UN indigenous forum faces budget crisis amid effectiveness questions

The U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues concluded its annual meeting last week with urgent recommendations on climate action and land rights, even as it grapples with severe funding shortfalls and doubts over its influence. The two-week gathering in New York highlighted ongoing challenges for the 25-year-old body, which advises the U.N. and member states on Indigenous issues. A new internal assessment underscored the gap between its recommendations and actual implementation by governments.

Forum chairperson Aluki Kotierk, who is Inuk from Canada, closed the session on Friday by stressing the immediate human rights impacts of climate change on Indigenous communities. Delegates issued calls for member states to protect Indigenous lands, including those of uncontacted tribes, and to direct funding from global climate mechanisms straight to affected peoples. They also urged governments to consider international court rulings on climate mitigation by 2027 and to treat climate-induced displacement as a health emergency.

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Hundreds of delegates are gathering at the United Nations in New York this week for the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, the world's largest meeting of Indigenous peoples. The forum's theme is ensuring Indigenous health in the context of conflict, addressing war, climate change, AI-driven extraction, and U.S. visa barriers. Experts highlight the interconnectedness of health, land, and sovereignty for Indigenous communities.

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Indigenous communities bear heavy climate impacts but receive almost no global funding to fight them, advocates say. At the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, leaders highlighted barriers in major climate funds. U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres praised them as guardians of nature, yet billions pledged have largely bypassed them.

Die brasilianische Bundesstaatsanwaltschaft (MPF) hat eine Untersuchung zu den Versäumnissen der Regierung Lula bei der Bewältigung des Klimanotstands sowie zu mutmaßlichen Unregelmäßigkeiten bei den Mitteln für die Vorbereitungen zur COP 30 eingeleitet.

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Die 10. jährliche gemeinsame Konferenz der Afrikanischen Union und der Vereinten Nationen ist in Addis Abeba mit einer gemeinsamen Erklärung aus 26 Punkten zu Ende gegangen.

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