Sarstoon Temash Institute for
Indigenous Management
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Annual Report 2006
Mission Statement:
Temash Lagoon
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“To safeguard the ecological integrity of the
Sarstoon Temash Region and employ its
resources in an environmentally sound manner
for the economic, cultural and social welfare of
its indigenous people.”
Contents
Words from the Executive Director 4
What is SATIIM 5
4
Accomplishments
6 Biodiversity Conservation and Community Participatory Mapping
Integrated Coastal Marine and Watershed Management/ Bi-
national Activities
Community management of Sarstoon Temash Coastal Marine Resources Sarstoon Temash Buffer Communities Environmental Education
Oil Advocacy
Satiim’s assistance to Otoxha …
Financial Statement (2006) 12
SATIIM’s Management & Staff 15
Gregory Choc
Executive Director
SATIIM Dear Friends I am pleased to present to you a synopsis of our work over the last year. 2006 has been a year of unprecedented growth filled with exciting, enriching, rewarding experiences yet challenging for our organization and our indigenous people. SATIIM has seen an increase in our staff from 5 to 11 full time and 5 part-time. With our cadre of young professionals and in partnership with our communities we have been busy tackling some of the intractable issues affecting protected area management and indigenous people. At the same time we put into motion our administrative and financial policies to effectively manage our human and financial resources. While we successfully
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used these systems during the implementation of the medium size grant from GEF through the World Bank, we had to restructure, streamline and make other operational improvements to keep cost in check and at the same time strengthen team spirit within our organization. SATIIM continue s the daunting task of concretizing our comprehensive management plan for the park. This involved additional fundraising for our park program that included infrastructure development, personnel recruitment, development of patrol and monitoring programs, research, strengthening traditional community governance structures and promoting and safeguarding our peoples’ livelihoods. This year was also challenging for SATIIM and by extension personally challenging for our staff as well. We objected to government permission to US Capital Energy, an oil company, to conduct oil exploration inside the Sarstoon Temash National Park. Government refusal to discuss and resolve our concerns, and those raised by our communities, forced us to seek redress before the Supreme Court of Belize. It was a long fought battle that we took to the Supreme Court and the court of public opinion. In the end, the rule of law prevailed. However, the real struggle has just started as human rights, benefits, safeguarding livelihoods, mitigating environmental contamination and discrimination that will directly affect our people, all need to be addressed. To our donors, colleagues and friends who supported us during these most difficult times, I extend, on behalf of our communities, board and staff, our most sincere thanks. We know that our work will have far reaching implications for protected areas management in Belize. With your continued support we will continue to lead the way forward creating new path where too many are afraid to go. I also give my many thanks to our communities, my board, volunteers and my staff for keeping our purpose in mind despite the confusion and the threat to our unity over the last year. Our work and our challenge to the oil industry have only strengthened our resolve. May the great Spirit be with all. Gregorio Choc Executive Director
What is
Satiim’s Staff
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SATIIM? The Sarstoon Temash Institute for Indigenous Management (SATIIM) is a community based indigenous environmental organization working in the far south of Belize, in a region in the Toledo District that lies between the Sarstoon and Temash Rivers. SATIIM co-manages, with the Belizean Forestry Department, the 42,000 acre Sarstoon Temash National Park (STNP). The national park was declared by government in 1994 on lands traditionally used by the Garifuna and Maya communities who live in the area. There was no community consultation process before the creation of the park. What is now SATIIM began in 1997 as the Sarstoon Temash National Park Steering Committee, which was formed after the communities around the park came together to stake a claim in the management of the land and natural resources in and around the park. Many villagers opposed the declaration of the park and viewed it as confiscation of their lands, but others saw the creation of the park as an opportunity for the indigenous communities to continue to safeguard and manage the area. Residents who saw this opportunity formed the steering committee and began a long process of discussion with their neighbours, slowly persuading people that the communities could benefit directly and indirectly from the national park if they organized and controlled its management.
SATIIM’s Board of Directors is made up of five elected community representatives, one from each of the buffer zone communities: Barranco, Midway, Sunday Wood, Conejo and Crique Sarco. In addition, representatives from the Q’eqchi Council of Belize, the Toledo Alcaldes Association and the Garifuna National Council have seats on the Board, with representatives chosen and appointed by those organizations. The Forest Department represents the Belizean government on the Board of Directors. The elected Board members serve two year periods and are elected at the General Gatherings, an event held every two years with all interested community members. This general assembly also decides overall Community Resource Maps produced @Satiim
STNP Boundary Map produced@ Satiim
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policy and the strategic direction of the organization.
