The Philippine Indigenous and Community Conserved Area’s (ICCA) initiative has a new feather in its cap, and that too of the magnificent Philippine Eagle, no less. Symbolically speaking, that is! The ICCA with its local partners in the Mindanao Island of the Philippines launched its latest site at Mt. Apo, the stunningly beautiful habitat of the rare Philippines Eagle. The Manolo indigenous peoples around Mt. Apo have a long history of reverence for the eagles as well as a cultural self-identity built over generations sharing the same habitat. The eagle symbolizes the traits that Manobo people admire in a leader – fearlessness, self-sacrifice, and foresight. The raptor’s presence also provides the necessary basis for identifying and designating sacred and community-protected habitat within the Manolo people’s ancestral home.

The new initiative in Mindanao underlines the strong confidence that ICCA has in bringing ecological development and protection back into the people’s hands as they address the overlap of ancestral lands and portions of their territory declared as National Park. As Giovanni Reyes, the ICCA steering committee member from Philippines, said in a recent communication, “had this project been implemented only by a government agency alone and under a state of war in Mindanao, it would have been “called off”, given the low priority for projects involving indigenous people.” He also emphasized how far ahead indigenous peoples are in comparison to state policy in terms of understanding nature and its role in people’s lives. “The Philippine state”, according to Reyes, “is only 115 years old, its National Integrated Protected Area System (NIPAS Act of 1992) is only 25 years old, the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA Law of 1997) is only 20 years old while indigenous peoples’ culture-based conservation practices go back four centuries.” And, that traditional wisdom is showing the way to harmonious co-existence with nature in the Mt. Apo region.

Click here to read the original article on radicalecologicaldemocracy.org

Alert: Indigenous Tumandok demand a halt to violence against them and their ancestral domain in the Philippines

The Indigenous Tumandok people have a rich culture that is rooted in their ancestral domain along and within the Jalaur and Pan-ay Rivers in Central Panay, Philippines. They have faced several threats to their lives and territory, particularly surrounding the proposed construction of the Jalaur River Multi-Purpose Project, a USD 200 million project financed by the Export-Import Bank (Eximbank) of the Republic of Korea. Read more ▸

Exhibition on pastoral territories of life

The exhibition “Territories of life on the edge: Pastoral Commons of the Mediterranean Mountains in the 21st-century” highlights bio-cultural diversity within a shared space, the resilience of communities, the threats they face, and conservation challenges in Euro-Mediterranean pastoral territories of life. Read more ▸

Preparing for the 17th General Assembly (online)

The 17th General Assembly of the ICCA Consortium will be convened virtually from 8-10 June 2021 from13:00-15:30 UTC each day, with additional dates (11-12 June 2021) for online social events. Participants are kindly requested to register using the link provided to all Members and Honorary members via email. Read more ▸

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