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Reparations for indigenous peoples international and comparative perspectives

Indigenous peoples versus colonial conservation | Opinion

June 27, 2022 by www.newsweek.com Leave a Comment

Earlier this month, Indigenous Maasai people in Tanzania were violently attacked by state security forces for protesting government plans to evict them from their ancestral lands. Hundreds of police officers came to clear the area to make way for a new game reserve. When the Maasai protested, they were beaten, shot, and arrested. These brutal police crackdowns forced thousands of Maasai people to flee their homes and become refugees in neighboring Kenya, where there is limited food and resources.

Unfortunately, this is not an isolated situation. After investigating 10 protected areas, my team of researchers found a systematic pattern of human rights violations against Indigenous peoples worldwide. International organizations including the World Wildlife Fund for Nature and the Wildlife Conservation Society are partnering with local governments under the guise of environmental protection. But behind the scenes, there is a tremendous cost to the people who have been the stewards of these lands since the beginning of time. Now, they are being displaced, as if their very existence were a threat to biodiversity, and replaced with hunting game reserves or ecotourism, absent of Indigenous involvement or consent.

We spoke with communities in Cameroon, the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, India, Nepal, and Uganda. For each one, the findings were the same . Indigenous peoples in protected areas are subject to forced displacements, losses of ancestral lands, beatings, sexual violence, looting, extrajudicial killings, and the torching of property, often perpetrated by militarized law enforcement personnel and park rangers.

In Chitwan National Park, Nepal, more than 20,000 Tharu people were displaced when the park was established in 1973 and continue to live under constant threats. They are beaten when going to the river to fish, which has been part of their way of life for generations. Meanwhile, local tourists can fish without repercussions. During the evictions in 2019 and 2020 , the army raped 27 women, six of whom were killed after refusing to leave their village.

“This type of violence affects our culture, rituals, language, food habits, livelihoods, occupations, and traditional practices,” said Chini Maya Majhi, chair of the National Indigenous Women’s Federation in Nepal, who contributed to our report.

Similarly, when Salonga National Park in the Democratic Republic of the Congo was created, Indigenous peoples were forced out of the forest, which they relied on for subsistence hunting and fishing. They were pressured to turn to agriculture for food, which isn’t sufficient to meet their basic needs, nor consistent with the preservation of their culture. When one man returned to the area and was suspected of fishing, he was publicly executed. Rape, torture, and other types of abuse are common in this national park , and against all Indigenous peoples who are simply trying to survive and maintain their way of life.

These crimes and violations will repeat themselves unless we do something differently. Fortunately, there is an opportunity to do just that.

Coming up this fall is the U.N. Biodiversity Conference (COP 15), where the 30×30 policy is set to be approved. This worldwide initiative aims to increase protected areas from approximately 16 percent of the Earth’s land and water to 30 percent by 2030 in order to mitigate climate change. So far there has been a lot of lip service around the need to protect the rights of Indigenous peoples through this policy, but we know from experience that this will not be the case, unless there is a new approach to conservation.

First, Indigenous peoples must be included from the start as peer stakeholders with equal decision-making authority. Second, there must be no violence allowed against Indigenous peoples as part of the enforcement of these policies. Finally, Indigenous peoples must maintain ownership of their land. After all, they are the best conservationists.

There is staggering evidence that the current, Western-centric conservationist model is leading to systematic human rights violations and needs a root and branch change. As Maud Salber from the Rainforest Foundation U.K. said, “This pattern won’t be overturned until the conservation industry shifts away from military-style enforcement and recognizes that Indigenous communities have a fundamental right to own and make decisions over their traditional lands and resources.”

Without decolonizing conservation, the outcome of the global effort to mitigate climate change through land conservation will likely be permanent displacement—and the possible extinction—of Indigenous peoples worldwide.

Today the Maasai are getting attention for the egregious abuses committed against them, but every day Indigenous peoples bear the burden of international organizations seeking to “preserve nature.” I urge those developing the 30×30 policy to make sure that this does not become what Indigenous groups are referring to as potentially the biggest land grab in history .

Nicolás Süssmann-Herrán is project lead at Project Expedite Justice .

The views expressed in this article are the writer’s own.

