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Pablo Mis Appointed as Advisor to UN General Secretary on United Nations Voluntary Fund for Indigenous Peoples 

On December 17, 2020, United Nations Secretary General António Guterres appointed Pablo Mis, Maya Q’eqchi’ from Laguna Village, Toledo District, Belize, to the Advisory Board of Trustees of the United Nations Voluntary Fund for Indigenous Peoples. This is the first time that an Indigenous representative from Belize is appointed to the Board of the Fund.

Mis’ selection will provide him the opportunity and responsibility to advise the United Nations Secretary General on the use of the Fund for three years.The Board is composed of five persons with relevant experience on indigenous issues, who serve in their personal capacity. Mis for the last eleven years has been passionate about Indigenous and grassroots development and has dedicated his energies in helping to build the resilience of the Maya people in southern Belize, and he will bring his wealth of knowledge, experience, and advocacy for Indigenous Peoples’ rights to this new role.

The United Nations Voluntary Fund for Indigenous Peoples was established by the United Nations General Assembly in 1985. The fund provides financial assistance for Indigenous community members to participate at the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and other United Nations meetings and sessions related to Indigenous rights advocacy. It is funded by voluntary contributions from governments, non-governmental organizations, and other groups.

The Advisory Board of Trustees of the United Nations Voluntary Fund for Indigenous Peoples comprises people with experience on Indigenous issues selected from different regions of the world. Mis fellow trustees include Diel Mochire Mwenge, Indigenous Pygmy from the Democratic Republic of Congo; Marjolaine Étienne of the Pekuakamiulnuatsh First Nation from Canada; Tukumminnguanq Nykjaer Olsen, Inuk from Greenland; and Dev Kumar Sunuwar, Koĩts-Sunuwar from Nepal, current staff of Cultural Survival.

Mis is the Program Director for the Maya Leaders Alliance and Toledo Alcaldes Association, Maya organizations led by the traditional leaders of the 39 Maya villages in southern Belize which has led strategic litigation against the Government of Belize for Maya land rights, resulting in the historic 2015 Caribbean Court of Justice Judgment and Consent Orders that affirmed that the Maya People have customary rights to their land. In 2018, an agreement was reached between the Maya People and the Government of Belize outlining a roadmap to demarcate, title, and register Maya lands and to develop domestic legislation to protect the court-affirmed rights of the Maya People. Having secured this agreement, Mis was the Team Leader for the development of a joint project with the Government of Belize approved by the International Land Tenure Facility to implement the 2018 roadmap to legally guarantee and protect Maya rights to ancestral lands.
 

Mis holds an associate’s degree in Natural Resources Management from the University of Belize, a bachelor’s degree in Geography from the University of Hawaii, and he has completed graduate work with specialization in Indigenous Governance at the University of Victoria. He began his journey of serving the Maya People as a primary school teacher in rural communities and was instrumental in supporting the development of Tumul Kin Center of Learning, a Maya intercultural school in Blue Creek, Toledo, where he served both as a teacher and an academic director. He has served his community and fulfilled his customary duties serving at times as taq’l (senior messenger) to the Jolomil Kaleb’aal (traditional leader), as acting deputy traditional leader and currently as a member of the Laguna village council.

Mis’ work has also extended beyond his own community; he was key in revitalizing the Belize National Indigenous Council, where he served as lead representative of the Maya Leaders Alliance who held Chairship from 2018-2019. He was instrumental in bringing together the  Indigenous and Tribal Peoples of the Caribbean  to strengthen the presence of indigenous and tribal voices within the Caribbean region.

Mis and the Maya Leaders Alliance have collaborated for over a decade with Cultural Survival in advocating for Maya land rights at the United Nations. Mis worked with Cultural Survival to report to the Universal Periodic Review of Belize on violations of Maya land rights in 2013 and again in 2018. “We have collaborated with Cultural Survival for many years doing advocacy for the Maya Land Rights in many quarters of the United Nations Systems. Through those advocacy I built my capacity to navigate the United Nation system and mechanisms to advance the Maya Land Rights,” shared Mis.

In 2013 he was honored with a fellowship at the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in Geneva with the Indigenous Fellowship Program. “A key arm of the OHCHR is the Voluntary Fund for Indigenous Peoples. The Fund has allowed many Indigenous Peoples’ representatives to access the United Nations systems. I am honored to be appointed as a Trustee to the Board of the Fund. As a former fellow of the Fund, I am committed during my tenure to advance the good work of the Fund to reach Indigenous Peoples who need it the most,” explains Mis. 

Cultural Survival deeply congratulates Mis on this appointment.