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National pygmy solidarity network launched

A "solidarity network" for indigenous peoples in the Republic of Congo was launched on Friday in the capital, Brazzaville, at the end of a three-day meeting among groups involved in the protection of minority rights across the country. The network, to be headed by local human rights defence NGOs, will be responsible for maximising efforts to promote the rights of the Congo's indigenous populations, commonly referred to as "pygmies". "We are friends of the pygmies. Together with other NGOs involved in this domain, we will work to ensure that this network truly serves the interests of pygmies," Loamba Moke, president of the Association pour les droits de l'homme et l'univers carceral (Adhuc), a national human rights group, told IRIN. The three-day conference was attended by about two dozen people, including a dozen pygmies, from the departments of Sangha, Plateaux, Lekoumou and Likouala, with the objective of providing a better understanding of human rights. "All of us here benefited from a short training programme a few months ago," Paul Assane, one of the pygmy participants, told IRIN. Assane works as a primary school teacher in his village of Mbaloula, 5 km outside of Ouesso, the main town of Sangha department. "Now we have come to participate in this supplementary training, and we believe that things are going to change. From now on, I will be able to hold my head high as I tell those who consider us to be inferior beings that all human beings are equal, and that human rights are immutable and valid for all." "We now know that discrimination in school is illegal, and that attendance is obligatory until the age of 18," he continued. "Furthermore, we now have the duty to inform our families and friends of the importance of registering births, which will help guarantee a child's civil rights and entitlements." The meetings, held in French and local languages, were intended to reinforce material taught during previous seminars. In addition to the formation of the network, conference participants recommended that future sessions be organised for the training of human rights educators for pygmy populations. They also called for the organisation of a national census of pygmies, who have not been counted since 1984. It is believed that their numbers have increased considerably since then. According to Adhuc, pygmies are often unaware of the rights, and as a result have been taken advantage of by majority Bantu populations. This latest seminar was part of a larger campaign carried out by Adhuc in the four aforementioned departments, and was financed by the US government with 16.8 million francs CFA (US $30,000).

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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