Filed Under: Opinion Opinion, indigenous people, Indigenous, Human rights, Climate Change, Climate, United Nations, Environment, Africa, International Affairs, ..., rediscovering the potential of indigenous storytelling for conservation practice, genocide of indigenous peoples in brazil, conservative opinion articles, brazil indigenous people, picture people first colony mall

Māoriland Film Festival set to bring the indigenous world to Ōtaki

June 26, 2022 by www.stuff.co.nz Leave a Comment

Māoriland
This year’s Māoriland Film Festival will present 106 films from 132 Indigenous nations over five days during the Matariki (June 29 – July 3).

“The magic that makes Māoriland is here, in Ōtaki.”

That is, according to Madeleine de Young (Ngāti Raukawa ki te Tonga, Ngāti Kapu), programme manager for the Māoriland Film Festival which runs for five days from June 29. “Our community and its people, our mountains to sea landscape, Whakatupuranga rua mano, our reo and tikanga.”

These were the things that made the festival unique and it’s what drew people to the festival, she said.

“They come here to be looked after and to share their stories.”

READ MORE: Inside the special women’s whare of Cousins film producer Libby Hakaraia Māoriland Film Festival returning to Ōtaki bigger than ever How Ōtaki is coming into its own

The festival will feature 106 films from 132 nations across 70 events and four venues, in just over five days. “It’s important we tell our own stories – story telling is in our genes,” Libby Hakaraia, te tumu whakarae o Māoriland said.

Hakaraia (Ngāti Raukawa ki te Tonga, Ngāti Kapu) travelled the world attending indigenous film festivals for 20 years and said she was always asked when Aotearoa was getting its own festival– so she brought the idea back to New Zealand.

“My father here wanted to see the films, and so my whanau said, go back to Canada and invite them to Ōtaki”.

“We invited the indigenous world to Aotearoa, and in 2014 they all started arriving.”

Hakaraia said indigenous people had a mutual understanding of trauma, such as “the effects of colonisation, of drug and alcohol abuse, being removed from family”.

“All the pressures that are coming to bear on our lands and our resources, those are shared experiences. When we watch them together, we gain strength from that.”

It also created opportunities for non-indigenous people to engage in a conversation many tried to avoid, Hakaraia said.

“It’s not all trauma films – there’s a lot of creative joy expressed in the films that we programme.”

Last year’s festival was closed to international visitors due to Covid restrictions but this year, they were expecting more than 12,000 people to attend – four times the population of Ōtaki.

It was important to Hakaraia that the festival had support from the community. “What we wanted to create in Ōtaki were economical, social and cultural benefits to our community.”

Modern Films
The Drover’s Wife: The Legend of Molly Johnson will screen as part of this year’s Māoriland Film Festival.

  • The festival runs from June 29 to July 3. From a wide range of films shown, de Young’s must-see film is The Drovers Wife: The Legend of Molly Johnson by Leach Purcell, which will be screening on the opening night.

Filed Under: Uncategorized pou-tiaki, bike film festival, charlotte jewish film festival, the film festival, kids film festivals, kids film festival, san diego international kids film festival, film festival films, stockholm film festival short films, film arts and hearts film festival, andkids world film festival

Who should get a fourth COVID-19 vaccine dose — and when?

June 27, 2022 by www.thestar.com Leave a Comment

With a fourth dose of vaccine only available across the province to those deemed at higher risk for severe COVID-19 outcomes, some infectious disease experts are calling for expanded eligibility due to the population’s declining immunity.

And as new Omicron subvariants are emerging, it’s important the public gain an immunity boost before the next wave, as research shows protection dips about six months after the first booster shot, they said.

However, some other experts said the fourth dose is likely most helpful for immunosuppressed and older people, but it may not provide enough benefit for the population at large to offer it to everyone at this point.

“We’re hitting a period where the bulk of people who have had two shots or more are in a period of waning immunity,” said Todd Coleman, an epidemiologist at Wilfrid Laurier University. “It would be prudent to offer and open up the fourth shot to the general population.”

The protection against COVID-19 that vaccines offer declines after about six months, said Coleman.

Currently, the National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) recommends that provinces and territories prioritize those 80 and older, long-term-care residents, and seniors living in other congregate settings for second booster shots, those who are moderately to severely immunocompromised, and adds that considerations be made for Indigenous peoples.

“Second booster dose immunization programs for other high-risk groups and the general public may be needed in the future if data suggest concerning trends in COVID-19 pandemic,” Health Canada told the Star in a statement.

