Two Offices Focused on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Will Open in Guatemala on July 23, 2021

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Guatemala City: On July 23, 2021 the International Indian Treaty Council will participate in the opening event for two offices in Guatemala, hosted by the Mayan Kaqchikel University in Santo Domingo Xenacoj in the department of Sacatepéquez.   The office of the United Nations Special Rapporteur Jose Francisco Cali Tzay, who began his three-year term on May 1, 2020, will be located at the Maya Kaqchikel University and will provide a base for his work in his home country of Guatemala.  The Special Rapporteur’s primary office will remain at the University of Arizona in Tucson Arizona, USA.

IITC is also pleased to announce that on the same day it will officially reopen its Latin America/Caribbean regional office hosted by IITC’s affiliate CONAVIGUA (the National Coordination of Indigenous Widows of Guatemala) in Guatemala City, focused on human rights advocacy.  It will also provide capacity building, training and technical assistance to assist Indigenous Peoples and organizations to present submissions and urgent action filings to human rights mechanisms including the UN Special Rapporteurs on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights Defenders, and Treaty bodies such as the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and the Committee on the Rights of the Child.

The IITC Guatemala Office will coordinate and collaborate with the office of Special Rapporteur Cali Tzay, and provide support for his work upon request.

The events at the Mayan University will take place over two days.  On July 23rd the IITC, the Mayan University and the office of the Special Rapporteur will host a capacity building and training workshop for Indigenous organizations, attorneys and educational institutions.  The inaugural event for the two offices will take place on July 23rd, with participation of Indigenous leaders, Mayan authorities, dignitaries and national and municipal officials, as well as spiritual ceremonies to bring blessings and unity for the work ahead.  Both events will be webcast in Guatemala.

IITC operated an office in Guatemala from 1993 to 2002. During this period, important results were achieved in the areas of food sovereignty, education and training on Indigenous Peoples’ Rights, cooperation among Indigenous Peoples and organizations of Latin America, and increased participation of Indigenous Peoples of the region in the drafting of the UN and OAS Declarations on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.  The IITC office was hosted by Defensoria Maya in Guatemala City and its then-Director Juan Leon Alvarado, Maya K’iche, served as IITC’s  Office Coordinator.  Juan is returning to his position as IITC’s Guatemala Office Coordinator after serving for several years as Guatemala’s Ambassador to Norway, Cuba, Ecuador and the Organization of American States where he chaired the OAS working group for development of the America Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

IITC President Ronald Lameman, Beaver Lake Cree Nation, represents over 240 Indigenous Nations that are members of Treaties 1-11 in Canada on IITC’s Board of Directors.  He will attend and present at the events organized to inaugurate the IITC and Special Rapporteur’s offices along with IITC Executive Director Andrea Carmen and other IITC representatives from in and outside Guatemala.   Ron affirmed the importance of these events and the reopening of IITC’s Guatemala office: “IITC remains committed to defend the rights of Indigenous Peoples in Guatemala, Central America and around the world.  We look forward to working with our affiliates and other Indigenous organizations in Guatemala as well as UN Special Rapporteur to strengthen our collective voices for the well-being and survival of our Peoples.”

IITC also maintains offices in San Francisco California and Tucson Arizona in the United States.

 

For additional information regarding these events or the work of IITC’s Guatemala office, contact IITC’s Guatemala Office Coordinator  Juan León Alvarado at +502-42102584,  or email  to: [email protected].

To contact the UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, email to: [email protected] or [email protected]

 

The International Indian Treaty Council (IITC) is an organization of Indigenous Peoples from North, Central, South America, the Caribbean and the Pacific working for the Sovereignty and Self Determination of Indigenous Peoples and the recognition and protection of Indigenous Rights, Treaties, Traditional Cultures and Sacred Lands.

Two Offices Focused on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Will Open in Guatemala on July 23, 2021

 

Guatemala City: On July 23, 2021 the International Indian Treaty Council will participate in the opening event for two offices in Guatemala, hosted by the Mayan Kaqchikel University in Santo Domingo Xenacoj in the department of Sacatepéquez.   The office of the United Nations Special Rapporteur Jose Francisco Cali Tzay, who began his three-year term on May 1, 2020, will be located at the Maya Kaqchikel University and will provide a base for his work in his home country of Guatemala.  The Special Rapporteur’s primary office will remain at the University of Arizona in Tucson Arizona, USA.

IITC is also pleased to announce that on the same day it will officially reopen its Latin America/Caribbean regional office hosted by IITC’s affiliate CONAVIGUA (the National Coordination of Indigenous Widows of Guatemala) in Guatemala City, focused on human rights advocacy.  It will also provide capacity building, training and technical assistance to assist Indigenous Peoples and organizations to present submissions and urgent action filings to human rights mechanisms including the UN Special Rapporteurs on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights Defenders, and Treaty bodies such as the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and the Committee on the Rights of the Child.

The IITC Guatemala Office will coordinate and collaborate with the office of Special Rapporteur Cali Tzay, and provide support for his work upon request.

The events at the Mayan University will take place over two days.  On July 23rd the IITC, the Mayan University and the office of the Special Rapporteur will host a capacity building and training workshop for Indigenous organizations, attorneys and educational institutions.  The inaugural event for the two offices will take place on July 23rd, with participation of Indigenous leaders, Mayan authorities, dignitaries and national and municipal officials, as well as spiritual ceremonies to bring blessings and unity for the work ahead.  Both events will be webcast in Guatemala.

IITC operated an office in Guatemala from 1993 to 2002. During this period, important results were achieved in the areas of food sovereignty, education and training on Indigenous Peoples’ Rights, cooperation among Indigenous Peoples and organizations of Latin America, and increased participation of Indigenous Peoples of the region in the drafting of the UN and OAS Declarations on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.  The IITC office was hosted by Defensoria Maya in Guatemala City and its then-Director Juan Leon Alvarado, Maya K’iche, served as IITC’s  Office Coordinator.  Juan is returning to his position as IITC’s Guatemala Office Coordinator after serving for several years as Guatemala’s Ambassador to Norway, Cuba, Ecuador and the Organization of American States where he chaired the OAS working group for development of the America Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

IITC President Ronald Lameman, Beaver Lake Cree Nation, represents over 240 Indigenous Nations that are members of Treaties 1-11 in Canada on IITC’s Board of Directors.  He will attend and present at the events organized to inaugurate the IITC and Special Rapporteur’s offices along with IITC Executive Director Andrea Carmen and other IITC representatives from in and outside Guatemala.   Ron affirmed the importance of these events and the reopening of IITC’s Guatemala office: “IITC remains committed to defend the rights of Indigenous Peoples in Guatemala, Central America and around the world.  We look forward to working with our affiliates and other Indigenous organizations in Guatemala as well as UN Special Rapporteur to strengthen our collective voices for the well-being and survival of our Peoples.”

IITC also maintains offices in San Francisco California and Tucson Arizona in the United States.

 

For additional information regarding these events or the work of IITC’s Guatemala office, contact IITC’s Guatemala Office Coordinator  Juan León Alvarado at +502-42102584,  or email  to: [email protected].

To contact the UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, email to: [email protected] or [email protected]

 

The International Indian Treaty Council (IITC) is an organization of Indigenous Peoples from North, Central, South America, the Caribbean and the Pacific working for the Sovereignty and Self Determination of Indigenous Peoples and the recognition and protection of Indigenous Rights, Treaties, Traditional Cultures and Sacred Lands.

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