Native Group Takes Land
Dispute to UN
Haider Rizvi
UNITED NATIONS, Jan 26 (IPS) - Feeling cheated and betrayed by Washington for
nearly 150 years, a Native American tribe is now looking to the United Nations
for help in protecting its ancestral lands.
"Where else do we go?" Carrie Dann, a leader of the Shoshone people of the
United States, told IPS in an interview about why her people have gone to the
U.N. to demand justice.
Dann and other Shoshone leaders maintain that the U.S. government has used a
series of illegal tactics to gain control of their ancestral lands, including
seizures of livestock and the imposition of heavy trespass fines.
They charge the U.S. government with trying to sell or lease their land to big
corporations involved in gold mining and other excavations in the area, which
has disrupted not only their traditional way of life, but also caused enormous
damage to the environment.
Last August, Shoshone elders filed a petition with the U.N. Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) calling for action against the U.S.
government for claiming large parts of indigenous lands as federal property.
CERD was established under an international human rights treaty called the
Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. It prohibits racial
discrimination and defines it as a breach of international law.
The Shoshone lands cover about 60 million acres in the states of Nevada, Idaho,
Utah and California. These lands, which are known to contain rich reservoirs of
gold, also include a proposed national repository for radioactive waste.
The U.S. government argues that 90 percent is ''public'' or federally controlled
lands.
The Shoshone people belong to the Numic branch of the larger Uto-Aztecan
language family. In the past two centuries, they also have been identified as
"Snake Indians", according to the Encyclopedia of North American Indians.
In their petition to the U.N., the Shoshone have argued that the U.S. government
has no right to occupy or privatise their ancestral land because the treaty it
had signed in 1863 does not allow Washington to do so.
The U.S. government maintains that the Shoshone people have lost their rights to
ancestral lands, as identified in the treaty, due to "gradual encroachment" by
non-Native Americans.
But this argument has failed to fully satisfy U.N. rights officials.
"Has the 1863 Treaty of the Ruby Valley been abrogated in whole or in part, and
if so, following which process?" Mario Yatzis, chairman of the U.N. Committee,
asked the U.S. envoy in Geneva in a letter sent last August.
In 2004, the U.S. government tried to resolve this issue by passing a law, known
as the Western Shoshone Distribution Act, which allowed Washington to claim
large swathes of indigenous lands by financially compensating the Shoshone
people. However, the compensation to the tribes is based on the 1872 price for
their land and minerals -- about 15 cents per acre.
Shoshone elders say the land is priceless because it is sacred and central to
the survival of their traditions and belief system. Most Shoshone objected to
the procedures that led to the passage of the controversial act, and refused to
accept the money because they believe their ancestral lands are sacred.
"Our traditional laws tell us we are placed here as caretakers of the land,"
said Joe Kennedy, a Shoshone leader and one of the signatories of the petition.
"We will not stand idly by and allow the U.S. government to cement its hold on
our ancestral land," he added.
Kennedy and others assert that there has never been a legally valid transfer,
sale or cessation of land by Shoshone people.
In his letter, Yatzis also pressed the U.S. for an explanation of expanded
mining and nuclear waste storage on Shoshone ancestral lands, and for "placing
their land up for auction for privatisation".
The letter has a list of 10 questions, which are based on the Shoshone people'
request for "urgent action". If accepted, the U.N. committee has the power to
investigate the U.S. conduct.
In a similar inquiry, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights issued a
report in 2003 concluding that the U.S. government's claims to Western Shoshone
land were illegal and contrary to international human rights law, and that it
had used illegitimate means to assert ownership of the lands.
While the U.S. response to the U.N. body is still pending, Shoshone elders and
their lawyers say they are planning to visit Geneva in March this year to
present more than 11,000 signatures in support of their petition.
"There is no remedy in the U.S.," Julie Fishel, a Shoshone lawyer, told IPS.
"They are dealing with the treaty by ignoring it. That's why were going to the
U.N."
Both Fishel and Dann are cautiously optimistic that a number of non-Native
groups have joined their campaign to regain control of the ancestral lands. One
is the London-based Oxfam International, a leading humanitarian and development
aid organisation.
"This is a critical issue," Oxfam America's Laura Inouye told IPS. "This isn't
about (American) Indians. It's about everybody."
"This is about not allowing the U.S. government to place corporate interests
before human rights and environmental concerns," she said of the petition.
(END/2006)
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