All roads led to General Nakar, Quezon, Philippines when the honey processing center and buying station was officially opened last October 14!

The 24-square meter honey processing center was constructed inside the compound of the Sentrong Paaralan ng mga Agta (SPA) or the Dumagat-Agta tribal school in Barangay Catablingan, General Nakar, Quezon Province, in the heart of the Sierra Madre mountain range.

The event gathered around 200 Dumagat-Agtas from 32 communities, NGO support groups, and government agencies. The honey processing center is one of the support projects to the enterprise development component of the Community Carbon Pool Project (C2P2) by NTFP-Task Force together with the Fauna and Flora International-Philippines and the Tribal Center for Development with funding support from the Team Energy Foundation Inc. (TEFI).

Aside from the opening and blessing of the honey processing center, solar panels were also installed by TEFI to jumpstart the processing of honey. There were also books donated for the school library and vitamins and medicines for the students.

Also in attendance were National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) Commisioner Conchita Calzado who hailed from General Nakar and a Dumagat-Agta herself, and NCIP Provincial Office OIC Benedict Maloles.

The honey processing center will be managed by KOMOT, the enterprise group under SAGIBIN-LN, the IP partner-organization of C2P2. Aside from honey, the group is also starting to focus on processing other food products such as the wild pili nuts (locally known as pilaway) as there is an abundance of these nuts in the area.

All the NGO support groups are hopeful and positive that this will be the start of a sweet and enterprising journey for the Dumagat-Agtas of Quezon!

Manila, PHILIPPINES – More than a hundred indigenous peoples, coming from different tribes from Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao, have gathered last October 13 at the National Museum in Manila in the first ever national Indigenous Peoples Cultural Summit.

The summit, organized by Senator Loren Legarda, Chair of the Senate Committee on Cultural Communities, was the culminating event of the three regional assemblies that brought to light the different concerns that various indigenous cultural communities (ICCs) in the three major regions of the Philippines would want the government to address.

The regional assemblies brought out the common concerns of the indigenous peoples’ rights to ancestral lands and domains, self-determination, governance, human rights and social justice.

A presentation on the Convention No. 169 of the International Labor organization vis-à-vis the Philippine Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA) was given, as well as the flagship projects for indigenous peoples by the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples.

Convention No.169 is a legally binding international instrument open to ratification, which deals specifically with the rights of indigenous and tribal peoples. The Philippines has not ratified Convention No. 169 and there were once again calls from the summit participants for the Philippine government to ratify said convention.

Dr. Bernd Liss of GIZ and Forester Marlea Muñez of CoDe REDD shared REDD Plus initiatives in the Philippines, with particular focus on its implications to IPs. This includes improved environmental services, income and livelihood, carbon credits, security of tenure, stabilization of rural areas and rural development.

Indigenous peoples’ conservation territories and areas conserved by indigenous peoples and local communities (ICCAs): status, prospects, options and opportunities in Indonesia (short title:ICCAs in Indonesia)

Purpose
This meeting is being called to explore the concept, practice, limitations and opportunities of ICCAs in Indonesia, and– if appropriate– provide initial stimulus and support to a broad alliance of organizations and people willing to engage in appropriate follow-up activities.

Co-sponsoring organizations (alphabetical order, main sponsors only)
Forests Peoples Programme (FPP); ICCA Consortium; People’s Coalition for Fisheries Justice (KIARA); Non-Timber Forest Products Exchange Programme for South and South-East Asia (NTFP-EP); WWF Indonesia.

Summary
ICCAs are a widespread reality throughout the world. They are also a strongly emerging concept for the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and numerous national policies on sustainable livelihoods, human and indigenous rights and conservation of nature. In the eve of recent affirmation by the Indonesian government to “recognize, respect and protect Adatrights” and in the occasion of the General Assembly of the ICCA Consortium in Indonesia, foreseen in October 2011, a national Symposium has been called to explore whether and how ICCAs are– in concept and practice— applicable to the specific case of Indonesia. If they are, the Symposium will explore theirlimitations and opportunities and ways to appropriately recognize them and support them to deliver their livelihoods, rights and nature conservation benefits.

