
New York, USA// – On March 10, 2026, Indigenous Peoples’ rights organisation Cultural Survival published its annual “In Memoriam” report documenting the 2025 murders of Indigenous land and rights defenders across Latin America.
Today, at the 25th session of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, Cultural Survival releases an advocacy brief, “Defending the Land, Paying with Life,” that analyzes the structural violence behind these murders in the context of international human rights legal frameworks and launches recommendations towards the parties responsible for protecting defenders and implementing Indigenous rights, including companies, States, the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, the Presidency of COP Escazu’s governing board, and the international community.
| It is well documented that Latin America is the most dangerous region in the world for defenders of the right to land and territory. In 2024, 82% of the 146 documented cases of murders of defenders took place in this region.
Two of the most lethal countries for defenders are Mexico and Colombia, both of which have protection mechanisms for defenders. Yet despite the existence of such mechanisms, defenders continue to lose their lives, as well as face threats, intimidation, kidnappings, physical and digital attacks, and other forms of violence that seek to make their defence work impossible or unsustainable. They were killed for doing work upon which the rest of the planet depends: protecting forests and waters and defending against the extractive projects that contribute throughout their supply chains to climate change and other environmental disasters. Key Recommendations
“Every name in this report is a universe that was extinguished, a language, a territory, a form of knowledge that the world will never recover. In memoriam is not an act of mourning; it is an act of resistance,” stated Alicia Moncada (Wayuu), Cultural Survival Director of Advocacy and Communications. |


