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Machu Picchu Declaration on Democracy, the
Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the War
against Poverty
The Presidents of the
Andean Community Member Countries, in the
presence of the Presidents of Argentina,
Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, Dominican
Republic, Panama, Paraguay, and Uruguay, the
Prince of Asturias, and the Secretary
General of the Andean Community, gathered
for the assumption by Dr. Alejandro Toledo
of the Presidency of Peru, have adopted the
following:
Machu Picchu Declaration
on Democracy, the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples and the War against Poverty
BEARING IN MIND that our
political systems are grounded in democracy,
respect for human rights, and the basic
freedoms;
BEARING IN MIND the
interrelationship and mutual involvement
that exist among democracy, human rights,
peace, social development, and the war on
poverty;
CONSIDERING that the
multicultural and multiethnic nature of our
countries was an essential element in the
formation of the nationalities and the
historical identity of our nations; and that
it continues to be an essential
characteristic of the human and social
wealth of our societies, as in the past;
AWARE that the indigenous
peoples, for the most part, suffer from
poverty and extreme poverty and that there
is a need to guarantee and promote their
rights, including the right to diversity;
CONSIDERING the
determination of our governments to
concentrate their resources on social and
economic development tasks and particularly
on the war against poverty and extreme
poverty and the creation of productive and
worthy employment;
CONSIDERING that all of
the efforts of Latin American integration
are in agreement on the common will to
establish mechanisms for political
cooperation, to fight poverty, and to
liberalize trade
DECIDE:
To move ahead with the defense of democracy
and respect for human rights
To express our deep
conviction that democracy, development,
and respect for human rights and basic
freedoms are interdependent and mutually
strengthening. We accordingly reaffirm our
intention to reinforce democracy as a
system of government and an irreplaceable
element of our political identity, to
promote its values as a way of life, and
to defend democratic institutions and the
state of law in Latin America and the
Caribbean. We further reiterate that the
effective exercise of democracy requires
strengthening its participatory nature.
To reiterate our
decision to adopt an Inter-American
Democratic Charter during the Special
General Assembly of the OAS that will be
held in Lima this coming September, as an
instrument conducive to the promotion,
stability, preservation, and defense of
democratic institutions.
To renew the commitment
of our governments to the exercise of and
respect for human rights and our intention
to strengthen the Inter-American Human
Rights System, including the possibility
of the progressive and continuing
operation of the Inter-American Human
Rights Court and the Inter-American Human
Rights Commission, as well as to foster
the universality of the inter-American
system for the protection of human rights.
The Presidents of the
Andean Countries, pursuant to the Act of
Carabobo adopted at the Thirteenth Andean
Presidential Council, instructed the
Foreign Ministers to draw up the text of
the Andean Human Rights Charter for
presentation at the next meeting of the
Andean Presidential Council; that
instrument shall set out the principles
and the major lines for a Community policy
on the subject, including the issues
associated with the rights of women and of
indigenous peoples.
We Andean Presidents
made the decision to entrust the Foreign
Ministries with the drafting of a proposal
to reinforce programs for promoting
democracy; providing for all forms of
citizen participation; preparing, putting
forward and carrying out actions for
education in democracy; the exchange of
experiences among political parties in the
Subregion; and developing policies for
promoting and disseminating democratic
values, in keeping with existing national
policies.
We consider the
cultural and ethnic diversity that is a
hallmark of our nations to be a source of
great wealth and of unity among our
societies. The exercise of democracy in
our nations requires a respect for and
promotion of their diversity. In this
regard, it is our intention to continue
implementing strategies and policies for
revaluing the multiethnic and
multicultural characteristics of our
countries, with a view to promoting full
participation by the indigenous peoples
and ethnic minorities.
The rights of indigenous peoples
We firmly support all
efforts that are geared towards promoting
and protecting the basic rights and
freedoms of the indigenous peoples, among
them: their individual and collective
right to their spiritual, cultural,
linguistic, social, political, and
economic identity and traditions, their
right as peoples to retain control of
their historic cultural heritage; their
right to their systems, know-how and
practice of traditional medicine,
including the right to the protection of
their ritual and sacred places; their
right to an education in diversity; and
their right to be elected to and to hold
public office. We express our intention of
safeguarding these rights within our
public order and in compliance with
existing constitutional and legal
provisions.