Supplies of doses are sufficient for the populations NACI recommends vaccinating, and provinces and territories have stocks, Health Canada said.

In Ontario, those 60 and older are eligible as well as those living in long-term care, retirement homes, elder care lodges, congregate settings; and First Nation, Inuit and Métis individuals 18 and older plus anyone in their household over 18.

Some provinces have lowered the age requirement, as New Brunswick and Saskatchewan allow residents 49 and older to receive the fourth dose. In Quebec it’s 18.

NACI published a report Tuesday stating that for the Omicron variant specifically, the protection from the disease offered by the first booster shot of an MRNA vaccine is about 60 per cent and decreases over time.

The committee also explained that vaccine protection against hospitalization and severe illness has been “more durable” and protection climbs by 10 to 20 per cent after a first booster.

One study published in the journal Science in the fall found that a two-dose series of COVID-19 vaccines from Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech and Johnson & Johnson was less effective after six months.

However, NACI does stipulate that while the protection gained from a second booster shot helps prevent severe disease, the duration of that protection is unknown. There are also uncertainties around the effectiveness of the current vaccines on variants of concern.

Omicron variants including the fast-emerging BA.4 and BA.5 indicate that more of the population should receive that immunity boost that’s gained from another shot, ideally before the start of another wave, said Coleman.

The booster shots of the current vaccines do offer important protection against new variants, especially severe outcomes like hospitalization and death, he said.

Moderna has developed a vaccine that takes aim at BA.4 and BA.5, which it says has been highly effective , according to its trial data. The company plans to submit data to regulators by August so that it can be available by the fall, it announced Wednesday.

Even with variant boosters in development, it’s better not to wait, and to have the population be protected against severe outcomes ahead of the fall, said Coleman.

Dawn Bowdish, the Canada Research Chair in aging and immunity and a professor of medicine at McMaster University, agreed with Coleman.

“It makes a lot of sense to get as many people vaccinated at the beginning of a wave as possible,” she said.

However, other health experts aren’t entirely certain the population at large should receive a fourth dose.

Dr. Sameer Elsayed, a professor of infectious diseases, microbiology, epidemiology and biostatistics at Western University, said while a second booster is recommended for older people and immunocompromised people, there’s not enough evidence that a fourth dose boosts immunity to a degree that’s worth a mass vaccination campaign.

“It’s a very marginal benefit against infection with some newer variants, which are more widespread,” he said.

Elsayed points to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control , which concluded in April that a fourth dose isn’t needed for the larger population, but it is recommended for those at high risk.

The European Medicines Agency also argued in January that COVID-19 boosters should not be given too close together and they are concerned about overloading the immune system — which Elsayed agrees is a possible issue. However, NACI’s recent report states the safety of a second booster is comparable to previous doses and “no new safety signal was identified.” It will continue to monitor the evidence.

He also pointed to a recent trial published in the science journal Nature indicating that a fourth dose only offers a slight boost against Omicron.

He recommended diverting more resources to improving health-care infrastructure rather than engaging in a fourth-dose push.

“I don’t think that’s a good use of health-care resources,” he said, adding that he would place more importance right now on masking.

“Now the incidence of COVID in the summer is less, cases are milder in general. Giving a booster now doesn’t really make sense … we should really target a high-risk population.”

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Filed Under: Uncategorized second booster, omicron, older people, Ontario health, InHouseArticle_thestar, fourth dose, smg_gta, booster, NICRT1, immunocompromised, Arc cov..., acip covid-19 vaccines work group, acip covid 19 vaccine recommendations, kangtai biological covid-19 vaccine gets emergency use approval in china, countries developing covid 19 vaccine, analysts offer 7 reasons why a covid-19 vaccine could fail, sinovac supplied 260 mln covid-19 vaccine doses globally, provisional certificate for covid-19 vaccination 1st dose, necessity of 2 doses of the pfizer and moderna covid-19 vaccines, 19 covid - 19 vaccination, revised covid-19 vaccine 2nd dose schedule

Why Finland Is So Happy (and the U.S. Is So Depressed)

December 13, 2019 by www.inc.com Leave a Comment

For the past two years, the United Nations has ranked Finland as the world’s happiest country. The U.S. has never scored in the top 10 since the index was launched in 2011, and in 2019 it plummeted to 19th.

