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         Tuareg Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail
  1. The Tuareg: People of Ahaggar by Jeremy Keenan, 2003-01

1. FWDP -- African Documents
peoples Rights Question in africa Statement before to Namibia trying to claim to be indigenous peoples . tuareg.TXT - Information on the situation with the
http://www.cwis.org/africa.html
The Fourth World Documentation Project
African Documents
  • Documents by Dr. Richard Griggs on the Great Lakes conflict in Eastern Zaire, Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda, and Tanzania:
  • The Cultural Dimensions of Environmental Decision-Making by Dr. Richard Griggs
  • MOROCO85.TXT - Statement by Morocco at the UNWGIP 4th Session - April 1985
  • NUBA1.TXT - The Crisis in Nuba Mountains - Genocide against the Nuba by Sudan
  • NUBA2.TXT - Nuba Mountains Solidarity Abroad info sheet and help request
  • PARKIPNY.TXT - The Indigenous Peoples Rights Question in Africa - Statement before UNWGIP by Moringe Parkipuny, Member of Parliament, Ngorongoro, Tanzania
  • OGONI.TXT - Background material on the Ogoni Nation in Nigeria consisting of UNPO and Amnesty International Reports
  • REHOBOTH.TXT - On the Discrimination of the Rehoboth Basters - A paper to the UN by European immigrants to Namibia trying to claim to be "Indigenous Peoples"
  • SHELOGON.TXT
  • 2. The World Wide Web Virtual Library: Indigenous Studies CWIS George Manuel Librar
    indigenous Resources for africa. indigenous Resources for Asia and the political struggles waged by indigenous peoples seek to achieve the The Sakuma Homepage. tuareg Information
    http://www.cwis.org/wwwvl/indig-vl.html
    The WWW Virtual Library Alphabetical
    Category Subtree

    Library of Congress
    The World Wide Web Virtual Library:
    INDIGENOUS STUDIES
    The Center For World Indigenous Studies (CWIS) and the Chief George Manuel Library are pleased to support and contribute to the development and maintenance of the World Wide Web Virtual Library The Indigenous Studies Virtual Library provides links to: General Indigenous Studies Resources If you wish to register a resource with the Indigenous Studies WWW Virtual Library, please use our Site Submission Form . For other inquiries, please e-mail the Chief George Manuel Library Librarian This site is maintained in conjunction with the Australian National University's Aboriginal Studies WWW Virtual Library Circumpolar WWW Virtual Library containing links to Circumpolar Indigenous resources.

    3. Minorities At Risk (MAR)
    indigenous peoples. NIGER. tuareg. 774. 0.0800. indigenous peoples. 3979. 0.0360. indigenous peoples. NIGERIA. OGONI. 0.1200. communal contender. SOUTH africa. ASIANS. 1114.
    http://www.cidcm.umd.edu/inscr/mar/data/africatbl.htm
    Choose a Region Africa (Sub-Saharan) Asia Post-Communist States Sub-Saharan Africa Gpop98: Group Population in 1998 in 000s ( Explanation of population estimates
    Prop98: Proportion of group population to total population
    COUNTRY GROUP TYPE ANGOLA BAKONGO communal contender ANGOLA CABINDA communal contender ANGOLA OVIMBUNDU communal contender BOTSWANA SAN indigenous peoples BURUNDI HUTUS communal contender BURUNDI TUTSIS communal contender CAMEROON BAMILEKE communal contender CAMEROON KIRDI indigenous peoples CAMEROON WESTERNERS communal contender CHAD SOUTHERNERS communal contender CONGO LARI communal contender CONGO M'BOSHI communal contender DEM. REP. CONGO HUTUS ethnoclass DEM. REP. CONGO LUBA communal contender DEM. REP. CONGO LUNDA, YEKE communal contender DEM. REP. CONGO NGBANDI communal contender DEM. REP. CONGO TUTSIS ethnoclass DJIBOUTI AFARS indigenous peoples ERITREA AFARS ethnonationalist ETHIOPIA AFARS indigenous peoples ETHIOPIA AMHARA communal contender ETHIOPIA OROMO communal contender ETHIOPIA SOMALIS indigenous peoples ETHIOPIA TIGREANS communal contender GHANA ASHANTI communal contender GHANA EWE communal contender GHANA MOSSI -DAGOMBA communal contender GUINEA FULANI communal contender GUINEA MALINKE communal contender GUINEA SUSU communal contender KENYA KALENJIN indigenous peoples KENYA KIKUYU communal contender KENYA KISII communal contender KENYA LUHYA communal contender KENYA LUO communal contender KENYA MAASAI indigenous peoples KENYA SOMALI indigenous peoples MADAGASCAR MERINA communal contender MALI

