Helping Indigenous women from Guyana protect their lands
The project provides multi-year support to the Wapichan women’s movement in Guyana. This has helped Indigenous women play a greater role in protecting their land and natural resources, retaining their cultural identity and addressing the social issues affecting their rights
For instance, the project enabled Immaculata Casimero, a Wapichan nation leader, to advocate for Indigenous women’s rights at COP26. At the conference, she shared how climate change is affecting the land where 21 Indigenous communities in Guyana live.
At the meeting, she spoke of how the lack of government regulation for mining activities is resulting in:
- deforestation
- flooding
- lower crop yields
- increased food insecurity
To address these problems, her organization is advocating for climate justice and actively working to gain legal ownership and control of these lands. While participating in the “Indigenous Caucus” at COP26, Immaculata emphasized the importance of including women-led organizations and feminist movements in all climate finance strategies.
“I keep advising community leaders that when government leaders come to our communities, we must ask them what is happening to our lands … And if the men cannot do it, well then, the women will do it.”
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