While Finland seems perennially chirpy, the U.S. is seeing growing rates of depression, drug addiction, and suicide . Here are six reasons that residents of Finland (7.1 percent of whom are immigrants, BTW) are so happy when compared with their American counterparts:

1. Finns pay higher taxes but see more results.

According to the conservative think tank the Brookings Institute, Finland collects 44 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) in taxes versus the 26 percent of GDP that the U.S. collected in 2015. (For comparison, Denmark collects 46 percent and Mexico 17 percent.)

So taxes are relatively high in Finland, which you’d think would tend to reduce overall happiness. However, higher taxes don’t seem to bother the Finns, for two reasons:

First, taxes in Finland are highly progressive, so that the rich pay much more than the poor or middle-class. Finland also has a legal system that extracts larger fines from the wealthy than the poor or middle-class. In one recent case, a driver with an annual income of $7.3 million was fined $103,000 for going 65 mph in a 50 mph zone. It’s hard to get too upset about high taxes when the rich are visibly carrying their share of the burden.

Second, and more important, taxes (especially federal taxes) in the U.S. often seem as if they’re being wasted on privatization boondoggles, and so-called nation-building. By contrast, the Finns tend to see the benefits of their taxes in immediately useful services, like free health care, free child care, and infrastructure.

2. Finland makes life easier for working parents.

In the U.S., working parents (especially single ones) struggle to find good, inexpensive day care, are penalized for taking time off to deal with family issues, and are expected to sandwich childbirth into their schedules as if it were an unwelcome distraction. Needless to say, this creates a great deal of unhappiness and dissatisfaction.

By contrast, Finland has an extensive support system for families. As BusinessCulture.org summarizes :

Finland’s options for family leave are numerous. Every child under school age is entitled to municipal day care, which is organized in day care centres, in family day care and in playgroups. The family’s income level influences day care fees. There are also various private day care services available… it is possible to stay at home and take care of your child until they are three years of age without fear of losing your job. Once your child has entered school, you can adjust your working hours to facilitate child care.

Finland also has universal free health care, for which it pays about 9 percent of its GDP, as opposed to the U.S., which spends almost exactly twice as much (18 percent). While the U.S. has a more advanced health care system in terms of technology, many outcomes are better in Finland than in the U.S. Infant mortality in Finland, for example, is 1.7 deaths per 1,000 births ; in the U.S., it is 5.8 deaths per 1,000 births .

3. Finland mandates generous paid time off.

In the U.S., about a third of all jobs have no paid vacation whatsoever. Jobs that do have paid vacation typically start with 10 days the first year, a number that gradually increases. However, many American firms are trying to phase out paid vacations by discouraging employees from taking them and turning them from an earned benefit into a negotiable perk.

Finland, by contrast, mandates that newly hired workers get two days of paid vacation for every month of full-time work, which of course comes out to 24 days. In addition, Finland mandates 15 paid holidays versus an average of 7.6 in the U.S. Rather than discouraging workers from taking vacations and holidays, Finnish businesses actively encourage it.

All that time off does appear to have a small negative effect on productivity, if measured by the amount of GDP resulting from an hour’s worth of work: Finland ($55 per hour) is less “productive” than the United States ($68 per hour). That difference seems less significant, however, compared with the difference between, say, Luxembourg ($93 per hour) and Russia ($25 per hour).

4. It’s easy to do business in Finland.

My thinking may be distorted by writing for Inc.com since 2011, but I can’t help but believe that people are happier when they have the opportunity to start businesses and make them successful. From that perspective, countries that make life easier for entrepreneurs and startups are likely to make people happier.

There’s a common perception in the U.S. that Finland is a socialist country that heavily regulates businesses. Nothing could be further from the truth. Although Finland does have a state monopoly on liquor sales, it has a free-market economy. According to the Trading Economies research firm :

The Ease of Doing Business Index ranks countries against each other based on how the regulatory environment is conducive to business operation and stronger protections of property rights. Economies with a high rank (1 to 20) have simpler and more friendly regulations for businesses… Finland averaged 13.67 from 2008 until 2019, reaching an all-time high of 20 in 2019 and a record low of 10 in 2014.

Not surprisingly, given the business-friendly climate, Finland has plenty of billionaires : roughly 1 per 786,000 residents, a figure that is roughly comparable to the 1 per 559,000 residents in the U.S. who are billionaires.

