Protecting 470,000 Acres in Panama

We are helping the Wounaan people of Panama secure their rights to 470,000 acres of their ancestral lands.
Location: Panama
Partner: Foundation for the Development of the Wounaan People
Project description
Why this project is important: Panama recently passed a law that will allow indigenous groups to claim collective lands, which has long been a demand of the indigenous movement. The Wounaan will be among the first indigenous groups to gain formal control of their lands through this new law, establishing a model for other indigenous communities in the country. We see this as a critical opportunity for advancing indigenous rights, as well as environmental protection in the biologically important Darién region.
Background: The Wounaan number some 8,000 people living in communities spread throughout eastern Panama, including the Darién - the largest remaining stretch of tropical forest in the country. Twelve Wounaan communities, numbering about 7,000 people and covering some 470,000 acres, have never held formal legal title to their lands. Some have been invaded by outsiders, who have cleared the forest for cattle-raising, agriculture, and other development projects. Despite these threats, the lands claimed by the communities include significant swaths of largely untouched rainforest, some of the most intact mangrove and lowland forest ecosystems in Panama, and ecologically important rivers and estuaries.
In response to pressure from indigenous groups, in late 2008 the Panamanian Congress passed a law to facilitate the demarcation of collective indigenous lands. A law setting out all the steps necessary for recognition of collective lands was passed in 2010. This is exactly what the Wounaan were waiting for, and they have since completed nearly all the steps needed for three communities to have their lands protected, and begun laying the groundwork for others.
Recently the government promised to give titles to the first two Wounaan collective lands in March 2012, and an additional two more by the end of 2012.
What we’re doing: Over the next few years, RF-US is working with the Wounaan to gain recognition of all 12 communities. This includes legal work, community meetings, gathering necessary documents, and subsequent negotiations with the government. As a result, we hope to secure nearly 500,000 acres of tropical forest, to be owned and managed by the Wounaan, who call the area home.
Did you know?
•More than a third of Panama is comprised of indigenous lands and territories.
•More than 60% of the rainforests of Panama are in indigenous lands.
•Panama is home to seven indigenous peoples: the Bribri, Bugle, Emberá, Kuna, Naso (or Teribe), Ngobe, and Wounaan, comprising approximately 6% of the total population.
•The Panamanian Constitution states that it “guarantees to its indigenous communities the reservation of necessary lands and collective property of the same to achieve their social and economic well-being.”
•Five semi-autonomous indigenous areas, known as comarcas, exist in Panama, though dozens of areas still remain unrecognized.These comarcas comprised of about 22.4 % of the country, a total area of 1.6 million hectares (almost 4 million acres).
•In 2008, the UN Human Rights Committee recommended that Panama “recognize the rights of indigenous communities that live outside the comarcas, including the right to collective use of their ancestral lands.”
•New legislation recognizing collective indigenous lands was passed in December 2008, and enabling legislation was passed in June 2010.
News
February 1, 2012
Wounaan community in a standoff with loggers in Panama
November 22, 2011
Good news for indigenous peoples of Panama
Last week the Wounaan along with the Emberá of Panama blocked the Pan-American Highway in eastern Panama. The two groups were protesting against the unfulfilled government’s promise to issue titles to seven of their collective lands in the Darien region of Eastern Panama.