Expected outputs
Broad common understanding of the meaning, practices and legal context of ICCAs in Indonesia
Joint strategic posture of diverse Indonesian organizations on the value, limitations and opportunities of embracing an ICCA-related agenda
As appropriate, follow-up initiatives identified, in particular policy-oriented initiatives and site-based analyses of prospects and needs (the ICCA Consortium, other co-sponsoring organizations and GEF SGP are ready to support such initiatives in the months to follow)
As appropriate, initial discussion of ICCA documentation in Indonesia and preliminary identification of possible ICCA cases to be illustrated at forthcoming international events in 2012 (Rio +20, World Conservation Congress, etc.).

Background
Throughout the world, indigenous peoples and local communities relate to nature, use natural resources for their livelihoods and perceive them as essential in their lives. Nature intertwines with their knowledge, practices and spiritual and material values and is closely related to their customary and legal rights over land, water and natural resources and culture. Despite the enormous global importance of state-property and private property, communal ownership and control (and/or community-based decisions and action) still encompass a vital proportion of the land and water bodies significant for global biological and cultural diversity. In fact, a close association is often found between a specific indigenous people or local community and a specific territory, area or body of natural resources. When such association is combined with de facto local governance and conservation of biological and cultural diversity, it has now become usual to speak of “ICCAs”.1
ICCAs include cases of continuation, revival or modification of traditional practices, many of which are of ancient origin. They also include new initiatives, such as restoration and innovative uses of natural resources taken up in the face of new threats or opportunities. Some ICCAs conserve ecosystems that have had minimum human influence, while others manage various kinds of regulated uses in small to large stretches of agricultural, pastoral and hunting and gathering lands, as well as forests, wetlands, mountain, coastal and marine areas. Many ICCAs are Sacred Natural Sites. Equally impressive is the diversity of traditional and modern institutions and rules that govern ICCAs, and the variety of their motivations and objectives. Such diversity, designed through time to fit specific ecological and social situations, is ICCAs’ true wealth but also contributes to their vulnerability, as some state governments are not comfortable dealing with unique institutions that may not fit the country’s legislative and procedural requirements.
ICCAs have not had an easy relationship with modern state agencies. In recent history they were often neglected when not forcibly assimilated into protected areas or development initiatives (tourism, extractive industries, infrastructures…) developed by the state and/ or the private sector. Rarely the institutions governing ICCAs have been appropriately recognised and supported. More often, they have been treated as invisible, disrespected or damaged, with the consequence that many ICCAs have today ceased to exist and provide benefits, or are under severe impending threats.
Local governance institutions, tenure security and self-determination regarding land, natural resources and culture are crucial for the survival of ICCAs as they are for advocates of indigenous peoples’ and local communities’ rights. As a matter of fact some assert that full recognition and support of ICCAs is one of the most powerful and direct ways of implementing the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP).2Some indigenous peoples have started using the concept to affirm their governance capacities and rights even for lands and natural resources currently encompassed into state protected areas. They stress that such areas were, and some still are, de facto ICCAs, and they can effectively govern them with common benefits for themselves and all other national stakeholders.3
The world of conservation began to take serious notice of ICCAs at the World Parks Congress of Durban, in 2003. ICCAs were then defined by the World Conservation Union (IUCN) as “natural and/or modified ecosystems, containing significant biodiversity values, ecological benefits and cultural values, voluntarily conserved by indigenous peoples and local communities, both sedentary and mobile, through customary laws or other effective means”.4 Today, ICCAs are fully embraced by both IUCN and the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) as one of the four main governance types for protected areas,5 to be autonomously governed by indigenous peoples and local communities and properly supported as part of the legal obligations of all 193 CBD countries that are parties to the Convention, including Indonesia.
Importantly, neither the CBD nor the IUCN assume that ICCAsshould be recognised as protected areas and/or incorporated in national protected area systems. As a matter of fact, they can be considered as the major component of conservation recognised to take place outside national protected areas systems. They can be recognised as part of the system if the relevant indigenous peoples, local communities and governments so wish, but they can also remain part of “other area-based conservation measures” that concur to the country’s agreed biodiversity targets. 6
Rationale
On the eve of recent affirmation by the Indonesian government that it will prioritize the needs of its forest communities, “recognize, respect and protect Adat [customary] rights” and implement legislation that has rarely been implemented in the past decade, Indonesia seems poised to become one of the most sensitive countries in the world with respect to ICCAs. It is important news that the Indonesian government agreed to work closely with civil society and indigenous groups to develop and implement a new national strategy to grant significant land rights to the people who live in and around the archipelago’s estimated 130 million hectares of forest.7 It is thus appropriate to call, as part of this collective reflection, a meeting to explore whether and how ICCAs are– in concept and practice— applicable to the case of Indonesia. If this is so, we could then also explore what specific limitations and opportunities exist in the country and how ICCAs could be appropriately supported to deliver their livelihood and natureconservation benefits and to strengthen the security of land and resource tenure for the concerned communities and peoples.

