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.
Delegates face a hostile global landscape as they convene for the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII). The event, running this week, centers on the theme “Ensuring Indigenous peoples’ health, including in the context of conflict.” Speakers emphasize that Indigenous health inequities stem from colonialism, climate change, armed conflicts, and militarization, which threaten lands and ecosystems. Health, they argue, cannot be isolated from environment, land rights, and sovereignty, reported experts including Geoffrey Roth, a Standing Rock Sioux descendant and former UNPFII vice chair. Roth, board chair of the Indigenous Determinants of Health Alliance, stated, “You can’t separate human health from the health of the environment, or our culture, or our language.” His report outlines determinants like land tenure and governance to combat dispossession and exclusion from decision-making. The Coquille Indian Tribe in Oregon has adopted these principles, incorporating traditional activities like elder fishing trips to boost mental and physical well-being. Additional concerns include AI's risks of digital extractivism, scraping cultural data without consent, as warned by former UNPFII chair Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim from Chad. Lydia Jennings of Dartmouth College, from the Pascua Yaqui Tribe and Huichol, advocates for Indigenous data sovereignty after discovering a mining firm misusing cultural data. Visa denials under the Trump administration hinder Global South participation, with Mariana Kiimi Ortiz Flores of Cultural Survival noting denials for African and South American representatives. Climate impacts restrict nomadic mobility, as Samante Anne of Kenya's Maasai explained: “Mobility has everything to do with us adapting to climate change.” Advocates also decry the U.N.'s grouping of Indigenous peoples with “local communities” as IPLCs, diluting distinct rights, per a 2023 joint statement from top U.N. Indigenous bodies.