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  • UN tells US to return land

    A United Nations investigator probing discrimination against Native Americans has called on the US government to return some of the land stolen from Indian tribes as a step toward combatting continuing and systemic racial discrimination.

    James Anaya, the UN special rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, said no member of the US Congress would meet him as he investigated the part played by the government in the considerable difficulties faced by Indian tribes.

    Anaya said that in nearly two weeks of visiting Indian reservations, indigenous communities in Alaska and Hawaii, and Native Americans now living in cities, he encountered people who suffered a history of dispossession of their lands and resources, the breakdown of their societies and "numerous instances of outright brutality, all grounded on racial discrimination".

    "It's a racial discrimination that they feel is both systemic and also specific instances of ongoing discrimination that is felt at the individual level," he said.
    Anaya said racism extended from the broad relationship between federal or state governments and tribes down to local issues such as education.

    "For example, with the treatment of children in schools both by their peers and by teachers as well as the educational system itself; the way native Americans and indigenous peoples are reflected in the school curriculum and teaching," he said.

    "And discrimination in the sense of the invisibility of Native Americans in the country overall that often is reflected in the popular media. The idea that is often projected through the mainstream media and among public figures that indigenous peoples are either gone or as a group are insignificant or that they're out to get benefits in terms of handouts, or their communities and cultures are reduced to casinos, which are just flatly wrong."

    Close to a million people live on the US's 310 Native American reservations. Some tribes have done well from a boom in casinos on reservations but most have not.

    Anaya visited an Oglala Sioux reservation where the per capita income is around $7,000 a year, less than one-sixth of the national average, and life expectancy is about 50 years.

    The two Sioux reservations in South Dakota – Rosebud and Pine Ridge – have some of the country's poorest living conditions, including mass unemployment and the highest suicide rate in the western hemisphere with an epidemic of teenagers killing themselves.

    "You can see they're in a somewhat precarious situation in terms of their basic existence and the stability of their communities given that precarious land tenure situation. It's not like they have large fisheries as a resource base to sustain them. In basic economic terms it's a very difficult situation. You have upwards of 70% unemployment on the reservation and all kinds of social ills accompanying that. Very tough conditions," he said.

    Anaya said Rosebud is an example where returning land taken by the US government could improve a tribe's fortunes as well as contribute to a "process of reconciliation".

    "At Rosebud, that's a situation where indigenous people have seen over time encroachment on to their land and they've lost vast territories and there have been clear instances of broken treaty promises. It's undisputed that the Black Hills was guaranteed them by treaty and that treaty was just outright violated by the United States in the 1900s. That has been recognised by the United States supreme court," he said.

    Anaya said he would reserve detailed recommendations on a plan for land restoration until he presents his final report to the UN human rights council in September.

    "I'm talking about restoring to indigenous peoples what obviously they're entitled to and they have a legitimate claim to in a way that is not devisive but restorative. That's the idea behind reconciliation," he said.

    But any such proposal is likely to meet stiff resistance in Congress similar to that which has previously greeted calls for the US government to pay reparations for slavery to African-American communities.

    Anaya said he had received "exemplary cooperation" from the Obama administration but he declined to speculate on why no members of Congress would meet him.

    "I typically meet with members of the national legislature on my country visits and I don't know the reason," he said.

    Last month, the US justice and interior departments announced a $1 billion settlement over nearly 56 million acres of Indian land held in trust by Washington but exploited by commercial interests for timber, farming, mining and other uses with little benefit to the tribes.

    The attorney general, Eric Holder, said the settlement "fairly and honourably resolves historical grievances over the accounting and management of tribal trust funds, trust lands and other non-monetary trust resources that, for far too long, have been a source of conflict between Indian tribes and the United States."

    But Anaya said that was only a step in the right direction.

    "These are important steps but we're talking about mismanagement by the government of assets that were left to indigenous peoples," he said. "This money for the insults on top of the injury. It's not money for the initial problem itself, which is the taking of vast territories. This is very important and I think the administration should be commended for moving forward to settle these claims but there are these deeper issues that need to be addressed."


    UN's correspondent on indigenous peoples urges government to act to combat 'racial discrimination' felt by Native Americans
    I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

  • #2
    fuck the un
    ازدهار رأسه برعشيت

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    • #3
      Originally posted by matts5.0 View Post
      fuck the un
      I agree.

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      • #4
        Obama will heed their advice.
        How do we forget ourselves? How do we forget our minds?

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        • #5
          Give them all of Oklahoma. No one will notice.

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          • #6
            I'm going to guess that you guys aren't all that familiar with the way Indians are/were treated. They've been dealt a real horse fucking from the American Government.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by ThreeFingerPete View Post
              I'm going to guess that you guys aren't all that familiar with the way Indians are/were treated. They've been dealt a real horse fucking from the American Government.
              They get even with their casinos and bingo halls.

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              • #8
                The UN did something like this to a different country almost 70 years ago and it is still a headache for us.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by cyclonescott View Post
                  The UN did something like this to a different country almost 70 years ago and it is still a headache for us.
                  They should have gone all the way with it, not this half-cocked bullshit that keeps the region up in arms to this day. Piss poor execution from day one in 1948.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by ThreeFingerPete View Post
                    I'm going to guess that you guys aren't all that familiar with the way Indians are/were treated. They've been dealt a real horse fucking from the American Government.
                    Adam, you are right. They did.


                    However, so has every other people in history at one point or another.

                    Han Chinese were ruled by the Manchu, Bretons ruled by the Romans, Irish ruled by the British, Byzantines by the Ottomans, etc etc etc

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by ThreeFingerPete View Post
                      I'm going to guess that you guys aren't all that familiar with the way Indians are/were treated. They've been dealt a real horse fucking from the American Government.
                      How they are treated? You mean free higher education if they want to get off their ass and take it, complete medical care, housing, and food that they're given by the government? Plus their right to discriminate against non-tribals in their hiring, reduced taxes, low interest loans available just for them, the ability to have their own tribal liscensing for cars, and ability to ignore local laws? The only ones that have it hard now are the lazy ass moochers that refuse to get an education and improve themselves, and that trust in leadership that keeps the status quo. Argue all you want about it, I'm part Cherokee and lived in the Cherokee capital for 7 years. I've seen the stupidity first hand and have as much sympathy for the tribal mooches as a hillbilly or a hood rat that makes the decision to remain in poverty.

                      Sure in the past some tribes got the shaft, but others got what they were dishing out themselves. The Lakota and Cheyenne were quiet expansionist and had been pushing other tribes off land for centuries. Thats why the Shashone and other tribes aided the US army. But there again, that was the past. If we give land "back" where does it end? We're all living on what was once "tribal" territory. Next the blacks will want reperation for slavery they never knew, wil the gov pay for the farms that got burned by Sherman? Will the Mormons get their land in Missouri, and Illinoise that they were driven off? Will Mexico get the southwest back? Does Spain get Puerto Rico or will that become it's own nation? What about the land we bought? Does the UN want Russia and France to pay the US back since they sold "tribal" land to us? It is only fair after all.

                      I personally think we need to kick the UN out of the country and not have anything else to do with them.

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