Accomplishments Biodiversity Conservation and Community Participatory Mapping
Sarstoon Temash Institute for Indigenous Management (SATIIM),
with assistance from Conservation International (CI), has been building its in-house GIS capability during the past year. Development of this capacity has played an integral role in the management of the Sarstoon -Temash National Park (STNP), assisted in laying the foundation for community-based biodiversity conservation, land tenure security and participatory mapping of traditional indigenous lands. Boundary demarcation is an integral part of SATIIM’s work with communities and it required several meetings and consultations with communities who share common boundaries. The issue of boundary demarcation can become sensitive at times as communities have been living on the land for several decades which may cause contention among themselves and neighbouring communities. This in turn may delay or halt the demarcation efforts. As a step towards supporting conflict resolution and consensus building between the communities, consultations were carried out in the communities. The meetings were for the communities to come together whereby they engaged in meaningful discussion in a n effort to agree on their boundaries.
Resource use mapping
Even though boundary demarcation is a step towards securing land
tenure which is a challenge for the indigenous people of Sarstoon Temash region, it is also important to map important, historical sites and extraction sites for better land use planning and management. The community mapping focused on the communities of Barranco, Midway, and Conejo and included compiling of data from reports done by consultants hired by SATIIM and overlaying, digitizing and geo-referencing of the data available.
Monitoring at Temash
Belize /Guatemala Delegation @St. Peter Claver Ext., PG
Drumming in Barranco
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Integrated Coastal Marine and Watershed Management/ Bi-National Activities
With funding received from the British Embassy, the UNDP GEF/
SGP and Oak Foundation, several coastal marine & watershed management as well as bi-national activities with Guatemalan counterpart FUNDAECO was carried out.
Bi-national mangrove and sedimentation monitoring SATIIM and FUNDAECO staff participated in a two day mangrove monitoring training on July 6th & 7th, 2006. The training covered basic information on mangroves and its monitoring, methodology and provided the participants with hands on experience. Sedimentation traps were also set at Temash river mouth and Sarstoon River mouth. These traps were checked on August 3rd, 2006 and the sediment collected was analyzed. Besides these monitoring activities, baseline data on fish and shrimp were also collected as a bi-national activity.
Punta Gorda Town Council Delegation to Livingston Guatemala On August 18th SATIIM carried the Belizean public officials, including representatives from the Punta Gorda Town Council, the Fisheries Department, the Immigration and Customs Departments, the Police and the Belize Defense Forces, to Livingston Guatemala to meet with their counterparts for one day of discussions and planning on a variety of issues of interest to the two countries. Discussions were lengthy and productive, with a number of specific initiatives identified for follow up. A second event introduced Guatemalan officials to Punta Gorda, Belize. Specific actions were identified for a number of the issues, including the development of a funding project for the Punta Gorda Town Council to develop a recycling program, dates for joint sessions with Fisheries and forestry personnel meetings in Barra Sarstun, and dates for joint patrols for the Sarstoon River and Amatique Bay.
Barra Sarstun School visit to Barranco and the STNP On October 5 t h , FUNDAECO
brought about 20 school children, parents and teachers from Barra Sarstun, (a Guatemalan community that borders the park) for their first visit to the nearby Sarstoon Temash National Park. The FUNDAECO boat was met by SATIIM staff at the mouth of the Temash River, w h e r e students were given a tour of the protected area and the shrimp conservation areas that b o t h communities have set aside for as b r e e d i n g grounds. After the tour, children were taken to the
Temash Monitoring station and dock
Confiscated lumber in the STNP
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Barranco school, where they were treated with a Garifuna dance performance, lunch and a football match. Follow-up plans are to take the children from Barranco to Barra Sarstun and to tour the Rio
Sarstun Multiple Use Area.
STMMA Advisory Committee An advisory committee was established for the Sarstoon Temash Marine Management Area (STMMA). The committee comprises a total of 7 members: representatives from Barranco, Motherbush, Panti Beach, Temash, Sarstoon, Fisheries department and Rio Grande Fishing Cooperative. This committee was established to develop mechanisms to address overfishing and resolving conflicts as it pertains to the coastal marine environment in the STMMA. They have met several times over the course of the year to discuss and resolve issues.
