Māori Climate Commissioner celebrates UN Conference progress
Māori Climate Commissioner, Donna Awatere Huata, is hailing the inclusion of indigenous people at the current UN Climate Conference in Poland as a successful first step at putting indigenous people and their experiences at the forefront of the climate change debate.
"The Local Communities and Indigenous Peoples Platform panel session at this years Climate conference is vital if we are to put First Nation voices at the centre of the climate debate."
"Indigenous peoples are amongst the poorest in most countries and it is the poor who will bear the brunt of climate change. This need to include indigenous people in decision making is an ethical and moral demand."
The three functions of
the Platform for indigenous peoples are:
• The exchange
of knowledge
• The capacity building for engagement in
the UNFCCC process and with the Platform
• The
integration of knowledge systems, practices and innovations
in climate change policies and actions, internationally and
nationally.
"We have much work to be done, but New Zealand needs to lead in these functions by giving broader scope for Māori involvement in decision making processes if engagement to be meaningful".