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Confident To Continue Our Fight

Confident To Continue Our Fight

Scoop24-07-2025
How often do Indigenous Peoples find spaces where they can share their suffering, feel safe, and freely learn and build hope?
Naw Paw Pree, Indigenous Karen from the Karen Human Rights Group (KHRG), joined the International Festival for People's Rights and Struggles (IFPRS) with IPMSDL as one of the co-organizers, and felt the comfort of being with fellow brother and sisters in struggle for self-determination.
'The 'People Power Hour' organised during IFPRS was a global platform where Indigenous Peoples and other marginalised groups were able to make their voices heard at a global scale,' she shared.
In an event organized for Indigenous activists from Karen, Manipur and CHT in Bangladesh, Naw Paw Pree expressed how different victims of oppression around the world gathered to learn and share their experiences, suffering and struggles for their rights to land, culture, tradition, freedom, and self-determination.
'It was a safe space for all people to enjoy freedom of expression, share their feelings, and demand for change,' Paw Pree said.
For her, she learned the similarity between different Indigenous Peoples from around the world: having diverse cultures, traditions, beliefs and social practices, but the same struggles and oppression.
She also felt a deep honour for community members from the indigenous Karen peoples of Southeast Burma to attend the event to learn about the struggles of other Indigenous Peoples and minority communities, and to share the struggles of the Karen peoples.
It was a very touching moment for her as she presents and the participants listened to her peoples' pain and understood about the Karen people's struggle to fulfill their basic human rights, to defend their people and land, and for self-determination.
According to her, 'their sympathetic response and respectful reflections show the international understanding of our struggles, so it made Karen people feel dignified and it honoured the 75 years of revolutionary struggles.'
'The People Power Hour event made us feel confident to continue our fight, without feeling the burden of other international views that often accuse us of being rebels, terrorists, and dangerous people,' she said with a firm and enlightened smile.
'We need more international solidarity to support the voices of indigenous and minority people and to stand firmly with us,' she added.
Below is her presentation and sharing:
The struggle of the Karen people from Kathoolei, Burma
Locally-defined Karen State, in Southeast Burma (Myanmar), has been affected by ceaseless armed conflict and human rights abuses since Burma's independence in 1948.
Since then, the Karen peoples have been targeted by the Burma Army, which has persecuted and oppressed other ethnic minorities around the country, seeking to impose their rule and spurring conflict with ethnic armed groups.
As early as the 1960s, the Burma Army was already targeting villagers as part of their 'four cuts' strategy, to destroy the links of ethnic armed groups with food, funds, recruits and intelligence. Teaching ethnic languages and cultures was also prohibited and customary rules, such as those of land ownership, were violated.
Although the conflict diminished after the National Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) in 2015, with some economic and human rights improvements, many Karen villagers perceived this as a means of 'Burmanisation' and still faced abuses at the hands of the Burma Army.
In February 2021, the Burma Army staged a coup d'état against the democratically elected civilian government, and self-proclaimed the State Administration Council (SAC). Civilians around the country opposed the coup with street demonstrations and a civil disobedience movement and were met with violence throughout.
In response to such violence, and the re-militarisation in ethnic areas, ethnic armed groups and newly formed armed resistance forces confront the SAC and their affiliated groups. Villagers in Karen State conduct their daily lives in a theatre of war.
Throughout this conflict, the Burma Army has frequently directed widespread and systematic shelling and bombing into civilian areas, reinvigorating the 'four cuts'. The systematic targeting of civilians encompasses extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrests, torture, forced displacements, looting and extortion, sexual violence, and forced labour.
Buildings protected under international law, such as schools, clinics, religious buildings and houses, are equally targeted. Due to the intensity of the conflict, and to the level of organisation of the armed actors involved, international humanitarian law (IHL) must be applied. The SAC violations of IHL of non-international armed conflicts, as well as of customary international law, amount to potential war crimes.
Furthermore, given the widespread and systematic nature of the SAC attacks committed against civilians, the abuses by the Burma Army may amount to crimes against humanity, punishable under international criminal law. The human rights violations being perpetrated in Burma give rise to an obligation erga omnes binding all States, to prosecute and punish all those responsible and enact universal jurisdiction.
Recommendation to international stakeholder:
Support coordinated and targeted sanctions on the supply of weapons and aviation fuel to the military junta, on oil and gas revenues, and sanctions against junta officials.
Supporting ongoing investigations and trials and seeking additional ways to hold the Burma Army leaders accountable for their many crimes, including those against the Karen.
Increasing financial support for local organisations working on the ground to assist the civilian population in need.
Do not legitimize the military junta and do not collaborate with them in any way.
Take these and other decisive actions to end the military dictatorship in Burma and end SAC's military aggression against civilians, especially in ethnic areas, including by seeking the complete withdrawal of SAC troops from ethnic ancestral territories.
Give full recognition and realisation of the self-determination rights of Indigenous Peoples locally, nationally and internationally. #
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'Karanga is yours': Kuia empower the next generation of wāhine Māori to step forward
'Karanga is yours': Kuia empower the next generation of wāhine Māori to step forward