A specific occasion for such a meeting presents itself in October 2011, when the ICCA Consortium (www.iccaforum.org ) will hold its General Assembly and Coordinators’ retreat in Indonesia.The ICCA Consortium encompasses a diverse group of organizational Members from around the world working at the local, national, regional, and international levels to advocate for and realize appropriate recognition and support for ICCAs. Some representatives of Consortium Member organizations are already in Indonesia, but others will travel there in October. Together, they could take time to participate in the Symposium and contribute their extensive experience to the discussion of Indonesia-specific cases and issues.

Structure of the event
The Symposium is foreseen to encompass two full days. Broadly, it is expected that during the first day a variety of case examples of “ICCA-like” situations in Indonesia will be illustrated, as well as a few reports and comments from international participants. During the second day, several working groups will explore in-depth a number of questions, seeking clarity about the extent of the ICCA phenomenon in Indonesia, as well as its characteristics and current key issues and prospects. The results of the working groups will be brought together as conclusions of the Symposium and recommendations for follow-up.

Financial sponsorship
The ICCA Consortium (with funding from The Christensen Fund, UNDP and GIZ) will sponsor most international participants. WWF Indonesia will sponsor several local participants as well as accommodations and meals for all participants. Natural Justice (with funding from Swedbio) will sponsor two international participants. CIFOR has kindly made available its facilities in Bogor at a preferential rate.

Dates
13-14 October 2011 (arrival in Bogor the 12 of October)

Participants
Between forty and eighty participants are expected to attend, most of whom from Indonesia; the ICCA consortium will provide experience also from other Asian countries, Africa, Europe and Latin America.

Location
CIFOR Campus, Bogor, Indonesia

Contacts of key organisers (alphabetical order)
FPP — Maurizio Farhan Ferrari, maurizio@forestpeoples.org
FPP — Emil Kleden kleden.emilola1@gmail.com
GFC — Hubertus Samangun hsamangun@yahoo.com
ICCA Consortium — Grazia Borrini-Feyerabend , gbf@cenesta.org
ICCA Consortium — Vanessa Reid nessiereid@gmail.com
KIARA — Riza Damanik riza.damanik@gmail.com
NTFP-EP — Crissy Guerrero crissyg33@yahoo.com
WWF Indonesia — Cristina Eghenter awing@samarinda.org ;ceghenter@www.or.id
1 The acronym stands for “Indigenous peoples’ conserved territories and areas conserved by indigenous peoples and local communities”. For more information see: Bio-cultural diversity conserved by indigenous peoples and local communities— examples and analysis. and www.iccaforum.org.

2 Stevens, S., “Implementing the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and International Human Rights Law through Recognition of ICCAs”,Policy Matters 17, 2010 (in press).

3 Confederación Mapuche, Del co-manejo a la gobernanza, 2008.

4 Borrini-Feyerabend, G., A. Kothari and G. Oviedo, Indigenous and Local Communities and Protected Areas– Towards Equity and Enhanced Conservation, IUCN Best Practice Protected Area Guidelines Series No. 11, Gland (Switzerland) and Cambridge (UK), 2004.

