A/HRC/24/50
All of the above are contributing factors that bear on the ability of indigenous individuals
and peoples to gain access to justice.
26.
Challenges also include discriminatory laws and practices, lack of funding necessary
to seek justice, including legal aid,25 insufficient numbers of indigenous judges and lawyers,
and biases against indigenous peoples and individuals involved in legal proceedings.
2.
Remedies
27.
States must provide remedies, reparations and, where appropriate, public apologies,
public memorials and guarantees of non-repetition for violations of indigenous peoples’
right to freedom from discrimination.26
C.
Cultural rights
28.
The cultural rights of indigenous peoples include recognition and practice of their
justice systems (A/HRC/21/53, para. 21), as well as recognition of their traditional customs,
values and languages by courts and legal procedures.27 Cultural rights are interrelated with
the right to self-determination of indigenous peoples, and therefore, to access to justice, as
set out by numerous provisions of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples, specifically articles 8, 11, 12, 13, 15, 25, 31 and 36.
1.
Barriers
29.
Cultural rights often go unrecognized. In the case of linguistic rights, for example,
challenges include a lack of bilingual interpreters and training in indigenous languages
informing people about mechanisms that facilitate access to justice. 28 A 2012 study in
Guatemala found that the majority of indigenous inmates in selected prisons had not been
offered language-appropriate legal services or information in indigenous languages
regarding their detention.29
2.
Remedies
30.
Positive examples include measures to ensure the use of indigenous languages in
courts,30 as well as providing for training of officials on indigenous history, legal traditions
and customs.31
31.
A notable example of efforts to ensure culturally appropriate justice is the Cree
Court, a circuit court handling criminal and child protection matters established by the
Saskatchewan Provincial Court of Canada. The Cree Court conducts hearings entirely or
partially in Cree and encourages the participation of community leaders in the criminal
justice system, recognizing the community’s role in supporting both the victims and the
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
8
See, for example, Human Rights Committee, concluding observations on Australia
(CCPR/C/AUS/CO/5).
Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, general recommendation No. 28,
para. 32.
See Expert Mechanism advice No. 3 (2012).
See, for example, the report of the Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers on
her mission to Mexico (A/HRC/17/30/Add.3), paras. 80–81.
Procurador de los Derechos Humanos, “Los derechos humanos de personas indígenas privadas de
libertad en el marco de pluralismo jurídico” (2012).
See, for example, the submissions of Finland and Norway.
Submission: Canadian Human Rights Commission.