SMHRIC |
June 29, 2007 |
New York |
The
Task Force on Protected Areas, Equity and Livelihoods, a joint
initiative of the World Commission on Protected Areas (WCPA) and
the Commission on Environment, Economics and Social Policy (CEESP),
held its Asia Group inaugural meeting in Bangkok, Thailand, on
June 19 -- 20, 2007. Enghebatu Togochog, president of the
Southern Mongolian Human Rights Information Center (SMHRIC),
attended the meeting as the representative of the mobile
indigenous Mongolian communities in Southern (Inner) Mongolia.
The meeting was
proposed to promote dialogue amongst participants to develop a
platform for the functioning of the Taskforce in Asia. The main
objectives of the meeting are as follows:
A.
To establish a common
understanding and appreciation of:
a), the purpose,
mandate and scope of the Task Force;
b),
core concepts
that are fundamental to the work of the Task Force, e.g. models
of Protected Areas (PAs) governance, equity, livelihoods,
poverty;
c),
key policy
instruments, e.g. the World Park Congress recommendation on
Poverty and PAs, World Bank Policy on displacement, and the
Convention on Biological Diversity Programme of work on PAs;
d),
the range of
different perspectives within the Task Force membership.
B.
To develop a strategy and
work-plan for addressing each of the three specific objectives
of the Task Force (as listed on the previous page).
C.
To review, and where
appropriate suggest revisions, to the Terms of Reference and
membership of the Task Force.
Facilitated by
the three co-chairs of the Task Force, Lea M. Scherl, Phil
Franks, Ali Kaka, and Ashish Kothari with support from several
other resources persons, the meeting divided the representatives
into three smaller groups and each group was asked to come up
with its detailed work-plan by the end of the meeting.
At the meeting, Southern Mongolian
representative Enghebatu Togochog brought to the attention of
the representatives the case of “Ecological Migration” and
“Total Ban over Livestock Grazing” in Southern Mongolia. He said
to the representatives that the Chinese authorities have been
carrying out a coercive displacement policy called the
“Ecological Migration” which aims to displace the entire
Mongolian herding and semi-herding population from their
ancestral grazing lands to overwhelmingly Chinese populated
urban and agricultural areas. In his comment, he also mentioned
that the Chinese government is implementing another equally
egregious policy --- the “Total Ban over Livestock Grazing” in
Southern Mongolia.
Under recommendations by Enghebatu Toghochog
and Ms. Asmita, representative from India, the meeting adopted
the topic of “displacement” of indigenous people from their land
under the conservation and development as one of the focal
points of the work-plan that will be carried out in the next few
years. |