have adversely affected
indigenous peoples and their lands, indigenous peoples more generally face significant
challenges to their own development in economic, social and related spheres. As mentioned,
census data collected by IBGE maintain that Brazilian indigenous peoples are the most
impoverished sector of the country’s population. For a number of reasons related to historical
patterns of discrimination and loss of control over lands and resources, both rural and urban
indigenous communities face obstacles to development and are challenged to support themselves
in ways appropriate to their cultures and world views.