Survival International in their report, “Progress can Kill”,
exposes the devastating consequences of loss of land and autonomy on tribal
peoples. As well as the shockingly high suicide rates among tribes, it also
reveals high rates of alcoholism, obesity, depression and other health
problems.reveals that the appalling suicide rate among the indigenous Guarani
Kaiowá people of southern Brazil is the highest in the world. The rate of
self-inflicted deaths within the tribe is 34 times the Brazilian national
average, and statistically the highest among any society anywhere on earth.
Suicide rates among many other indigenous peoples such as Aboriginal
Australians and Native Americans in Alaska also remain exceptionally high. This
can be viewed as the inevitable result of the historical and continuing theft of
their land and of "development” being forced upon them. Other striking
statistics include the sky-rocketing rates of HIV infection in West Papua,
which increased from almost no cases in 2000 to over 10,000 by 2015, and the
rate of infant mortality among Aboriginal Australians – twice that in wider
Australian society. In large parts of the world, poor nutrition continues to
cause further problems, such as malnutrition for Guarani children, who are
forced to live on roadsides, and obesity for many Native Americans, for whom
junk food is the only viable option.
Roy Sesana of the Botswana Bushmen, forcibly evicted from
their land in 2002, said: “What kind of development is this when the people
lead shorter lives than before? They catch HIV/AIDS. Our children are beaten in
school and won’t go. Some become prostitutes. We are not allowed to hunt. They
fight because they are bored and get drunk. They are starting to commit
suicide. We never saw this before. Is this “development”?”
Olimpio, of the Guajajara tribe in the Brazilian Amazon,
said: “We are against the type of development the government is proposing. I
think some non-Indians’ idea of “progress” is crazy! They come with these
aggressive ideas of progress and impose them on us, human beings, especially on
indigenous peoples who are the most oppressed of all. For us, this is not progress
at all.”
All of these statistics demonstrate the fatal consequences
of forcing change on tribal societies in the name of “progress” and
“development”. In many cases, tribes have been forced to move away from
abundant and sustainable food sources and a sure source of identity in favour
of poverty and marginalization on the fringes of mainstream society. Tragic
repercussions of such forced change can continue even several generations down
the line.
Around the world, tribes continue to fight for the recognition
of their right to live on their lands in peace. Where this right has been
respected or restored, tribes flourish. For example after the creation of an
indigenous reserve in the northern Amazon in 1992, medical teams worked with
tribal shamans and together they halved the mortality rate among the Yanomami
Indians. Likewise, the Jarawa in India live on their ancestral lands and enjoy
what has been called a “life of opulence”. Nutritionists rate their diet as
“optimum”.
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