"The already-critical situation for many indigenous peoples, who face entrenched inequalities, stigmatization and discrimination, including poor access to health care and other essential services, is exacerbated by the pandemic. It presents particular existential and cultural threats to indigenous peoples, and indigenous elders and indigenous peoples in voluntary isolation are especially vulnerable."
-- From the UN SG Policy brief on COVID-19 and Human Rights: We are all in this together.
UNESCO, as part of the UN family, has contributed to the UN Interagency Support Group communiqué on the pandemic and indigenous peoples. At the same time, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) has released guidelines on the human rights of indigenous peoples during the pandemic.
You are invited to read through the different stories in this newsletter which elaborate actions by UNESCO across the world and with our indigenous partner organizations. Each crisis offers an opportunity for learning and integrating new strategies into our progress in ensuring the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals and UNESCO’s unique objectives and mandate. During such a major crisis, it is a time to re-imagine our ways of living together, in harmony with nature and with each other. This newsletter is a contribution to the ideas for us to build back better.
More information:
- Indigenous Peoples
- UNESCO Indigenous Peoples Bulletin Issue 1: Indigenous Peoples and the COVID-19 pandemic (August 2020)
URL:
https://en.unesco.org/news/indigenous-peoples-and-covid-19-pandemic-global-overview