Steel gets greener, South Africa protects endangered penguins

An international court weighed in for the first time on whether a government protected the rights of uncontacted peoples

Some 10,000 people worldwide live in Indigenous groups that voluntarily have little to no contact with the outside world. In March, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights ordered Ecuador to prevent third parties from entering uncontacted peoples’ lands.

The court found that Ecuador violated the rights of the Tagaeri, Taromenane, and Dugakaeri peoples by allowing oil drilling inside Yasuní National Park, where some members of those groups live. Ecuador must also honor a 2023 referendum in which voters chose to halt oil production in the northeastern region, the court said.

Why We Wrote This

Separation is not a quality associated with the well-being of people in communities. But for Indigenous Ecuadorians who choose to live without contact with others, a court said it is a human right to remain undisturbed. And in South Africa, protections for endangered penguins give them more space.

If a project’s impacts are uncertain, “Effective measures must be adopted to prevent serious or irreversible damage, which in this case would be the contact of these isolated populations,” the judges wrote.
Sources: Inside Climate News, The Atlantic, The Guardian

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