Indigenous leaders at UN forum push for climate ruling enforcement

Indigenous leaders and advocates gathered at the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues this week to address how to enforce international court rulings on climate action. They highlighted gaps between legal decisions and government compliance, particularly affecting vulnerable communities. Speakers urged using these rulings as tools to protect Indigenous lands and rights.

At the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, which convened this week, hundreds of advocates heard calls to leverage recent international court opinions for climate accountability. Luisa Castañeda-Quintana, executive director of Land is Life, told the forum on Monday: “This is a moment of opportunity. These advisory opinions are not symbolic, they are instruments of power.” She emphasized integrating them into advocacy at every level to safeguard Indigenous futures. Last year, the International Court of Justice issued an advisory opinion holding states accountable for climate harm, especially to small island states. The Inter-American Court on Human Rights made a similar ruling last summer, mandating fossil fuel reductions and inclusion of Indigenous knowledge in policies. Despite these decisions, enforcement remains elusive. In Ecuador, where the constitution has recognized nature's rights since 2008, Magaly Ruiz Cajas of the Judiciary Council stated: “In Ecuador, green justice is not an option, it is an obligation.” Yet Juan Bay, president of the Waorani Nation, accused the government of noncompliance with laws protecting isolated Indigenous peoples near oil wells. Ecuador's February mining law further weakened environmental safeguards amid ongoing persecution of land defenders. UN special rapporteur Albert Kwokwo Barume noted a regional paradox in Latin America: strong legal frameworks undermined by poor implementation. Vanuatu's UN resolution to operationalize the ICJ ruling, seeking fossil fuel phaseouts and reparations, faced opposition from the Trump administration, which deemed it a “charade.” The General Assembly vote is delayed until May. Speakers from Canada and New Zealand, including Ryan Fleming of Attawapiskat First Nation and Janell Dymus-Kurei of Te Whakatōhea, decried local climate impacts and underuse of global mechanisms.

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Protesters outside Argentine Congress rally against glacier law reform as lawmakers debate inside.
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Argentine lower house debates glacier law reform amid protests

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Argentina's lower house began debating the glacier law reform on Wednesday, securing quorum with 129 lawmakers from the ruling bloc and allies. The bill, already half-approved by the Senate, lets provinces decide activities on glaciers, drawing sharp criticism from opposition and environmentalists. Protesters gathered outside Congress against the measure.

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.

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An overwhelming majority of United Nations members voted on Wednesday to endorse a landmark advisory opinion from the International Court of Justice on climate change responsibilities. The resolution signals broad political support for holding countries accountable for failing to address global warming. More than 140 nations backed the measure while eight voted against it.

A new study published earlier this month in Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems has uncovered a gap between advocacy and empirical evidence for scaling indigenous farming systems to counter climate change impacts on agriculture. Researchers led by Kamaljit Sangha at Charles Darwin University reviewed 49 articles on practices by Indigenous peoples and local communities, or IPLCs. The findings highlight benefits like soil protection and biodiversity support, but call for more data on productivity and economic value.

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Argentina's Chamber of Deputies approved a reform to the Glaciers Law early Thursday by 137 votes in favor, 111 against, and 3 abstentions. The change allows extractive activities like mining in previously protected areas, sparking backlash from environmentalists and citizens. Over 300,000 people joined a collective unconstitutionality lawsuit, and La Pampa's governor filed a judicial injunction.

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