Community Management of Sarstoon Temash Coastal Marine Resources Research, monitoring and visitation Infrastructure Through funding from the UNDP GEF/SGP a monitoring facility was constructed at the Temash Bar mouth. The station will facilitate and house researchers and staff in conducting research and monitoring within the STNP. With additional funding from the OAK Foundation, the construction of the dock facility at the Temash River Monitoring Station was completed on August 10, 2006. This added to the completion of basic research, monitoring and visitation infrastructure at the station.
Extraction Permitting System Satiim’s Technical Coordinator and Park Manager met with the Forest Department in finalizing an E x t r a c t i o n Permitting system for STNP. Meetings were held in all communities buffering the park explaining the permitting procedure and informing them that the system will be managed by the village alcaldes in conjunction with the park rangers. Permits are submitted to the approval committee which meets monthly to review permits.
Patrolling and law enforcement Throughout the course of the year, patrols were planned and conducted on a regular basis. Park patrols are conducted by rangers daily within the STNP and weekly on the demarcation line near the buffer zone communities. A total of five multi-agency patrols (Satiim, Forestry, Fisheries and Police Departments and the Belize Defense Force) have been conducting patrols deeper within the park this year, along the Temash and Sarstoon Rivers and the many tributary creeks. These patrols led to the discovery of a major logging operation inside the park, leading to
the confiscation of over 4,000 board feet of illegally logged mahogany in March 2006. Other patrols conducted led to another illegal logging operation on the Midway/ Conejo
boundary where 1,296 board feet of Samwood was confiscated.
Education officer @ Mid-
way Community
Sustainable fishing workshop @Sarstoon
Field trip to Xunantunich Maya ruin
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Advocacy The Oil Challenge:
This year SATIIM responded to a major challenge - proposed oil exploration and development in the Sarstoon Temash National Park and surrounding com-munities. US Capital Energy (USCE), an American oil company, was given per-mission by the Belizean Forest Department in April to begin seismic testing in the National Park. Permission that SATIIM’s Board and staff felt was illegal and unfair. In response, SATIIM mounted a multifaceted advocacy campaign that involved raising awareness of the oil exploration issue through public outreach and education, coalition building, legal action, policy research and analysis, mobilizing local supporters, lobbying Government ministers, generating inter-national political, technical and financial support and preparing to monitor and mitigate activities in the STNP if oil exploration goes ahead.
We began the campaign with ambitious objectives- to halt or mitigate the impacts of oil exploration in the STNP and to incorporate biodiversity conservation and indigenous community concerns into Belize’s relevant policies and regula-tions. Thanks to funding from IUCN, the Summit Foundation, Green Grants, Conservation International and the Oak Foundation SATIIM has been able to carry out oil advocacy activities that support these objectives in a timely and effec-tive way.
Highlights from the Campaign: One of the highlights from this campaign was the legal case that SATIIM brought to the Supreme Court in May 2006. We challenged the legality of the permission that was granted to the oil company by the Forest Department and this re-sulted in an injunction on oil exploration in the Park until a judicial review was complete. On September 27, 2006 the judicial review found that the permission to enter the National Park was illegal because no Environmental Impact As-sessment (EIA) was done beforehand, therefore the permission was quashed and an EIA was required. However, this was only a partial victory for SATIIM as we had hoped the Supreme Court would have agreed that oil exploration ac-tivities are illegal within Belizean National Parks. SATIIM and other protected area managers in Belize have some work ahead of us if we are to keep oil prospectors out of the National Park system. In addition to legal action, we have implemented a number of awareness raising and public education activities includ-ing community meetings to communicate and consult with local villagers and village leaders, public forums to promote discussion and dialogue on the issue, a media tour that showed reporters the park and the local communities where the proposed oil exploration is to happen, and we also produced and disseminated a newsletter, email updates, newspaper articles and radio and TV interviews. We mobilized local supporters to Belize City and Belmopan to witness the Su-preme Court case and participate in national press conferences. Since the campaign began SATIIM has received public support from some of our colleagues and interna- tional support through an online petition set up the EcoLogic Development Fund and an international letter writing campaign developed by Global Re- sponse. ELAW and Earthjus-tice have helped provide technical legal and advo- cacy training, while others have contributed time, energy, knowledge and re-sources to the campaign.
