JOAS to map Orang Asal Traditional Lands and Territories

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JARINGAN ORANG ASAL SEMALAYSIA 

Indigenous Peoples’ Network of Malaysia

P.O. Box 511 • 89507 Penampang, Sabah, Malaysia

Tel/Fax: +6088 726413 | joasmalaysia@gmail.com | www.joasmalaysia.org

 

 

JOAS to map Orang Asal Traditional Lands and Territories

Media Contact: Jannie Lasimbang, Secretary General, Jaringan Orang Asal Se Malaysia (JOAS)

Ph: +6010 931 1944 | Email: jannielasimbang@gmail.com

Kota Kinabalu – Jaringan Orang Asal SeMalaysia (JOAS) announced their plans today to map

out and consolidate Orang Asal territories in conjunction with the launch of the Global Call to

Action on Indigenous and Community Land Rights by the #LandRightsNow campaign.

The worldwide campaign signed on by over 300 organizations aims to double the global area

of land legally recognized as owned or controlled by indigenous peoples (Orang Asal) and local

communities by 2020.

“Land rights for Orang Asal, is not just an issue of livelihoods, our traditional land is the source

of our identity and culture,” explained JOAS Secretary General, Jannie Lasimbang.

“Rather than sitting back and waiting, JOAS has been training community mappers to map out

our traditional territories which will later be consolidated into a national database,” she

added.

“The alarming trend now is that communal areas including watersheds, hunting grounds,

burial areas and forest all found within our traditional territories or wilayah adat are being

contested in courts as outside of our traditional territories.”

“In an effort to secure our land rights, we have trained community mappers who will go to

Orang Asal villages and work with communities to map out the land they’ve used for

generations,” she explained.

According to #LandRightsNow, in the last decade alone foreign investments have led to the

acquisition of more than 81 million acres of land worldwide – an area the size of Portugal, with

unspeakable consequences for many rural and forest dwellers across the world. This is caused

by the widespread and enduring lack of clarity and recognition of indigenous and community

land and resource rights.

The campaign further stressed that securing and protecting that ownership is not only of great

importance for social and economic development, but also for progress on human rights, food

security, environmental conservation and confronting and adapting to climate change.

“We call on all organizations and our government, to support the Global Call to Action on

Indigenous and Community Land Rights because securing indigenous and community land and

resource rights is key in the face of global challenges, such as eradicating hunger and poverty,

promoting gender equality and ensuring environmental protection,” stressed JOAS President

Yusri Ahon.

Find out more and lend your support to the campaign here http://landrightsnow.org/

JOAS community mapping trainees downloading and collating the data into maps, with lead-trainer Nousi Giun from Sabah, guiding.

JOAS community mapping trainees downloading and collating the data into maps, with lead-trainer Nousi Giun from Sabah, guiding.