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This article is from The Star Online (http://thestar.com.my)

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2004/2/17/features/7332153 & sec=f\

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Tuesday February 17, 2004

Re-thinking eco-tourism

By MICHAEL CHEANG

 

IS eco-tourism doing more harm than good? That was the issue that was debated

during a discussion among representatives of indigenous groups all over the

world at the Community Kampong during COP-7.

 

According to Anita Pleumarom from Third World Network’s Tourism Investigation

and Monitoring team, current definitions of eco-tourism are not clear, and even

the experts are debating on what it really means.

 

“Eco-tourism now merely focuses on the environment part, and the bio-diversity,

and does not take into account the indigenous peoples,” she said. “Many

countries with high bio-diversity are either already pursuing industrial

eco-tourism, or developing plans to do so, but that does not mean that

indigenous people will also benefit from these activities.”

 

One major concern among the indigenous tribes was that their rights were being

violated by rich corporations out to make profits out of their lands in the name

of eco-tourism. In some instances, such as in the case of sacred places, the

locations are packaged as tourism spots, complete with directions and

attractions, but there is no effort to ask the indigenous local people for

permission to visit those sites.

 

“The most dangerous thing in eco-tourism is the privatisation of more public

lands. Once the private sector gets the land, they tend to claim more and more

rights to it, and the local people get more and more marginalised,” said

Pleumarom. “Most of the time, tourism in an area is the product of a corporate

company, which does not include the local communities.”

 

Therefore, local and indigenous communities should have the right to determine

their own development and what they want for their people, and should have a say

in whatever plans for tourism that the government or private sector may have for

their lands, thus ensuring that their culture and way of living are not violated

by outside influences or commercialisation.

 

A good example of the local community taking a hand to ensure a better

eco-tourism system was given by a delegate from Indonesia, who explained how

their eco-tourism system sets rules that prevent tourists from bringing their

respective cultures. Instead, tourists are required to follow the cultures of

the local people, down to wearing the same clothes and eating the same food.

 

In the light of the world-wide failure of corporatised eco-tourism, Pleumarom

hoped that COP-7 would reconsider the proposed Guidelines on Bio-Diversity and

Tourism Development and avoid promoting tourism as a bio-diversity friendly

activity, which will result in nature becoming privatised and indigenous

people's rights being violated. “If we look at the guidelines, its completely

voluntary, which we think is not the right way. We need legal binding frameworks

and it is very important to press for the enforcement of laws,” she said.

 

Pleumarom was disappointed that after all these years of debates and efforts to

create more awareness about the damage that eco-tourism may have on

bio-diversity, eco-tourism was still highlighted during the convention’s opening

speeches by UNEP Executive Director Klaus Toepfer, as a wonderful means of

conserving bio-diversity while improving the lives of indigenous peoples.

 

“So far, eco-tourism has caused more harm than good to the overall

bio-diversity and indigenous peoples,” she said. “But that speech by Toepfer

showed that there is still a denial of any problems of eco-tourism within

COP-7.”

 

“Many people want to know why we are so critical of tourism. Isn’t it much

better to use tourism for bio-diversity, protection and for local communities to

benefit from it?” she said. “However, the threats of tourism towards

bio-diversity and indigenous peoples have been constantly underestimated, and

there is a kind of denial that tourism only has good effects. We need to debunk

this myth, especially here, at COP-7.”

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