    4. Press Kit: Issues - Racism Against Indigenous Peoples - World Conference Against
    The world's indigenous peoples or "first peoples" - do not share the are the indigenous peoples of northern africa and the Sahel. The best known Imazighen may be the tuareg. Most
    http://www.un.org/WCAR/e-kit/indigenous.htm
    ISSUES Trafficking in Persons
    The Phantom of Racism
    Racism and Indigenous Peoples

    "Racism has historically been a banner to justify the enterprises of expansion, conquest, colonization and domination and has walked hand in hand with intolerance, injustice and violence."
    - Rigoberta Menchú Tum, Guatemalan Indigenous Leader and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
    "The Problem of Racism on the Threshold of the 21st Century" "Doctrines of Dispossession" - Racism against Indigenous peoples Historians and academics agree that the colonization of the New World saw extreme expressions of racism - massacres, forced-march relocations, the "Indian wars", death by starvation and disease. Today, such practices would be called ethnic cleansing and genocide. What seems even more appalling for contemporary minds is that the subjugation of the native peoples of the New World was legally sanctioned. "Laws" of "discovery", "conquest" and " terra nullius " made up the "doctrines of dispossession", according to Erica Irene Daes, chairperson/rapporteur of the United Nations Working Group on Indigenous Populations, in a study on indigenous peoples and their relationship to land. Specifically, in the fifteenth century, two Papal Bulls set the stage for European domination of the New World and Africa.

    5. World Cultures
    Habarino!) Rashaida Samburu San (Namibia) tuareg (Sahara) Wodaabe Server Virtual Library african Studies indigenous peoples Rights Question in africa
    http://www.indigenouspeople.net/world.htm
    Europe, Asia, Africa, and Oceania
    Indigenous Peoples of Europe
    Basque Nation
    Putting Minority Languages on the Map!
    (GeoNative - Ongi etorri GeoNative gunera!)
    Buber's Basque Page

    (Buberen Euskal Orrialdera) European Islands
    (England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, etc,)
    Gaelic Peoples

    (Eire, the Isle of Man, and Scotland)
    Latvia/Livonia

    (Li'vzeme)
    Romani

    (Tsigani/Cigano/Zigeuner/Gypsies)
    Russia
    (50+ Indigenous Groups) Chukchi Even Udegeh Saami of Scandanavia Norway ... Finland , and Russia
    Indigenous Peoples of Africa
    Authentic African Art Ba-Benjelle Pygmies (Central Africa) Bantu Languages ... Wodaabe
    Other African Sites
    Africa-Net African Documents African National Congress African National Congress FTP ... Indigenous Peoples Rights Question in Africa
    Indigenous Peoples of Asia/Middle East
    Ainu (Japan) Arabic Literature Azerbaijani (Azerbaijan) Bajau (Philippines) Bakhtiari (Iran) Bedouin Kafir/Nuristanis (Pakistan) Kazakhs (Mongolia) Kurds (Kurdistan) Labakhis (Tibet/Bhutan) Kalash Literature "Brargini, doy tazim"

    6. IPACC - Regional Information: West Africa
    Fati ABOUBACRINE, tuareg, BurkinaFaso. View all Regional Representatives . In West africa, indigenous peoples are not basing their claims on being the first
    http://www.ipacc.org.za/regional/regional.asp?Region=West_Africa

    7. Africa Indigenous People Baule
    africa, african Anthropology General Resources. By peoples. Oron Owo Pende Pokot Punu San Senufo Shambaa Shona Songo Songye Suku Swahili Tabwa tuareg Urhobo We
    http://www.archaeolink.com/africa_indigenous_people_baule.htm
    Baule Home Africa, African Anthropology General Resources By peoples Akan Akuapem Akye Anyi ... Zulu ArtWorld AFRICA - Baule "One of the Akan group sharing similar language and, in general, matrilineal inheritance. They broke away from the Asante of Ghana in the 18th century, bringing with them craftsmanship in gold and gold leaf decoration." - From University of Durham - http://artworld.uea.ac.uk/teaching_modules/africa/cultural_groups_by_country/baule/welcome.html Baule People "The Baule belong to the Akan peoples who inhabit Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire. Three hundred years ago the Baule people migrated westward from Ghana when the Asante rose to power. The tale of how they broke away from the Asante has been preserved in their oral traditions." You will find material related to history, culture, religion, political structure, art and more. - From University of Iowa - http://www.uiowa.edu/~africart/toc/people/Baule.html