RNZ News

time3 days ago

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'Karanga is yours': Kuia empower the next generation of wāhine Māori to step forward

Kōka Alamein Connell (Ngāti Porou), one of the māreikura honoured at Tīhei Waitaha, offered some of her mātauranga, despite recently spending five weeks in hospital recovering from a stroke. Photo: Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ In a time when many marae are facing the loss of kaumātua and kuia who have long upheld tikanga, a powerful movement in Ōtautahi is preparing the next generation of wāhine Māori to carry forward the mātauranga and mana of their tūpuna. Tīhei Waitaha, a wānanga led by the rōpū Te Kōkōwai Māreikura o Mātangireia , took place at Rehua Marae over the weekend, honouring five wāhine who have upheld the mauri of the mahau across generations: Rānui Ngārimu, Alamein Connell, Tihi Puanaki, Te Herehere Tukaki and Roberta Arahanga. Two hours after putting the pānui out, the sign-up list for the free wānanga was full, a response organisers said shows just how needed kaupapa like this are in Te Waipounamu. Facilitator and resepcted Tuahiwi māreikura Heeni Te Whakaako Kereru (Whaea Liz) said the kaupapa is about igniting the inner flame. "It's important that we do what we do. We've only got these five, who are sitting here left in Ōtautahi, that have walked the walk and now talk the talk." Surrounded by the strength of their tīpuna, Kereru spoke of the urgency felt throughout the day. "I cry because all of our tīpuna are here. It's full. "There's been a sense of urgency from them, about us losing our identity, who we are as wāhine, who we are as Māori, as Indigenous people." Looking across the rōpū of wāhine gathered at Rehua, she reminded them this was only the beginning. "And the turmoil we are in... it will be us who will nurture the world, actually. And bring peace back." Rānui Ngārimu (Ngāi Tahu, Ngāti Mutunga) leads a karanga during the pōwhiri at Rehua Marae for Tīhei Waitaha. Photo: Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ One of the country's most renowned kaiwhatu, Rānui Ngārimu, who wove the Olympic team's kākahu , was the first kaikōrero at Tīhei Waitaha. She shared moments from her own haerenga, or journey, with karanga, paying tribute to the wāhine who helped shape her understanding. "[My aunty] would say te reo Māori is our language from the heavens. It is our language from our gods, and nobody on earth can change that." "In today's political environment, I bless you Aunty Marge, you've given us something to hold on to." Her first experience with karanga came without warning, and without preparation. She recalled calling out haere mai again and again, eventually weaving in a childhood waiata to fill the space. "I was whakamā. But I was reminded that all that mattered was making our people feel welcome." Ngā māreikura: Rānui Ngārimu, Te Herehere Tukaki, Heeni Te Whakaako Kereru (Liz), Alamein Connell, Tihi Puanaki, Roberta Arahanga. Photo: Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ "Karanga is a ritual of engagement between two groups of people that requires the ability to communicate not only messages, but also emotion." She described karanga as a spiritual bridge, a way of drawing manuhiri in safely and a practice that transforms any space into a marae once it begins. She also spoke of its power. In 2013, Ngārimu attended the unveiling of Pou Whenua on Scott Base in Antartica alongside the then-Ngai Tahu Kaiwhakahaere Mark Solomon, and then-Prime Minister John Key. A formal pōwhiri was planned, but heavy snow casted doubt over whether it would go ahead. "They were saying 'we might have to cancel', and I said, 'No, it'll clear'." As she stepped forward and began her karanga, snow still falling, she felt the shift. "I opened my mouth, got a mouthful of snow, and just kept going," she laughed. "And then... it stopped. Total stillness. "The Americans called it luck. But I knew. I've seen it happen before. The power of karanga can part skies." She ended her kōrero with a saying from one of her rmentors. "Stand tall darlings, we are the faces of our tūpuna... and that's exactly what we are, the faces of our tūpuna." Despite recently spending five weeks in hospital recovering from a stroke, Kōkā Alamein still showed up - for Whaea Liz, for Tuahiwi, and for the kaupapa. Photo: Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ Despite recently spending five weeks in hospital recovering from a stroke, Kōkā Alamein still showed up. Her kōrero centred around two questions: Mā wai? Mō wai? Who will do it? And who are we doing it for? "Mō wai? For whom will we do it? For the generations to come," she said. "Mā wai? Who will