A/HRC/51/28
C.
Latin America
89.
In 2020, the Asociación de Mujeres Indígenas of Colombia succeeded in their legal
efforts to designate the Andes-Amazon rainforest that they steward as a civil society nature
reserve. The Asociación brings indigenous women in Colombia together to revitalize their
knowledge of medicinal plants, gardening, artisanship, women’s self-care and ecological
stewardship.81 In Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Arhuaca women engage in ethno-education
and ethnobotanical research on sacred plants that have medical, spiritual and nutritional
properties. In response to COVID-19, they have promoted the revitalization of indigenous
scientific practices by using natural medicines and sacred plants, strengthening the Arhuaco
food system and other cultural practices.82
90.
In Panama, indigenous women play a fundamental role in conserving and transmitting
the Guna cosmovision to future generations. The Organización de Mujeres Indígenas Unidas
por la Biodiversidad de Panamá has promoted a project to recover indigenous knowledge on
jaguars and other felines among the Guna and Embera peoples and generate information on
the conservation of the cats by systematizing information based on indigenous culture and
strengthening the local capacity.
91.
The Wapichana and Macuxi indigenous women of Brazil gather to learn from elder
women about the medicinal properties of plants to strengthen resistance to COVID-19 and
are engaged in networking to develop and share their scientific knowledge among indigenous
communities and between generations of indigenous women.83
92.
Indigenous Nicaraguan women have formed cooperatives to apply agricultural,
medicinal and artisanal knowledge to advance their economic opportunities. The Wangki
Tangni organization has brought together a collective of Miskito women farmers, promoting
women’s self-sufficiency through organic farming practices, and uses its radio station led by
indigenous women to reach remote indigenous communities along the Nicaragua-Honduras
border and educate community members about their rights. They have also established
networks to promote the involvement of indigenous women in indigenous governance and
bring them together with municipal governments to combat violence against them. 84
D.
Asia
93.
Despite climate extremes and variability throughout the region, indigenous women in
Bangladesh are taking the lead on securing access to food and purifying and preserving stores
of water. They are combating increased flooding and salinization by cultivating floating
gardens and planting saline-tolerant reeds, fruits and trees.85
94.
In Thailand, indigenous women manage crop production processes, a vital spiritual
and cultural tradition for the Akha people. Climate change, increasing monoculture and
divergent market orientation away from indigenous communities has led to a gradual
disappearance of Akha agriculture. To combat this, community organizers have established
a centre to teach youth and interested outsiders the science of Akha agricultural practice. Also
in Thailand, the indigenous Shan women, have long understood how to ferment food to store
it during famines and other crises, ensuring family and community food security. 86
81
82
83
84
85
86
18
See https://www.amazonteam.org/Indigenous-women-achieve-mamakunapa-civil-society-naturereserve/.
FAO, “Celebrating indigenous women scientists on the International Day of Women and Girls in
Science”, 11 February 2021. https://www.fao.org/Indigenous-peoples/news-article/en/c/1374632.
See https://cir.org.br/site/2020/12/20/mulheres-wapichana-e-macuxi-da-regiao-murupu-realizamoficina-de-medicina-tradicional.
Madre, “Towards an indigenous women-led just recovery”, p. 3.
Local Communities and Indigenous Peoples Platform web portal – Asia, accessible at
https://lcipp.unfccc.int/about-lcipp/un-Indigenous-sociocultural-regions/asia.
See https://aippnet.org/land-tenure-security-foundation-resilient-sustainable-food-systems-webinarIndigenous-women-global-game-changers.