    8. Buy Delta Limited Tuareg Rb - FahrneysPens.com
    The first of Delta's 2004 indigenous peoples series, the tuareg are nomads who traveled Western africa in great caravans and controlled trans Saharan trade for thousands of
    http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://feedpoint.net/r/redir.jsp?engine=INK&pci

    9. Indigenous Peoples & 3W
    women in indigenous societies has been noted with admiration in the West. We have seen already with the tuareg of NorthWest africa a Muslim people that
    http://www.thirdway.org/files/world/all3wnow.html
    INDIGENOUS
    By Aidan Rankin
    If now I sit once more for a brief quarter hour on the parapet of the bridge from which as a child I dangled my fishing line a thousand times, I am powerfully gripped by an awareness of how beautiful and remarkable was the experience of possessing a place to call my own. Just once to have known in one small corner of the globe each house and every window in them, and every person behind each window! Just once to have felt inseparable from a particular corner of the world, much as a tree is bound by its roots to its own particular spot.
    Herman Hesse The ahatai [settlers] have always coveted Llakha Honhat [Our Land], and they have used deceit and violence in order to take it from us. ... They did not plant the trees; they do not keep the bees; the wild animals and fish do not belong to them. ... We have always lived here, since the time of creation we are as much a part of Llakha Honhat as the trees that grow on it. Our land belongs to us because we belong to the land.
    Oral History of the Wichi Indians (Northern Argentina) Our roots are deep in the lands where we live. We have a great love for our country, for our birthplace is here. The soil is rich from the bones of thousands of our generations. Each of us was created in these lands and it is our duty to take care of them, because from these lands will spring the future generations of our peoples. We will walk about with great respect for the Earth, for it is a very Sacred Place.

    10. SOCIALLY RESPONSIBLE INVESTING And THE WORLD'S INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
    gatherer societies such as the tuareg (Niger), Maasai (Kenya), Mbuti (Congo of biodiversity. indigenous peoples of Canada, Russia, Amazonia, central africa, and southeast Asia
    http://www.calvert.com/pdf/White_paper_barsh.pdf

    11. Indigenous Reference Site
    Where indigenous peoples Live. Source The Health of indigenous peoples Amuesha. Guana. Chenchus. africa. Dani ( Six TobaMaskoy. Gadabas. tuareg. Hawaiian. Potawatomi. Cakchiquel. Asurini
    http://www.ukans.edu/~insp/referencesite.html
    Where Indigenous Peoples Live Source : The Health of Indigenous Peoples
    Compiled by Ethel (Wara) Alderete
    World Health Organization (WHO), 1999. WHERE INDIGENOUS PEOPLES LIVE
    The following listing of Indigenous Peoples is not comprehensive, nor exclusive, but instead representative of peoples living worldwide. MAP KEY
    1. Artic 8.Great Basin 12.Circum-Caribbean 14.Mato Grosso ASIA 21.Chittagong Hill 26. Kalahari Desert
    Aleut Shoshone Akawaio Borbora 19. North and Tract Peoples San Chipewyan Ute Bari (Motilones) Botocudo Central Asia Chakma Inuit Choquie Ge (Central) Ainu Marma 27. Ituri Forest Saami 9. Southwest Guajiro Guato Hui Tripura Efe Apache Karina Kaduveo Manchu Lese 2. Sub-Arctic Dine (Hopi) Kogi Kaingang Miao 22. South East Asia Mbuti Cree Navajo Otomac Karaja Mongolian Chin Dene Zuni Paez Kayapo (Southern) Taiwan Aborigines Hmong 28. Australia and Naskapi Yarawato Tupi Tibetan Kachin the Pacific Ojibwa 10. Pacific NW Coast Yukpa Uighur Karen Aboriginals Bella Coola 15. Gran Chaco Yi Kedang Arapesh North America Chinook South America Ache Zhuang Lisu Asmat 3. Eastern