5. Finland has truly stellar public schools.

In the U.S., education policy is set from the top down. Federal and state government sets standards and mandates that public school teachers are expected to follow (a.k.a. “teach for the testing”). While U.S. public school system performs reasonably well among countries that educate their entire population, Finland’s universal public school system is by most accounts the best in the world.

One reason may be that in Finland, the teachers who know the individual students are given the power to decide how best to teach them. Smithsonian magazine explains:

Most of Finland’s 62,000 educators in 3,500 schools from Lapland to Turku [are] selected from the top 10 percent of the nation’s [under]graduates to earn a required master’s degree in education. Many schools are small enough so that teachers know every student. If one method fails, teachers consult with colleagues to try something else. They seem to relish the challenges. Nearly 30 percent of Finland’s children receive some kind of special help during their first nine years of school. [As one teacher put it:] “Children from wealthy families with lots of education can be taught by stupid teachers. We try to catch the weak students. It’s deep in our thinking.”

In addition, undergraduate college in Finland is free (like K-12 in the U.S.), which means that one can get a bachelor’s degree without spending a small fortune or going deep into debt. As a result, Finland has excellent upward mobility, compared with the U.S., where downward mobility has become far more common .

6. Finland has younger leaders.

Every U.S. president since 1992 has been a Baby Boomer and it looks likely at this point that a Boomer will be president until at least 2024. While some Boomer leaders have attracted a following among the young, the Boomer generation has (by and large) been remarkably reluctant to let younger people take on leadership roles.

Not surprisingly, U.S. Millennials–a large cohort–have grown increasingly frustrated, especially since U.S. Boomers–very much led from the top–clearly expect Millennials to foot the bill for 28 years of gross mismanagement (see: “War in Afghanistan”), not to mention the Boomer generation’s reluctance to address the dangers of climate change.

As a result, politics in the U.S. tends to be a depressing–like a 1970s rock band doing its fifth farewell tour.

Finland’s political leadership could not be more different. The current prime minister, Sanna Marin, is 34. In fact, four of the five top political leaders in Finland are Millennial women and the fifth is a Gen-X woman. As someone who’s worked for both Millennials and Boomers, I can say without hesitation that Millennials are on average savvier, smarter, and far more likely to solve today’s problems than their Boomer counterparts.

And they’re certainly a lot less depressing.

One wonders whether the U.S. might not be stuck in the emotional doldrums had U.S. Boomers been as gracious as Finland’s and ceded power to people with new perspectives and new ideas.

Filed Under: Uncategorized depression will i ever be happy again, finland happiness, why finland is happy country, i have depression but i'm happy

15 airlines to operate more intl’ flights to, from Vietnam’s Da Nang

June 27, 2022 by tuoitrenews.vn Leave a Comment

Fifteen airlines are expected to operate international flights connecting numerous destinations with Da Nang from now until the end of the year, promising ample opportunities for the promotion and development of local tourism.

These airlines will operate international routes from such countries as South Korea, Thailand, Singapore, Japan, and Malaysia, among others, to Da Nang with a total frequency of up to 90 flights per week, Ho Ky Minh, vice-chairman of the municipal People’s Committee, said on Monday.

The Vietnamese coastal city recently collaborated with budget carrier Vietjet Air in opening five air routes to major cities in India and Singapore.

In the first six months of this year, Da Nang has welcomed 286 international flights carrying 35,000 passengers, according to vice-chairman Minh.

On June 24, the city received a record of 120 domestic and international flights, the official added.

The local tourism sector has had a positive and breakthrough recovery with a series of products, services, and festivals since the end of the first quarter.

Many tourist areas and attractions have received a large number of visitors, Minh continued, adding that the average occupancy rate of local hotels reached up to 70-75 percent on weekends.

The city’s tourism revenue in the first six months of this year has increased 41 percent compared to the same period in 2021.

These are good signs for Da Nang’s tourism after being affected by the COVID-19 pandemic for two years, the vice-chairman assessed, noting that the city now needs to renew itself in order to take advantage of every opportunity for tourism recovery and development.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Vietnam Life - 15 airlines to operate more intl’ flights to, from Vietnam’s Da Nang, TTNTAG tourism, TTNTAG airline, TTNTAG Da Nang, TTNTAG international..., hong phuong hotel da nang

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