do it? Well of course it will be you. Mō ngā uri whakatipu. So it's not a lost art. "We have to carry it on, and pass it from one generation to the next. But we also have to learn to respect." Through her stories, she made clear that karanga is love in action. "Even when you're calling out to your manuhiri, you're doing that through love. Love of your language, love of who you are, love of your whakapapa." "Always be proud of your whakapapa, of yourself, of your iwi. But don't forget to respect those who came before you, your elders." Te Herehere Tukaki (Ngāi Tuhoe, Tauranga Moana) reminded wāhine that everyone plays a role in the pōhiri process, from pēpi to kaumātua. Photo: Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ Whaea Te Herehere focused on pōwhiri and the importance of aroha in her kōrero. "Looking at your faces, I can feel your aroha coming into me. I can feel more confident." She reminded the rōpū that everyone plays a role in the pōhiri process, from pēpi to kaumātua. "The pōhiri is for everybody who is at the marae, everybody who is in the manuhiri. Ko ngā pēpi, ahakoa te pakeke, o te newness of our pēpi, ki te kaumātua, ki te pakeke, ki te koroheke - doesn't matter how old you are. You're on the marae doing your pōhiri." Preparation starts young, she said, whether it is picking up rubbish or placing a clean cup on the table - always with aroha. "Everything we did then, we had to do with aroha, so that our manuhiri would feel welcome, so they would feel the aroha of our marae, and of our people." She shared that moving as a collective during the pōhiri, with kuia at the front, tāne at the back and tamariki protected in the middle, is about keeping one another safe. "The kuia who are there to call for you, their backs need to be protected too." She said that karanga, too, is deeply connected to this spirit of preparation and aroha. "Sometimes when I stand there outside, I don't karanga to the manuhiri in front of me. I'm calling down to Tangaroa so he can hear me. I'm calling ki ngā maunga so they can hear me." "Karanga kia puta mai te aroha ki roto i a tātou nei mahi katoa," she said, meaning, let the call (karanga) bring love (aroha) into all our work (mahi katoa). Photo: Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ Known affectionately as Aunty Birdie, Roberta Arahanga (Ngā Puhi, Ngāti Hine, Tainui ki Pare Hauraki, Tuhoe, Ngāti Rongomai, Ngāti Pikiao, Ngāti Whakaue, Ngāti Kahungunu) shared her experiences as a wahine Māori stepping into karanga. She stressed the importance of the voice of wāhine, and the power it holds. "That's your voice. That's the first voice that's heard out there on the mahau when you are from here. So they can't move until you use your voice. "You're not mucking around, you mean business." She encouraged wāhine to be proud of their whakapapa and to always ensure tikanga is upheld during karanga. "Make sure that you get your whakapapa right, where you've come from, what you're going to be doing, what it was all about... acknowledge your tīpuna." Tihi Puanaki (Ngāti Hine), shared her mātauranga at Tīhei Waitaha, and said to the wāhine in attendance that "karanga is yours to uphold." Photo: Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ A beloved figure across Aotearoa, Tihi Puanaki is known for her work in Māori education and her leadership of the award-winning haka rōpū Te Kotahitanga. At Tīhei Waitaha, she reminded wāhine of the sacredness of the kaupapa: "Wāhine mā, tai tamariki mā, kua huihui tātou i raro i te karanga o te kaupapa nei... He kaupapa tino tapu, he kaupapa tino nui. Horekau he mutunga. "No matter where you come from or what iwi you descend from, karanga is yours to uphold." She acknowledged the pressure that comes with the role as kaikaranga, and the humility. "Karanga is not just a performance. You're acknowledging the maunga, the iwi, the hau kāinga. There's real pressure in that. "You've got to look after your voice, and your wairua too." Puanaki also spoke candidly about protecting tikanga. "Karanga is not a course you complete. You don't get a certificate and become a kaikāranga overnight. You carry that responsibility for life. "Don't just bring new people onto the pae without letting the rest of us know... We overlook mana whenua sometimes, and we shouldn't. "There are some things we have to protect. Karanga is not for everybody." "Kaua koe ki tō hoa Pākehā, kāre. I say it with aroha... but this is for my people. "You might not be a kaikaranga for Rehua or Tuahiwi. But you might be a kaikaranga for your little job, your whā that's important too." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Confident To Continue Our Fight
Confident To Continue Our Fight