Our States have the
duty of safeguarding and guaranteeing the
implementation of the provisions of the
American Declaration of Human Rights and
Duties, the American Human Rights
Convention, and all other existing
regional and universal instruments in
order to ensure that indigenous peoples
are able to exercise their human rights
fully, in keeping with the principle of
non-discrimination. In this connection, we
shall advance the preparation and approval
of the American Declaration on the Rights
of Indigenous Peoples.
Policies to ensure the
active participation of indigenous peoples
in all spheres of national life are needed
if democracy and the state of law are to
be consolidated in our countries. The
Foreign Ministers shall accordingly
propose the establishment within the
institutional framework of the Andean
Community of Nations, of a working group
on the rights of indigenous peoples, with
the participation of indigenous
organizations, human rights organizations,
civil society, and representatives of each
of the Member States. The purpose of this
group shall be to incorporate the
indigenous peoples fully into the economic,
social, and political life of our nations,
while at the same time respecting and
promoting their cultural diversity. This
group shall hold its first meeting shortly
in the city of Cuzco.
An alliance for the war against poverty
Aware that an effective
war against poverty must be grounded in
authentic and complete democracy, we Heads
of State reiterate our intention to
undertake measures to reduce poverty by 50
percent by the year 2015.
Social justice is a
basic element of democracy and is
essential for guaranteeing the political
stability and legitimacy of our
governments. For that reason, we commit
our countries to attain sufficient
economic growth with social equity to
allow our societies to overcome their
inequalities, emerge from their poverty,
and meet the challenges that face them.
It is our intent to
strengthen our political cooperation
within the subregional integration process
and to attach considerable priority to our
social agenda.
We believe that good
governance and efficient and transparent
administration, with mechanisms for
citizen participation, are essential
elements for using our resources
adequately to overcome existing social
inequalities.
Aware that corruption
poses a threat to democratic stability and
has a negative effect on the war against
poverty, we reiterate the need to increase
our efforts to fight corruption and to
cooperate in any joint measures that may
be necessary in keeping with international
law and regional agreements on the subject.
We have great
expectations for the agreements reached by
the Group of 8 in Genoa and urge those
governments to make them effective,
especially those agreements that concern
external debt relief and the war on
poverty and extreme poverty.
In this connection, we
express the desirability of reaching
agreements within international financial
organizations and among the governments of
the industrialized nations, particularly
with regard to the policies on increasing
non-reimbursable cooperation and financing
for projects in the critical areas of the
war on poverty. We attribute special
priority to debt-for-development project-swaps
in benefit of the most vulnerable sectors
of society.
We express our firm
political intention to approve a new
common tariff before the next Andean
Presidential Council. This instrument,
combined with the execution of commitments
in regard to the circulation of people,
the Andean passport, and border
integration and development, will ensure
the establishment of the Andean Common
Market by the year 2005.
In implementation of
the agreements reached at the Carabobo
Summit and with a view to advancing the
social agenda and mobilizing all sectors
of society in the war against poverty and
the creation of jobs, we Presidents of the
Andean Community charge the Foreign
Ministers to draft a proposal to set up a
social conciliation group within the
Andean forum approved at the Carabobo
Summit in order to give the citizenry full
participation in the integration processes.
That group shall contribute its ideas to
the design of an "Integrated Andean Social
Development Plan."
We Presidents of the
Andean Community Countries congratulate Dr.
Alejandro Toledo on his election as
Constitutional President of Peru, as well as
on his leadership, from a position in civil
society, in reinstitutionalizing democracy
in Peru. We further applaud President
Valentín Paniagua and his Government for
having held free and fair elections and for
his outstanding role in consolidating
democracy in Peru, as well as for having
reestablished the exercise of human rights
and basic freedoms.
Lima - Machu Picchu. July 28-29, 2001
Jorge Quiroga Ramírez
Acting President of Bolivia
Andrés Pastrana Arango
President of Colombia
Gustavo Noboa Bejarano
President of Ecuador
Alejandro Toledo Manrique
President of Peru
Hugo Chávez Frías
President of Venezuela
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