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Community Organizations International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA)
International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA)
International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA)
Acronym
IWGIA
Network

Focal point

Dwayne Mamo, Documentation & Communications Manager
Email
Phone number
+45 5373 2837

Location

Prinsessegade 29 B, 3rd floor
1422
Copenhagen
Denmark
Working languages
Danish
English
Spanish

IWGIA is a non-governmental human rights organisation promoting and defending Indigenous Peoples’ collective and individual rights.

We have supported our partners in this fight for more than 50 years.

We work through a global network of Indigenous Peoples’ organisations and international human rights bodies.

We promote recognition, respect and implementation of Indigenous Peoples’ rights, including the right to self-determination by virtue of which they can freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development. 

Visit our website for more information and to access all our publications, including our flagship annual book The Indigenous World, a yearly overview of the state of the rights of Indigenous Peoples across individual countries and through various international mechanisms and processes. 

Members:

Dwayne Mamo

Resources

Displaying 51 - 55 of 59

Joint Stakeholders (NGOs) Submission to the Human Rights Council- Universal Periodic Review Mechanism

Reports & Research
November, 2011
Tanzania

This report is a compilation of primary and secondary sources of information, evidences and facts collected through consultative meetings and interviews with CSOs and Community members. More information was obtained from different credible sources including the UN treaty bodies, UN special procedures, ACHPR, government reports, media as well as reports of fact finding missions of pastoralists’ CSOs members. Validation was done by pastoralist CSOs and National CSOs in two different meetings

Joint Stakeholders (NGOs) Submission to the Human Rights Council- Universal Periodic Review Mechanism

Reports & Research
November, 2011
Tanzania

This report is a compilation of primary and secondary sources of information, evidences and facts collected through consultative meetings and interviews with CSOs and Community members. More information was obtained from different credible sources including the UN treaty bodies, UN special procedures, ACHPR, government reports, media as well as reports of fact finding missions of pastoralists’ CSOs members. Validation was done by pastoralist CSOs and National CSOs in two different meetings

Joint Stakeholders (NGOs) Submission to the Human Rights Council- Universal Periodic Review Mechanism

Reports & Research
November, 2011
Tanzania

This report is a compilation of primary and secondary sources of information, evidences and facts collected through consultative meetings and interviews with CSOs and Community members. More information was obtained from different credible sources including the UN treaty bodies, UN special procedures, ACHPR, government reports, media as well as reports of fact finding missions of pastoralists’ CSOs members. Validation was done by pastoralist CSOs and National CSOs in two different meetings

Joint Stakeholders (NGOs) Submission to the Human Rights Council- Universal Periodic Review Mechanism

Reports & Research
November, 2011
Tanzania

This report is a compilation of primary and secondary sources of information, evidences and facts collected through consultative meetings and interviews with CSOs and Community members. More information was obtained from different credible sources including the UN treaty bodies, UN special procedures, ACHPR, government reports, media as well as reports of fact finding missions of pastoralists’ CSOs members. Validation was done by pastoralist CSOs and National CSOs in two different meetings

IWGIA Urgent Alert concerning Gross Human Rights abuses towards Pastoralists in Loliondo, Ngorongoro district in Tanzania

Policy Papers & Briefs
July, 2009
Tanzania

This urgent alert is based on the forceful evictions of Maasai pastoralists from their homes and grazing lands in Loliondo Division, Ngorongoro District in Northern Tanzania and the gross human rights violations that are being committed. 


The eviction operation started on the 4th July 2009 and was conducted by the notorious riot police, the Field Force Unit, with assistance of private guards from the Otterlo Business Cooperation (OBC). They entered the villages by shooting in the air and using teargas before pouring petrol on the Maasai homes and setting them on fire.