    12. HISTORIC PERMANENT FORUM ON INDIGENOUS ISSUES BREAKS NEW GROUND FOR WORLD’
    900 indigenous peoples from all regions of the world from the tropical forests of Amazonia and Central africa, the the Americas, Inuit, tuareg, Saami, Maori, Mapuche, Igorots
    http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/hr4588.doc.htm
    Press Release
    HR/4588
    Background Release
    HISTORIC PERMANENT FORUM ON INDIGENOUS ISSUES BREAKS
    To date, over 900 indigenous peoples from all regions of the world from the tropical forests of Amazonia and Central Africa, the Pacific Islands, East Africa, the Arctic, the Australian desert and the temperate regions of the Americas, Inuit, Tuareg, Saami, Maori, Mapuche, Igorots, Aboriginal people, Native Americans, Kuna and many other peoples have registered to attend the Forum and take the opportunity to raise their voices in the two-week meeting.  All who attend may make statements to the 16 members, and through them, to the world.  The establishment of such an entity has long been a goal for indigenous peoples, and was first suggested by the 1993 Vienna World Conference on Human Rights.
    The mandate of the Forum is to advise and make recommendations to the Economic and Social Council on economic and social development, culture, human rights, the environment, education and health.  In addition to advising the Council, the Forum has been asked to raise awareness, promote the integration and coordination of activities relating to indigenous issues within the United Nations system, and prepare and disseminate information on indigenous issues.  It will meet once each year for 10 working days.  States, United Nations bodies and organs, intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations, and organizations of
    The Forum was established on 28 July 2000 by the Economic and Social Council, on the recommendation of the Commission on Human Rights.  The distribution of governmental seats is based on the five United Nations regional groups, with three additional seats rotating among the regions.  This term, the three regional groups of Latin America and the Caribbean, Western Europe and Asia each have two seats.  Indigenous people have nominated their candidates on the basis of seven geo-cultural regions that they have devised to more accurately reflect cultural regions, with one rotating seat. 

    13. LANGUAGES-ON-THE-WEB: BEST TUAREG LINKS
    tuareg Tamazgha, a Collection of Resources on North Documents www.halcyon.com/FWDP/africa.html (WebCrawler over 500 texts on indigenous peoples throughout the
    http://www.languages-on-the-web.com/links/link-tuareg.htm
    language links
    TUAREG HOME THE BEST LINKS GUARANTEE
    Unlike many other web sites related to languages,
    only serious and useful sites are listed here.
    If you know a really good site for learning this language do email us GENERAL LINKS Links Tuareg
    www.sahara-info.ch/Aktuell/Links/Links_Tuareg.htm
    (Snap) INFOS SATELLITENBILDER GPS ALGERIEN LIBYEN MAROKKO TSCHAD TUAREG REISEBERICHTE VERSCHIEDENES AUSRÜSTER LAND ROVER VERANSTALTER FAHRAD - MTB Neu! Tuareg Tamazgha, "a Collection of Resources on North Africa, the Amazigh (Berber) People, their... Touareg
    www.cybercable.tm.fr/~hsixt/
    (AltaVista) Cybercable, touareg, musique, music, rêves, dreams, voyage, travel, image, picture, graphique, graphics, calligraphie FWDP African Documents
    www.halcyon.com/FWDP/africa.html
    (WebCrawler, Magellan) An online library of over 500 texts on indigenous peoples throughout the world. ONLINE BILINGUAL TEXTS ONLINE COURSES ONLINE GRAMMARS ONLINE DICTIONARIES ONLINE NEWSPAPERS/MAGAZINES ONLINE RADIO/TV ONLINE CULTURE, RELIGION, LITERATURE, ARTS AND MUSIC