June 28, 2006 Public Forum on Oil Issues @ Parish Hall
Greg Choc, ED for SATIIM, speaks to local supporters outside the Supreme Court in Belize City
on June 5, 2006., Greg Choc and Mrs. Antoinette Moore at supreme court( (above)
Greg Choc went to Ecuador for an Oilwatch
conference in October 2006, where he visited the
site of oil development in the Amazon
David Itch, SATIIM’s GIS Analyst demon-
strates where the proposed seismic testing
lines will go at a community meeting in
Conejo village in June 2006.
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Satiim assistance to Otoxha Deer Dance and Koxtal Cultural Group
Satiim through the CARD project conducted work with the Deer dance and Koxtal cultural group of
Otoxha. As a part of the project, a marimba and 23 deer dance costumes were purchased and handed over to the Otoxha Deer Dance Group. Having the proper costumes, the group was able to perform the Deer Dance in Belize City on September 15, 2006 as part of the September celebrations. The Koxtal Cul-tural group were assisted with material for Koxtal training in the standardizing and diversification of Koxtal marketable products and were able to create a total of 111 koxtals (38 small, 38 medium and 35
large). The project assisted in strengthening the capacity of the Otoxha Deer Dance and Koxtal Cultural Group to deliver more effective ser-
vices, respecting gender, ethnic diversity while incorporating indigenous knowledge.
Marimba players and Deer dancers perform-
ing in Belize City, koxtals produces by the
Otoxha Womens Group
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Financial Statement (2006) STATEMENT OF INCOME AND EXPENSES
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2006
REVENUES
Bi-National Work $ 116,417
Community Outreach 26,825
General Operations & Coastal Project 297,355
Advocacy & Policy 214,109
Community Development Projects 49,278
Education & Outreach 39,949
Other Income 6,488
Total Revenue: $ 750,421
LESS: EXPENDITURES:
Programme Administration 207,559
Operational Expense 54,549
Consultancy 14,632
Bi-National Work 56,348
Community Outreach 40,619
Alternative Livelihood 930
Capital Expenditures ` 25,935
Advocacy Initiatives 178,810
Total Expenditures $ 579,382.00
NET INCOME $ 171,039
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Revenue Distribution
General Operations &
Coastal Project
39%
Advocacy & Policy
28%
Community Development
Projects
7%
Community Outreach
4%
Bi-National Work
16%
Other Income
1%Education & Outreach
5%
$-
$50,000
$100,000
$150,000
$200,000
$250,000
$300,000
Belize D
ollars
Bi-National
Work
Community
Outreach
General
Operations &
Coastal Project
Advocacy &
Policy
Community
Development
Projects
Education &
Outreach
Other Income
Revenue Collected in 2006
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Expenditures
Capital Expenditures
Alternat ive Livelihood
Community Outreach Operat ional ExpenseConsultancy
Bi-National Work
Programme Administrat ion
Advocacy Init iat ives
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SATIIM’s Management & Staff Board of Directors:
Alvin Loredo Marcos Ico Chairman (Barranco) Representative (Midway) Alejandro Tush Alfonso Makin Representative (Sunday wood) Representative (Conejo Creek) Jose Coy Pedro Kuk Representative (Crique Sarco) Representative (Q’eqchi Council of Belize) Lorenzo Pop Wilbur Sabido Representative (Toledo Alcaldes Assoc) Representative (Forestry Department) Marion Cayetano Representative (National Garifuna Council)
Office Staff Gregorio Choc Lynette Gomez Executive Director Technical Coordinator David Duncan Jr. Peter Shol Office Administrator/ Finance Officer Education Officer David Itch Acela Cho GIS-Database Analyst Accounts Clerk/receptionist
Field Staff Seleem Chan Anasario Cal Park Manager Head Ranger (Crique Sarco) Thomas Ishim Egbert Valencio Ranger (Midway) Ranger (Barranco) Enrique Makin Beatrice Mariano Ranger (Conejo) Community Promoter (Barranco) Martin Tush Josaiah Bo Community Promoter (Sunday Wood) Community Promoter (Crique Sarco)
Louis Ishim Community Promoter (Midway)
Volunteers Megan Bennett
Sarstoon Temash Institute for Indigenous Management
6 Pampana Street, Punta Gorda Town
Toledo District, Belize, C.A.
Phone: 501-722-0103
Fax: 501-722-0124
Email: [email protected]
Website: http://www.satiim.org.bz