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Minority and indigenous groups – silent victims of climate change says new global report

11 March 2008

Embargoed until 07:00 GMT 11 March 2008

Minority and indigenous groups across the world are among the hardest hit by climate change and often disproportionately affected by climate-related disasters but their plight has yet to be recognised by the international community, a new report says.

A study of several recent environmental disasters across the world shows that it is minority and indigenous groups that have been worst affected by changing weather patterns but in most cases when a disaster strikes help and relief reach them last, Minority Rights Group International (MRG) says in their flagship annual State of the World's Minorities report.

This year's report, themed around minorities and climate change, argues that unless policy-makers pay urgent attention to the effects of climate change on disadvantaged minorities, then, in some cases, the very survival of these fragile communities is at stake.

"Climate change has finally made it to the top of the international agenda but at every level, be it inter-governmental, national or local level, recognition of the acute difficulties that minorities face, is often missing," says Ishbel Matheson, MRG's Head of Policy and Communications.

"From the immediate aftermath of a disaster to the point of designing policy on climate change – the unique situation of minority and indigenous groups are rarely considered," she adds.

The report cites cases from across the world of how minorities and indigenous groups were most affected in climate-related disasters because they live in the poorest, most marginalized neighbourhoods. When Dalits (or 'untouchables') in Bihar, India, were disproportionately affected during the 2007 floods, relief took long to reach them and they were subject to blatant discrimination in the aid distribution process.

The close relationship of many indigenous peoples and some minorities to their environment makes them especially sensitive to the impact of climate change. Indigenous people have extraordinarily intimate knowledge of weather and its effects on plants and animals, but climate change is now affecting their way of life.

"In our community the elders interpret certain signs from nature to know when to plant their crops or when to start the hunting season. But with climate change it is becoming impossible for them to make such predictions anymore," David Pulkol from the Ugandan Karamajong community says.

"We have had an unusual increase in droughts which has resulted in greater loss to livestock and increased poverty and starvation in our community," he adds.

Indigenous and minority communities across the world are also hurt by the planting of biofuel crops championed as a solution to climate change. Biofuels, from plant matter such as corn or oil palms, are seen as the greener option because they produce lower emissions of carbon dioxide.

But communities face forceful eviction and destruction to their livelihoods and culture for biofuel crops to be planted. In South American countries such as Colombia, Brazil and Argentina indigenous and minority communities have been forced off their lands, in some cases with the use of violence, to make way for biofuel plantations.

"Not only are minorities and indigenous groups disproportionately suffering as a result of climate change but they are affected by what the world sees as solutions to climate change. There is now a greater urgency to make these voices heard in the climate change debate," Matheson says.

Notes to the Editor

  • Minority Rights Group International (MRG) is a non governmental organisation working to secure the rights of ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities and indigenous peoples worldwide.
  • State of the World's Minorities 2008 will be launched at the Foreign Press Association on the 11th of March 2008.
  • Ishbel Matheson and David Pulkol will be present at the press conference.
  • Attached with this press release is a short list of cases discussed in SWM of minorities and indigenous communities affected by climate change.
  • For interviews with representatives of communities cited in the cases please see their contact details listed below each of the case studies.

For further information or to pre-arrange interviews with Ishbel Matheson or David Pulkol please contact:

Farah Mihlar or Emma Eastwood
T: +442074224205
M: +447870596863
E: [email protected] or [email protected]

The following is a list of some specific cases of indigenous and minority communities affected by climate change. People to interview and their contact details are listed below each case:

Scorched earth – the effects of climate change on Kenya's pastoralists

In northern Kenya, increasingly severe and frequent droughts, as well as major floods, have had a devastating impact on pastoralists. Traditionally, pastoralists have survived by herding animals, in an already harsh and dry environment. However, drought in the region in 2005-6 led to a 70 per cent fall in the size of their herds of cattle, goats and camels, leaving some 80 per cent of pastoralists dependent on international food aid.

Droughts force them to travel long distances in search of water and have also sparked deadly conflicts over water. The deaths of so many livestock in 2005-6 reduced pastoralists' food supplies and damaged their health.

Interview opportunity: Abdullahi Dima, Kenyan Pastoralist
Contact: +254 722 353 168

Indigenous peoples of the Arctic on the frontline of global warming

In the Arctic, where the atmosphere is warming twice as quickly as in the rest of the world, there are currently some 400,000 indigenous peoples. They include the Sami people of northern Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia, who traditionally herd reindeer as a way of life.

