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Peru Army Moves Into Amazon After Tribes Blockade Rivers and Roads
Ecology and culture at stake say environmentalists, as government plans to exploit rainforest for oil, gas and timber
The government has authorised the military to move into remote provinces where a state of emergency has been declared in the wake of a month-long stand-off between indigenous people and police.
Huge parts of Peru's rainforest is threatened by its government's deals with several multinationals. (Photograph: Paul A Souders/Corbis) President Alan Garcia said the state had the right and responsibility to develop mineral and hydrocarbon wealth to benefit all Peruvians. "We have to understand that when there are resources like oil, gas and timber, they don't belong only to the people who had the fortune to be born there because that would mean more than half of Peru's territory belongs to a few thousand people."
In the past two years the centre-right government has signed deals with multinationals to open swaths of rainforest, including a £1.3bn agreement last month with the Anglo-French oil company Perenco.
Indigenous groups, backed by environmentalists and Catholic bishops, have protested that the developments will devastate the area's ecology and their culture.
About 65 tribes have mobilised 30,000 people to disrupt roads, waterways and pipelines, leading to skirmishes with police. Up to 41 vessels serving energy companies are stuck along jungle rivers, paralysed by the protests, one private sector source told Reuters.
One of the most tense areas is along the Napo river in northern Peru, said Survival International, a London-based rights advocacy group. "After local indigenous people blockaded the river with a nylon cable, a naval gunboat and three boats belonging to Perenco broke through the blockade, sinking some of the protesters' canoes in the process."
The National Organisation of the Amazon Indigenous people of Peru said last week's declaration of a state of emergency, which suspended some constitutional rights in four jungle provinces, amounted to a declaration of war by the government.
The group responded by calling for an "insurgency" but retracted the term on Saturday after being threatened with 10 years in jail for sedition. Protests will continue but within the rule of law, it said.
The Peruvian rainforest is the largest swath of Amazon outside Brazil. According to one study oil, gas and timber deals would cover an estimated 70% of the forest.
The government says such developments are needed to boost economic growth and state revenues in one of South America's poorest countries. The projects, which could turn Peru into a net oil exporter, are in line with a free trade deal with the United States.
Alberto Pizango, an indigenous leader, said the tribes – who claim the forest as ancestral land – were not seeking a blanket ban on projects. "What we want is development from our perspective."
Each side has blamed the other for breakdown in negotiations.
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13 Comments so far
Show AllConsidering Peru's history is littered with examples of remote corrupt elites centered in Lima screwing over everybody else (and especially the indigenous population), is it any surprise that those whom stand to be adversely affected while gaining next to none of the benefits are using direct action.
After all, these elites are the ones who's actions spawned Shining Path & Tupac Amaru.
The Amazonian rain forest belongs to the world, not just to the Peruvian government. And it's not just a few thousand people in the rain forest, it's a whole ecological system. The Peruvian government is giving us the same old shit that no one believes any more. Blah, blah, Alan Garcia. Every time you open your mouth the flies of greed swarm out. It's time Peru was taken over by a populist democratic government.
GEORGE, WHAT YOU WROTE IS SO TRUE. LETS GET RID OF THE PEOPLE THAT LIVE AND LIVED THERE FOR THE SAKE OF MONEY AND GREED. WE HAVE DONE THAT TO THE NATIVE AMERICANS. A BIBLE IN ONE HAND AND A SWORD IN ANOTHER.CUSTER HAD IT COMING.
It is a world resource / treasure!
But only as it exists now!
You only have to look at the slash and burn policy elsewhere to the rain forests to know that once it's gone it will never come back till we are gone. Trade a priceless rain forest for 10 years of cattle grazing and you are left with depleted lot.
The oil? It gets more valuable as time goes on. Leave it in the ground.
it's too bad the screwers have all the money, guns and lawyers and the screwees have nothing but their ecosystem which will be destroyed if these projects are allowed.
please read this article:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7840310.stm
I can't help but think of Daniel Quinn's Leavers and Takers. We are the Takers.
Please read Quinn's "Ishmael."
Lima has always been the center for the exploitation of the western Andean and Amazonian hinterland. It was founded by conquistadors as a counter to Cuzco.
It is no wonder then there has always been an active comprador oligarchic elite that have benefited from some of the worst exploitation in the world. The fact that uppity Indians are resisting and in fact winning elections against their bankrupt neoliberal sellout politics is sending these same oligarchies into a frenzy, from Venzuela to Bolivia to Peru and Mexico. That's why there is no reasoning with them.
The US indeed stands as the granddaddy to these conquistadors, having exterminated its own indigenous peoples (instead, the North Americans used African slave labor).
If only Ollanta Humala was elected instead of that has-been Alan Garcia back in '06.
How many of us...you are willing to go and stand side by side with those opposing the destruction of the forest?
The economic hit men and jackels are at it again.
Write to whitehouse.gov or call 202.456.1414 and voice your opinion.