    14. Mythinglinks/AFRICA/Egypt & The Sahara: The Sahara
    a collection of resources on North africa with a essays detailing more facts on the tuareg s plight I find it unethical to explore indigenous peoples lore and
    http://www.mythinglinks.org/afr~sahara.html
    MYTHING LINKS
    Kathleen Jenks, Ph.D. GEOGRAPHICAL REGIONS
    THE SAHARA
    Berber Woman
    (From the "Libyana" site: see below) http://www.myrine.at/Amazons/libya.html Since Robert Graves and others argue that Medusa and her Gorgon sisters originated in Libya (Neith, one of the earliest Egyptian goddesses, also seems to have come from Libya in ancient times, Libyans and the Delta peoples of Egypt seem to have mingled freely), it isn't surprising that Greece's Amazon mythology might draw from northern Africa as well as Turkey. This engrossing site is on African Amazons, the probable ancestors of contemporary Berber ( Amazigh, or Free People, is their name for themselves) and Tuareg peoples. The site is a little difficult to navigate so just click on all hypertext available (including "cap" on the opening page). There's a page full of Amazons as they were portrayed in ancient Greek art; there's another on Tin Hinan, an ancient Tuareg queen so revered that the gold in her tomb was never looted; there's a page on the Berbers, another on the Tuareg, another on ancient language and art from the Sahara. A trial membership to this group is offered with it you get free downloads of ancient art as well as translated texts concerning the Amazons.
    http://www.arab.net/libya/culture/la_berbers.html

    15. Africa
    against the Nuba, Ogoni Nation, tuareg people in Northern africa, Great Lakes conflict in Eastern Forest Conservation Archive africa. indigenous peoples - africa. Nigeria and Oil
    http://www.globalcircle.net/00africa.htm
    Main Topic Index A B C D ... Z Continent Index for Countries
    Africa
    Asia Pacific Canada ... World africa Algeria
    Angola

    Benin

    Botswana
    ...
    Eropean imperialism in Africa, Internet History Sourcebook
    , extensive links
    The Impact of the Centuries of Slave Trade on Africa

    How Africa Was Underdeveloped Economically
    - control of the monetary system as critical to colonialism
    African History Internet Sourcebook

    Light Weapons in the Sahel-Sahara Subregion

    Workshop on Illicit Trafficking in Small Arms: African Issues
    Association of Concerned Africa Scholars ... Black history in the Carribbean Fourth World Documentation Project, African Documents including, Genocide against the Nuba, Ogoni Nation, Tuareg people in Northern Africa, Great Lakes conflict in Eastern Zaire, Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda, and Tanzania (see genocide racism Media sources in Africa , from MediaChannel.org by country The Arab Organization for Human Rights. Action Without Borders - African countries , organizations, NGOs by country Africa resources and maps Maps of Africa Action Without Borders - African countries Forest Conservation Archive - Africa ... U.S. Military and Corporate Recolonization of the Congo

    16. Wcsf Online: Sorry. An Error Has Occurred.
    Summary Workshop on indigenous peoples and Access to Fair citing examples of cooperatives of tuareg or Colombian mail can be costly in africa, when available
    http://www.mcart.org/wcsfonlinenews/en/19-jul-02/summ_20.05.cfm
    An error has occurred.
    Please wait while the site administrator is being notified...
    ODBC Error Code = S1000 (General error) [Microsoft][ODBC Microsoft Access Driver] Not enough space on disk. For questions please email: errors@mcart.org

    17. Amazigh History
    of northwestern Mali, and the tuaregoccupied Air and referred to the indigenous peoples they encountered as implying that the inhabitants of North africa.
    http://www.libyamazigh.org/history.htm
    Substance and Origins:
    Since the dawn of history, Imazighen have been the indigenous inhabitants of North Africa, their territory stretching from Egypt to Mauritania and from the Mediterranean to the boundaries of historic sub-Saharan Black Africa. Various empires and peoples have conquered portions of historic Tamazgha , beginning with the Phoenicians and Greeks and continuing through the Romans, Vandals, Byzantines, Arabs, Turks, French, British, Spanish, and Italians. Imazighen have been subjected to various religious beliefs: their own early pantheistic concepts; the polytheistic dogmas of the Phoenicians, Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans; and monotheistic Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Since the 13th century, most Imazighen have professed the Islamic faith and Islam has sunk most deeply into their psyches.
    Throughout their history, the Imazighen have always had their heroes or heroines who have defended their ancestral homeland but then succumbed to the superior "civilization" might of their conquerors. In 814 B.C., for example, Amazigh chief Larbas negotiated a deal to marry Princess Dido, daughter of the King of Tyre, in return for a small piece of real estate that eventually became Qart Hadasht (i.e., the New City, or Carthage). King Juba and king Massinissa intrigued with the Romans against the Carthaginians. Royal prince Jugurtha learned Roman fighting techniques and then led a formidable rebellion from 106 to 104 B.C. according to the Roman historian Sallust's account of the Jugurthine War.

