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Leaders’ Messages in Preparation for the World Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nature in Abu Dhabi

Global decisions mean nothing without action on the ground.

For the first-ever in-person World Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nature leaders are sending a clear message:

* The commitments made at global level, including at IUCN, must be matched by supporting actions in the territories.

* Indigenous Peoples’ contributions to conserving biodiversity, water, and ecosystems must be recognized and scaled up.

* Implementation must ensure that Indigenous Peoples are not just participants, but central actors in conservation.

Indigenous Peoples protect water, ecosystems, and biodiversity. The World Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nature marks a historic step — a moment to hold the international community accountable and to affirm that true change starts with Indigenous Peoples at the center.

Watch the full message delivered by Onel Masardule (FPCI)

About the World Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nature

The World Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nature will be the first ever in-person global Indigenous Peoples’ Summit of its kind. From 8 to 10 October, more than 100 Indigenous leaders from across the world will gather in Abu Dhabi, alongside IUCN, philanthropic allies, private sector actors, multilateral and bilateral donors, and the wider conservation community.

This high-level IP Summit marks a powerful turning point—an affirmation that Indigenous Peoples are not peripheral stakeholders, but rightful stewards of life on Earth. As knowledge keepers, guardians of ancestral territories, and visionaries of sustainability, Indigenous leaders will stand at the heart of this Summit to shape a future rooted in rights, reciprocity, and respect for all living beings.

Through strategic dialogue and renewed alliances, the Summit will open sacred space for Indigenous voices to lead the transformation of a global conservation agenda and set bold, collective priorities for IUCN and its networks. It also represents a catalytic opportunity for donors to invest in impactful, Indigenous-led solutions—anchored in traditional knowledge systems and the language of Mother Earth, and delivering lasting benefits for people and planet alike.

The event will also feature the first ever Indigenous Peoples Pavilion, a vibrant, self-curated space that will serve as the “Home of Indigenous Peoples” during the IUCN Congress. More than an exhibition, this living space will embody the spirit of Indigenous territories, offering an immersive experience rooted in ancestral wisdom, resilience, and innovation.

It will spotlight what truly works on the ground- traditional knowledge systems, indigenous conservation practices, community-led innovations, stories from Indigenous territories, and intergenerational leadership. Building on the legacy of Marseille and carried forward to Abu Dhabi, the Indigenous Summit marks a new chapter in recognising the rights, leadership, agency, governance, and knowledge of Indigenous Peoples in achieving the goals of the IUCN Global Indigenous Agenda, the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, adopted under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), and the Paris Agreement under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Visit the official site of the summit to learn more.