Scoop

time24-07-2025

  • Scoop

Confident To Continue Our Fight

How often do Indigenous Peoples find spaces where they can share their suffering, feel safe, and freely learn and build hope? Naw Paw Pree, Indigenous Karen from the Karen Human Rights Group (KHRG), joined the International Festival for People's Rights and Struggles (IFPRS) with IPMSDL as one of the co-organizers, and felt the comfort of being with fellow brother and sisters in struggle for self-determination. 'The 'People Power Hour' organised during IFPRS was a global platform where Indigenous Peoples and other marginalised groups were able to make their voices heard at a global scale,' she shared. In an event organized for Indigenous activists from Karen, Manipur and CHT in Bangladesh, Naw Paw Pree expressed how different victims of oppression around the world gathered to learn and share their experiences, suffering and struggles for their rights to land, culture, tradition, freedom, and self-determination. 'It was a safe space for all people to enjoy freedom of expression, share their feelings, and demand for change,' Paw Pree said. For her, she learned the similarity between different Indigenous Peoples from around the world: having diverse cultures, traditions, beliefs and social practices, but the same struggles and oppression. She also felt a deep honour for community members from the indigenous Karen peoples of Southeast Burma to attend the event to learn about the struggles of other Indigenous Peoples and minority communities, and to share the struggles of the Karen peoples. It was a very touching moment for her as she presents and the participants listened to her peoples' pain and understood about the Karen people's struggle to fulfill their basic human rights, to defend their people and land, and for self-determination. According to her, 'their sympathetic response and respectful reflections show the international understanding of our struggles, so it made Karen people feel dignified and it honoured the 75 years of revolutionary struggles.' 'The People Power Hour event made us feel confident to continue our fight, without feeling the burden of other international views that often accuse us of being rebels, terrorists, and dangerous people,' she said with a firm and enlightened smile. 'We need more international solidarity to support the voices of indigenous and minority people and to stand firmly with us,' she added. Below is her presentation and sharing: The struggle of the Karen people from Kathoolei, Burma Locally-defined Karen State, in Southeast Burma (Myanmar), has been affected by ceaseless armed conflict and human rights abuses since Burma's independence in 1948. Since then, the Karen peoples have been targeted by the Burma Army, which has persecuted and oppressed other ethnic minorities around the country, seeking to impose their rule and spurring conflict with ethnic armed groups. As early as the 1960s, the Burma Army was already targeting villagers as part of their 'four cuts' strategy, to destroy the links of ethnic armed groups with food, funds, recruits and intelligence. Teaching ethnic languages and cultures was also prohibited and customary rules, such as those of land ownership, were violated. Although the conflict diminished after the National Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) in 2015, with some economic and human rights improvements, many Karen villagers perceived this as a means of 'Burmanisation' and still faced abuses at the hands of the Burma Army. In February 2021, the Burma Army staged a coup d'état against the democratically elected civilian government, and self-proclaimed the State Administration Council (SAC). Civilians around the country opposed the coup with street demonstrations and a civil disobedience movement and were met with violence throughout. In response to such violence, and the re-militarisation in ethnic areas, ethnic armed groups and newly formed armed resistance forces confront the SAC and their affiliated groups. Villagers in Karen State conduct their daily lives in a theatre of war. Throughout this conflict, the Burma Army has frequently directed widespread and systematic shelling and bombing into civilian areas, reinvigorating the 'four cuts'. The systematic targeting of civilians encompasses extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrests, torture, forced displacements, looting and extortion, sexual violence, and forced labour. Buildings protected under international law, such as schools, clinics, religious buildings and houses, are equally targeted. Due to the intensity of the conflict, and to the level of organisation of the armed actors involved, international humanitarian law (IHL) must be applied. The SAC violations of IHL of non-international armed conflicts, as well as of customary international law, amount to potential war crimes. Furthermore, given the widespread and systematic nature of the SAC attacks committed against civilians, the abuses by the Burma Army may amount to crimes against humanity, punishable under international criminal law. The human rights violations being perpetrated in Burma give rise to an obligation erga omnes binding all States, to prosecute and punish all those responsible and enact universal jurisdiction. Recommendation to international stakeholder: Support coordinated and targeted sanctions on the supply of weapons and aviation fuel to the military junta, on oil and gas revenues, and sanctions against junta officials. Supporting ongoing investigations and trials and seeking additional ways to hold the Burma Army leaders accountable for their many crimes, including those against the Karen. Increasing financial support for local organisations working on the ground to assist the civilian population in need. Do not legitimize the military junta and do not collaborate with them in any way. Take these and other decisive actions to end the military dictatorship in Burma and end SAC's military aggression against civilians, especially in ethnic areas, including by seeking the complete withdrawal of SAC troops from ethnic ancestral territories. Give full recognition and realisation of the self-determination rights of Indigenous Peoples locally, nationally and internationally. #

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