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CHILE: Bachelet Unveils New Indigenous
Policy
By Daniela Estrada
Apr 2, 2008 (IPS) - Chilean President Michelle
Bachelet has announced a new policy for indigenous people, which
includes novel approaches to political participation and the protection
of natural resources in the hands of the country’s native
groups.
"Some say the problem facing indigenous people is just poverty,
and that good targeting of subsidies would be the most appropriate
policy. But we, on the other hand, maintain that it is a matter
of rights, of a collective identity seeking expression in a multicultural
society," said Bachelet at a ceremony Tuesday in the palace
of La Moneda, the seat of government.
"We are making progress on indigenous affairs, but now is
the time to go further, and above all at a faster pace. We have
the will, the grassroots support, the resources, the commitment
and the legitimacy to do so," she said.
The president announced the new policy for the nine ethnic groups
recognised by the state, in the presence of ministers, members
of Congress and representatives of indigenous communities, as
well as former President Patricio Aylwin (1990-1994), who promulgated
the 1993 Law on Indigenous Peoples and chaired the 2001-2003 Commission
for Historic Truth and a New Deal.
A 2006 census known by the acronym CASEN found that 1,060,786
people identified themselves as belonging to native groups, equivalent
to 6.6 percent of the Chilean population. The largest indigenous
community is the Mapuche, who make up 87.2 percent of the country’s
indigenous people.
The new "Social Pact for Multiculturalism" addresses
three main areas: political systems, rights and institutions;
integrated development of indigenous communities; and multiculturalism
and diversity. These are to be added to the guidelines for action
presented by Bachelet in April 2007.
In the first area, the president announced that she would promote
direct participation by indigenous people in Congress, regional
legislatures and local councils. "I want indigenous representatives
in parliament," said Bachelet, to a round of applause.
"The proposal that has been analysed in greatest detail is
to go back to a draft law presented in 1991 by two lawmakers,
proposing the creation of an indigenous electoral district which
would be entitled to elect a given number of members of both houses
of Congress," Rodrigo Egaña, commissioner for Indigenous
Affairs, said after the ceremony.
Egaña, appointed by Bachelet in February to coordinate
and propose new policies for original peoples, said they hope
to send several draft laws to Congress in three to five month’s
time.
It is likely that the draft law on the indigenous electoral district
will be combined with reform of the two-candidate or "binominal"
electoral system, which is part of Bachelet’s government
programme, as it has been for her three predecessors, all of them
belonging to the centre-left Coalition for Democracy, since the
return to democracy in 1990.
The binominal system, which benefits the two largest party coalitions,
has not been eliminated because of opposition from the right,
and because if affects the interests of sitting lawmakers.
The creation was also announced of a Subsecretariat of Indigenous
Affairs within the sphere of the Planning Ministry (MIDEPLAN),
a Council of Indigenous Peoples, conceived of as a representative
body for consultation on policies affecting native communities,
and a Ministerial Committee for Indigenous Affairs.
The present National Corporation for Indigenous Development (CONADI)
is to be restructured, in order for it to implement policies.
In addition, an Indigenous Affairs Unit will be established in
each cabinet ministry.
In the second area, the president said that land would be restored
in the immediate term to 115 indigenous communities, and decisions
would be made with respect to the applications of another 308
communities. The Land and Water Fund, administered by CONADI,
will be overhauled.
Programmes will be set in motion to boost the economic development
of native groups, as well as the areas of communications, housing,
drinking water, electricity and rural innovation, Bachelet said.
The special indigenous health programme will be strengthened,
and actions will be studied to guarantee the right of indigenous
peoples to have a say in the education of their children.
The third and final area of the new policy is aimed at "generating
cultural change" among the Chilean population. The main novelty
is that a "Code of Responsible Conduct" will be drawn
up to regulate private and public investment projects in Indigenous
Development Areas and on indigenous lands.
The Code "will include the right of indigenous people to
be consulted about the projects, to share in the benefits, to
be compensated for damages, and not to be relocated from their
homes except under the conditions stipulated in the (International
Labour Organisation) Convention 169 (on Indigenous and Tribal
Peoples)," the president said.
"We are thinking of an indigenous communities’ impact
assessment for investment projects," similar to the environmental
impact assessment studies that are already required, Egaña
said.
Lastly, policies fomenting multiculturalism and inclusion will
be created, and specific programmes will be developed for indigenous
people living in urban areas.
Although Bachelet launched an indigenous affairs policy in April
2007, intended to last until 2010 when her term of office ends,
the resurgence of the Mapuche land conflict in the southern region
of Araucanía forced her to announce further reforms.
The first five guidelines for action she proposed were strengthening
indigenous communities’ participation in the political and
social arenas, recognition and strengthening of their rights,
improvement of the quality of life of indigenous people living
in urban areas, empowerment of women, and promoting education
and culture.
In January, however, Mapuche student Matías Catrileo was
shot and killed by the police when, with a group of fellow activists,
he trespassed on a private estate that the Mapuche claim as part
of their ancestral lands.
Another activist for the Mapuche cause, Patricia Troncoso, who
is serving a 10-year prison sentence for "terrorist arson",
went on hunger strike for over 100 days.
Troncoso called off her fast when the government granted her prison
privileges, including transfer to a prison farm and weekend leave,
measures which were implemented in March.
Mapuche communities involved in conflicts over land have accused
the police of repression and the justice system of persecution.
These complaints, Egaña said, will be dealt with by the
Presidential Advisory Commission on Human Rights, and by the courts.
Meanwhile, the country’s indigenous groups are opposed to
the way Congress ratified ILO Convention 169, which it did with
a controversial "interpretative declaration" on article
35.
The Convention and the appended declaration are now being studied
by the Constitutional Court, after which the treaty could be approved
by President Bachelet.
Another government promise that has not yet been fulfilled is
a constitutional amendment recognising indigenous peoples, which
is currently making its way through Congress.
Javier Mamani Castro, an Aymara town councillor in Colchane in
the north of the country, told IPS he was pleased with the president’s
speech, especially her announcement about introducing indigenous
political participation in Congress.
But according to Paulina Acevedo, of the non-governmental Observatory
for Indigenous Peoples’ Rights, who was invited to Tuesday’s
ceremony, "there were no important announcements in what
the president said," except for the social policies to do
with health and education.
Acevedo said the announcements about political participation were
"vague." "Nothing was said, for example, about
a quota system for parliamentary representation. We’ll have
to wait and see what mechanism is finally chosen to implement
these measures," she told IPS.
From:http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=41835
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