Pingpu Aboriginal activist Jason Pan (潘紀揚) yesterday denied a statement by the  Council of Indigenous Peoples (CIP) that the UN has rejected a petition he filed  to sue the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) government for not recognizing Pingpu  Aborigines’ Aboriginal status.
Pan, director of the Taiwan Association  for Rights Advancements for Pingpu Plains Aborigines, made the remarks at a  press conference in Taipei held following his recent return from UN headquarters  in Geneva.
Pan said he, along with Siraya Culture Association chairwoman  Wan Shu-chuan (萬淑娟), attended the UN Experts Mechanism Session on the Rights of  Indigenous Populations, which took place from July 12 until Friday last  week.
During the session, Pan said he gave a five-minute briefing on the  situation of Taiwan’s Pingpu Aborigines and suggested that the session send  people to Taiwan to learn more about the Pingpu Aborigines.
He added that  he had met with James Anaya, the UN’s special rapporteur on the situation of  human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples.
“Anaya  accepted the petition and we met several times during the meeting in Geneva,”  Pan said. “What proof does the CIP have to claim that my petition was  rejected?”
Pan said that while Anaya has expressed sympathy and  understanding, he did not specify when he might dispatch people to Taiwan for  further investigation.
The Pingpu used to live in the plains areas of  Taiwan.
They were recognized as Aborigines until the 1950s, when they  failed to register their ethnic status with local governments and in recent  decades they have been struggling to regain the status.
Source: Taipei Times - 2010/07/24



 