5 Lausche, B., Guidelines for Protected Areas Legislation. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland. 2011; CBD COP 10 Decision X/31 on Protected areas, 2010; Dudley (ed.), Guidelines for Applying Protected Areas Management Categories, IUCN/ WCPA Best Practices in Protected Areas Series, Gland (Switzerland), 2008.

6 CBD Aichi Target 11, 2010– http://www.cbd.int/sp/targets/

7 http://www.rightsandresources.org/blog.php?id=780

NTFP-EP was given opportunity to address the ASEAN body during the 33rd SOM-AMAF Meeting on October 4, 2011 and presented ‘Civil Society Engagements: Community Forestry Partnerships –Working Towards Building the ASEAN Community’. The presentation highlighted Social Forestry as strategy in developing the ASEAN Forestry Sector.

Key recommendations to the ASEAN members for consideration are:
1) to promote coordination, communication, and joint lessons learning on governance reform in community forestry, forestry resources- NTFP utilization, REDD+ strategy development, institutional processes and implementation,
2) to ensure meaningful forest-community participation in key forest-related policy and decision-making processes at different levels, and to
3) recognize, implement and institutionalise FPIC principles and processes,
4) to accelerate and strengthen the enactment and implementation of community forestry agreements with particular attention to securing tenure for forest-based peoples and support for sustainable NTFP use, development and enterprise for improved local livelihoods,
5) to adopt and implement social, environmental, and governance safeguards in REDD+ initiatives.

NTFP-EP received positive comments from ministerial representatives of Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar and the Philippines. The comments were focused on ‘Promoting coordination, communication & joint lessons learning on: governance reforms in community forestry , forest resources- NTFP utilization, REDD+ strategy development, institutional process design and implementation’.

ü Indonesia Ministry of Forestry representatives expressed interest to work in collaboration with NTFP-EP with upcoming agenda to develop and promote NTFP in Indonesia. They have extended an invitation to NTFP-EP to be part of the International Seminar, Strategy and Challenges on Bamboo and Potential NTFP Management and Utilization on November 23-24, 2011 hosted by the Ministry of Forestry.
ü Malaysia representatives would like to know more about forestry and community livelihood. They look forward to more information sharing particularly on the importance of social forestry to climate change/REDD+ opportunities.
ü Myanmar delegates would like to have collaboration with NTFP-EP and extended invitation for NTFP-EP to be involved on upcoming social forestry activities.
ü Director Neria Andin of the Forest Management Bureau, Philippine representative, noted that the government is working on REDD+ strategy with CSOs. She emphasized that the presentation is about “Community partnerships working towards building the ASEAN communities’ and that the celebration of the international year of the forest is beyond 2011.

Maria Cristina Guerrero, NTFP-EP Executive Director responded that NTFP-EP look forward to closely collaborate with Indonesia, Myanmar and Malaysia especially in Sarawak, Malaysia and the Philippine forestry sector. NTFP-EP would strongly support respective country mandates to promote social forestry and develop NTFP. She especially noted and applauded the Philippine Forest Management Bureau for the amazing way they have allowed the CSOs to be part of the REDD+ process in the Philippines.

In celebration of the International Year of the Forest this 2011, the33rd ASEAN Ministers on Agriculture and Forestry (AMAF) Meeting had a week-long exhibit from October 3-7, 2011 on‘ASEAN Cooperation in Forestry’. The NTFP-EP contributed to the exhibit displaying NTFP products of partner communities in Cambodia (Cando Handicrafts and Community-based Wild Honey Enterprise), Indonesia (Crafts Kalimantan, Borneo Chic), Sarawak, Malaysia (Gerai Orang Asal) and the Philippines (CustomMade Crafts Center). The exhibit also included participation of Ms. Devi Herma of Bina Usaha Ratan (BUR), demonstrating the Pepas Eheng village, East Kalimantan craft and art of rattan basket weaving.