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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!sgigate!sgi!cdp!jagdish
- From: jagdish@igc.apc.org (Jagdish Parikh)
- Newsgroups: alt.native
- Subject: Asian Indigenous Women's Conf
- Message-ID: <1308200103@igc.apc.org>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 04:01:00 GMT
- Sender: Notesfile to Usenet Gateway <notes@igc.apc.org>
- Lines: 83
- Nf-ID: #N:cdp:1308200103:000:3660
- Nf-From: cdp.UUCP!jagdish Jan 25 20:01:00 1993
-
-
- From: Jagdish Parikh <jagdish>
- Subject: Asian Indigenous Women's Conf
-
- Subject: First Asian Indigenous Women's Conference
-
- --------------
- A First INDIGENOUS WOMEN'S CONFAB SLATED
-
- BAGUIO CITY -- Indigenous women from 19 countries are
- converging here for the "First Asian Indigenous Women's
- Conference" to be held January 24-30.
-
- The Conference is the first to be held for Asia's 150
- million indigenous population. It opens venues for women's
- voices to be heard during the UN- proclaimed International
- Year for the World's Indigenous Peoples, said Victoria
- Corpuz. Corpuz heads the non-government Cordillera Women's
- Education and Resource Center (CWERC), main host of the
- conference.
-
- Indigenous women up to this day play vital roles in ensuring
- the survival of indigenous peoples, cultures and biodiversity.
- "Indigenous women are the main food producers in subsistence
- economies which persist in many indigenous people's communities,"
- organizers said in a statement.
-
- "Their reproductive roles of bearing and rearing the
- future generation are done amid poverty and dire lack of
- health and social services," the statement added.
-
- Despite all the odds, indigenous women have proved to
- be "capable resource managers and environment protectors."
-
- The participants are also expected to dissect the impact
- on women of indigenous traditions and culture, fundamentalist
- religions, transnational corporations such as those in
- logging and mining, militarism and state violence, official
- development aid, foreign debt, media and the educational
- ssystem.
-
- Reproductive health and sexuality of indigenous women
- shall also be reviewed.
-
- Issues to be tackled in the conference include brideprice,
- dowry deaths and arranged marriages in India; population
- control and forced mass sterilization in Bangladesh;
- transmigration in West Papua; logging and deforestation in
- Sarawak and Sabah; continuing militarization in the
- Philippines; dams in India and sexual trafficking in Thailand.
-
- The weeklong conference is itself a crash course on feminism
- as it aims to trace how "neocolonialism" brought with it what the
- conference organizers call "patriarchal" (male-dominated)
- political and economic growth models which, they say, further
- "marginalized" indigenous women.
-
- The conference is also a culture-filled affair. How
- culture and indigenous women helped maintain "people's
- strength and dignity" shall be carefully studied as one of
- the bases for an alternative development model that is more
- sustainable and earthfriendly.
-
- Participants are expected to come out with an "Asian
- Indigenous Women's Declaration of Unity" to be forwarded to the
- United Nations. Participants hope the declaration will influence
- policies of various Asian governments.
-
- The conference will gather 200 indigenous women from the
- Philippines, Malaysia, Indonesia (particularly West Papua and
- East Timor which are seeking independence), Burma, Thailand,
- India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, Pakistan, China
- Mongolia, Tibet, Vietnam, Laos, Kampuchea, Japan and Taiwan.
- Their issues rarely heard, women from these countries will seek
- to "gather strength from each other," said an organizing
- official.
-
- The Baguio Conference is a postlude to the 1985 Nairobi
- Conference and a prelude to the Fourth World Conference on
- Women to be held in Beijing, China in 1995, which closes the
- UN-declared Decade for Women that began in 1985.#
-
- (Maurice B. Malanes) Philippinre News & Features
-