Olav Mathis-Eira, a herder and vice-chair of the executive board of the Sami Council, says higher temperatures and increased rainfall are making it harder for reindeer to reach the lichen they eat, which in winter can be covered in ice.

The thinning of the Arctic ice has also made reindeer herding tracks dangerous, forcing people to find new routes. Many aspects of Sami culture – language, songs, marriage, child-rearing and the treatment of older people, for instance – are intimately linked with reindeer herding, says Mathis-Eira.

"If the reindeer herding disappears it will have a devastating effect on the whole culture of the Sami people… In that way, I think that climate change is threatening the entire Sami, as a people."

Interview opportunity: Olav Mathis Eira
Contact: 0047 4800 8740 or [email protected]

Success and struggles as the Inuit get their issues on to the international agenda

Excerpts from interview with Aqqualuk Lynge, leader of Greenland's Inuit people.

"In my lifetime, we have seen a big difference in floes of ice and animal migration, and we have seen the weather change. The Greenland ice cap is melting very fast and this will affect the rest of the world – that's why the Arctic is a barometer. We have known about it for a long time – before other famous people started talking about it."

"We have a legal petition under way in the US at the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights, to look into the issues we are facing. The case is not to get compensation; we need support for decision-makers to understand that we are paying a great price for what others are doing to the environment. I hope the government realizes this and adapts for the future. We are small nations and we cannot afford to shut up."

Interview opportunity: Aqqualuk Lynge
Contact: [email protected] or 00 299 323632

India's Dalits marginalised and discriminated in flood relief

One of the most shocking examples of minorities' greater exposure to climate change is in India, where some 170 million people known as Dalits are physically, socially and economically excluded from the rest of society. As a result they were worst hit by the unusually severe monsoon floods in 2007.

Many Dalits lived in rickety homes in floodprone areas outside main villages, leaving them especially exposed. They were often last to get emergency relief, if they received it at all, because relief workers did not realize that Dalits live outside the main villages, or because dominant groups took control of distribution or were given priority.

A survey by Dalit organizations of 51 villages on 8-9 August 2007 found, among other things, that 60 per cent of the dead were Dalits, that none of the Dalit colonies (or tolas) attached to the main villages had been visited by government relief officials and that Dalits' housing had suffered the worst damage because most was of poor quality and in low-lying areas.

Interview opportunity: Dr. Prasad Sirivella
Contact: 00919958890176

Roma worst affected in climate disasters yet discriminated in resettlement

In Europe Roma communities' housing conditions are notoriously unpleasant and unhealthy. That some are at high risk of flooding has been less widely noted, perhaps because of the more obvious hazards they face. However, a few studies have found that Roma people suffered especially badly during floods.

In Jarovnice, in Slovakia, which suffered the worst floods in its history in June 1998. Some 140 Roma homes were affected, compared with 25 non-Roma homes, and of the 47 people who were killed, 45 were Roma. Of those who died, 42 had lived in a shanty town in the valley of the River Svinka, which had flooded, while non-Roma lived in the village above the valley.

In the city of Ostrava, Czech Republic, which experienced severe flooding in 1997 Roma communities were treated very differently from ‘white' residents, who were resettled much faster and in superior accommodation.

Interview opportunity: Kumar Vishvanathan, Life Together
Contact: 00420 777 760 191

‘Eco-friendly' fuel impacting marginalised communities in Colombia

Excerpts from interview with Aparicio Rios, indigenous activist from Colombia's Nasa people and leader of the Cauca Indigenous Regional Council (CRIC).

"Both communities [indigenous and Afrodescendant] have suffered massive displacement from their communal lands [in the Choco in north-western Colombia]."

"Paramilitary groups first terrorize and then displace communities in the area and then take over the land to cultivate oil palm. They are rich, well-armed and powerful and often in the pay of large landowners."

"The UN Special Rapporteur on Fundamental Freedoms of Indigenous People concluded on his last visit that 10 of Colombia's 92 indigenous groups were in danger of extinction."

"This is a critical situation, practically the same as genocide… We ask that the international community pressure the Colombian government to provide comprehensive protection for indigenous communities and live up to its promises of buying and setting aside land for indigenous reservations so that we can preserve our traditional way of life."

Interview opportunity: Aparicio Rios (Spanish)
Contact: 00 57 8242594/ 8242153/ 8240343