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Community Coalition Against Mining Uranium (CCAMU)
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Citizens’
Inquiry on the Impacts of the Uranium Cycle |
DECLARATION OF THE INDIGENOUS WORLD URANIUM SUMMIT
Saturday December 2, 2006 08:30 PM
Window Rock, Navajo Nation, USA
We, the Peoples gathered at the Indigenous World Uranium Summit, at this
critical time of intensifying nuclear threats to Mother Earth and all life,
demand a worldwide ban on uranium mining, processing, enrichment, fuel use,
and weapons testing and deployment, and nuclear waste dumping on Native
Lands.
Past, present and future generations of Indigenous Peoples have been
disproportionately affected by the international nuclear weapons and power
industry. The nuclear fuel chain poisons our people, land, air and waters
and threatens our very existence and our future generations. Nuclear power
is not a solution to global warming. Uranium mining, nuclear energy
development and international agreements (e.g., the recent U.S.-India
nuclear cooperation treaty) that foster the nuclear fuel chain violate our
basic human rights and fundamental natural laws of Mother Earth, endangering
our traditional cultures and spiritual well-being.
We reaffirm the Declaration of the World Uranium Hearing in Salzburg,
Austria, in 1992, that "uranium and other radioactive minerals must remain
in their natural location." Further, we stand in solidarity with the Navajo
Nation for enacting the Diné Natural Resources Protection Act of 2005, which
bans uranium mining and processing and is based on the Fundamental Laws of
the Dine. And we dedicate ourselves to a nuclear-free future.
Indigenous Peoples are connected spiritually and culturally to our Mother,
the Earth. Accordingly, we endorse and encourage development of renewable
energy sources that sustain - not destroy - Indigenous lands and the Earth's
ecosystems.
In tribute to our ancestors, we continue centuries of resistance against
colonialism. We recognize the work, courage, dedication and sacrifice of
those individuals from Indigenous Nations and from Australia, Brazil,
Canada, China, Germany, India, Japan, the United States, and Vanuatu, who
participated in the Summit. We further recognize the invaluable work of
those who were honored at the Nuclear-Free Future Awards ceremony on
December 1, 2006. And we will continue to support activists worldwide in
their nonviolent efforts to stop uranium development.
We are determined to share the knowledge we have gained at this Summit with
the world. In the weeks and months ahead, we will summarize and disseminate
the testimonies, traditional Indigenous knowledge, and medical and
scientific evidence that justify a worldwide ban on uranium development. We
will enunciate specific plans of action at the tribal, local, national and
international levels to support Native resistance to the nuclear fuel chain.
And we will pursue legal and political redress for all past, current and
future impacts of the nuclear fuel chain on Indigenous Peoples and their
resources.
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