GENEVA (13 October 2021) — In a landmark decision, the UN Human Rights Committee found that Paraguay’s failure to prevent and control the toxic contamination of traditional lands, due to the intensive
use of pesticides by nearby commercial farms, violates the indigenous community’s rights and sense of “home”.
This is the Committee’s first decision to affirm that, in the case of indigenous people, the notion of “home” should be
understood within the context of the special relationship between them and their territories including their livestock,
crops and their way of life such as hunting, foraging and fishing.
“For indigenous peoples, their lands represent their home, culture and community. Serious environmental damages have
severe impacts on indigenous people’s family life, tradition, identity and even lead to the disappearance of their
community. It dramatically harms the existence of the culture of the group as a whole,” said Committee member Hélène
Tigroudja.
The Committee’s decision follows a complaint filed by the elected community leader and a teacher at the community school, on behalf of all the
201 Ava Guarani people of the Campo Agua’e indigenous community in the country’s eastern district of Curuguaty.
The Campo Agua’e indigenous community lives in an area closely surrounded by large commercial farms that use fumigation,
a process that utilizes chemical smoke to kill pests, to produce genetically modified soybeans. The fumigation,
including the use of banned agrochemicals continuously for more than ten years in the area, had killed indigenous
community’ chickens and ducks, affected subsistence crops and fruit trees, impacted hunting, fishing and foraging
resources, contaminated the waterways and harmed people’s health.
The environmental damage also had severe intangible repercussions. The disappearance of the natural resources needed for
hunting, fishing, woodland foraging and Guarani agro-ecology, led to the loss of traditional knowledge. The ceremonial
aspects of baptism (mitãkarai) are no longer practised as the materials from the forest necessary to build the dance
houses (jerokyha) and to make the liquor (kagüi) no longer exist. By halting such ceremonies, children are denied a rite
crucial to strengthening their cultural identity. Most alarmingly, the indigenous community structure is being eroded
and disintegrated as families are forced to leave their land.
After lengthy and unsatisfactory administrative and judicial process in Paraguay, the community brought their case to
the Human Rights Committee.
“More than 12 years after the victims filed their criminal complaint regarding the fumigation with toxic agrochemicals,
to which they have continued to be exposed throughout this period, the investigations have not progressed in any
meaningful way and the State party has not justified the delay,” the Committee said in its decision.
It further found that Paraguay did not adequately monitor the fumigation and failed to prevent contamination. “This
failure in its duty to provide protection made it possible for the large-scale, illegal fumigation to continue for many
years, destroying all components of the indigenous people’ family life and home,” it added.
The Committee recommended that Paraguay complete the criminal and administrative proceedings against all the parties
responsible, make full reparation to the victims, take all necessary measures, in close consultation with the community,
to repair the environmental damage, and take steps to prevent similar violations from occurring in the future.