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Education International
Education International

Malaysia: Union underscores rights of Indigenous Peoples

published 11 July 2016 updated 1 August 2016

Sustainable development goals will not be achieved if the rights of indigenous peoples are not respected. That was the message emerging from a meeting of teacher unionists on issues related to the rights of indigenous peoples held in Miri, Malaysia in June.

Twenty-seven participants from the Sarawak Teachers’ Union (STU), affiliated to Education International (EI), attended the workshop and discussed:

·         Identifying the Sarawak’s indigenous peoples

·         The United Nations’ Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

·         Challenges faced by the Sarawak’s indigenous peoples

·         Ways for teachers and their unions to work with other stakeholders to overcome challenges faced by the Sarawak’s indigenous peoples

·         The sustainable development goals (SDGs) pertaining to the rights of indigenous peoples

·         An action plan to be implemented at school/community level

Challenges vindicated

The difficulties and exploitation experienced by the Sarawak’s indigenous peoples were highlighted by the head of the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia (Suhakam) Sarawak office, Sophian B. Osman, in a presentation on the “Rights of Indigenous Peoples in Sarawak - Challenges and Solutions”. The presentation gave authenticity and credibility to the issues they face, especially on land rights, a topic on which the Suhakam developed a report submitted to the United Nations.

“The workshop was a real eye-opener for the participants, all indigenous teachers and teacher union activists,” noted EI’s Jerome Fernandez. Many of the participants did not know that “the indigenous peoples have so many rights, guaranteed not only by UN documents, but also enshrined in the Malaysian Constitution”.

Sustainable Development Goals

He added that participants find the inclusion of the indigenous peoples’ interests in SDGs 4, 8, 13 and 16 reassuring. The presence of the STU’s top leadership at the workshop further ensured that the action plan designed during the event will be carried out by the participants, and monitored by the STU Executive Committee, he stressed.

Sarawak is the largest state in Malaysia, with a diverse population comprising many races and ethnic groups, i.e. more than 40 sub-ethnic groups, each with its own distinct language, culture and lifestyle.