    18. NPR : On The Edge Of Timbuktu
    the use of local plants by indigenous peoples to Timbuktu A tuareg tribeswoman named Buktu settles by a well Niger River to Mopti and other parts of africa.
    http://www.npr.org/programs/re/archivesdate/2003/may/mali/
    Back to npr.org var SA_ID="nprpix;npr"; On the Edge, Timbuktu
    Project to Document Vanishing Cultures Begins
    Listen to Alex Chadwick's report: Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Part 4 View an expedition photo gallery.
    Video: Trek to the salt mines of Taoudenni.
    Read Chadwick's interviews with Wade Davis Chris Rainier Issa Mohamed
    May 28, 2003 Should ancient human cultural practices gain the same kinds of protections that plants and animals are accorded in remote forest and jungles? Conservationists acknowledge they've made great strides in protecting the natural world many school children now know terms like "biosphere," and understand the concept of interconnected environments, life forms and species survival.
    Music from Mali Listen to four selections of traditional music, performed by the La Troupe de Jeune Afrique, a group of young orphans in Timbuktu. Listen to two selections, performed by "Furia" Tuareg women in Timbuktu. Listen to four selections performed during a feast by Bamako's Tuareg people.
    Recorded in the field by Leo Del Aguila for 'Radio Expeditions.'
    Now, National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Wade Davis is leading an effort to win such recognition for the "ethnosphere" what he calls the vast reservoir of knowledge, experience and perspective created over thousands of years by countless cultures around the globe.

    19. FWB, Fall 1994/Winter 1995
    The tuareg Situation in West africa. the United Nations Working Group on indigenous peoples, in Geneva inform the world community of the tuareg situation that
    http://carbon.cudenver.edu/public/fwc/Issue9/tuareg-1.html
    T UAREGS
    "The Tuareg Situation" in West Africa
    BY LORI L. HARTMANN After the 1990 government crackdown on Tuareg rebels in Tchin Tabaradan, Niger, my daily life in nearby Tahoua did not change much. I remember only a short newsbrief about the violence that came over the radio, then silence, some whispering, and a mysterious combination of calm and tension. A curfew was imposed but there was no subsequent information on the radio or in newspapers, except for the repeated assurance that government security forces were doing their best to stabilize "the Tuareg situation." It turned out that many Tuareg prisoners were being brought to Tahoua, but I only heard about that later through a friend of a friend in the military. American missionaries living close by Tahoua's prison told of hearing tortured screams in the night. We thought that was an exaggeration, but the truth was illuminated weeks later, when I received a letter from a friend in France, along with an article cut out from "Le Monde" (a prominent French newspaper). The article explained in detail all about the violence and abuses. We were shocked, but then, we understood very little at that time about "the Tuareg situation." Generally speaking, there is not at present (nor has there ever been) any great public awareness of or knowledge about the Tuaregs, who are like many other indigenous peoples in being largely invisible within a world dominated by states. In an attempt to correct that lack of awareness, for the past few years "Temoust," a Tuareg support group based in Lyons, France, has participated in the annual meetings of the United Nations Working Group on Indigenous Peoples, in Geneva. Temoust has begun to inform the world community of "the Tuareg situation" that exists in the two main countries they inhabitNiger (where Temoust claims there are some 1.5 million Tuaregs) and Mali (where there are about one million). Tuaregs also inhabit Algeria, Libya and Burkina Faso (for a combined population of about another half a million), and Mauritania and several other countries where there are much smaller populations, mostly of refugees and exiles.1

    20. Welcome To The Caribbean Feature Article
    as observers. Participation Some 900 indigenous peoples from regions the Pacific Islands, East africa, the Arctic of the Americas, Inuit, tuareg, Saami, Maori
    http://www.welcometothecaribbean.com/news/articles/initiave.htm
    Welcome to the Caribbean Home Page Welcome WTTC News Business ... Lifestyles
    Peter Halder
    is the pen name of Burnett A. Halder, a former Ambassador of Guyana. A career diplomat, Mr. Halder served as Director of the Information Division and later the North American and European Divisions of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Guyana. He also served as deputy chief of mission in Washington and Ambassador to Canada. Mr. Halder has also worked as a consultant to the government of Fiji for almost a decade, serving in Suva and at Fiji's Perma- nent Mission to the United Nations, New York and its embassy in Washington, DC.

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