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Indigenous People Across Latin America Protest Spanish 'Genocide'
GUATEMALA CITY - Tens of thousands of indigenous people took to the streets across Latin America on Monday to protest the anniversary of Christopher Columbus's 1492 discovery of the Americas.
A Guatemalan native cries over the death of a demontrator in Guatemala City protesting against the celebration of Columbus Day, in Guatemala City, October 12 Columbus Day is celebrated as the Day of Hispanic Heritage in Latin America, but protesters marked the holiday as a reminder of the atrocities Spanish conquistadors wrought on indigenous people throughout the region.
In Guatemala City, 19-year-old demonstrator Imer Boror was killed and two were wounded as Maya Indians blocked entry points into the capital to protest their government's mining policies.
Protesters were marching on what they called the Day of Dignity and Resistance of the Indian People, protest leader Juana Mulul told AFP, saying the movement "is purely in defense of Mother Earth and our territory."
In a gesture toward reconciliation with indigenous groups, a special roundtable appointed by President Alvaro Colom after the incident was to meet with 14 poor farmers late Monday to discuss their demands.
Aparicio Perez of the Farmers Union Committee (CUC) said representatives would ask the government to annul mining, hydroelectric and cement concessions because "multinational companies are taking over natural resources, which have long been the source of life for rural families."
According to government statistics, 42 percent of Guatemala's 12 million inhabitants are Indians, although some groups put the figure at over 60 percent.
In southwestern Colombia, some 25,000 people set out from several towns and cities in Valle del Cauca department to protest President Alvaro Uribe's environmental policies and his alleged broken promises to their communities.
They planned to join up Friday in a larger demonstration of some 40,000 in the department's capital of Cali.
"We're demonstrating against the degradation of the planet... against President Alvaro Uribe's neglect" of indigenous communities, National Indigenous Organization of Colombia member Feliciano Valencia told reporters.
Indigenous people, who represent three percent of Colombia's 45 million inhabitants, accuse the conservative Uribe administration of failing to enact social programs and release state funds it promised indigenous communities when it came to power in 2002.
They also protested being regular targets of guerrilla, paramilitary and drug trafficking violence, despite their professed neutrality in the country's ongoing internal conflicts.
During an extraordinary session held at the National Pantheon, the Venezuelan National Assembly passed a bill proposing a "Day of Indigenous Resistance" to be held throughout South America.
National Assembly Speaker Cilia Flores hailed the event as proof lawmakers were "working with all the people and with a revolutionary government to build a new nation."
At the National Pantheon, where the remains of Venezuelan heroes are buried, dozens of indigenous representatives gathered in a demonstration organized by the ruling Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) to protest the "genocide of the (Spanish) empire" 500 years ago.
A group of indigenous people kept the Panama-Costa Rica border closed for several hours in the morning at the Sixaola border crossing and later protested in front of the Spanish embassy.
Several thousand native activists were joined by environmentalists, farmers and students for protests across Panama demanding respect for their land rights and rejecting energy projects that "do not respect the autonomy of indigenous people" and cause "forced evictions."
"The arrival of the Spaniards in the Americas in 1492 brought about the destruction of the Indian way of life and broke a series of political and economic institutions that has since driven us into poverty," said Cecilio Guerra before burning a Spanish flag close to the presidential palace.
According to Guerra, over 21 hydroelectric concessions and nine mining projects are affecting indigenous communities.
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18 Comments so far
Show AllCortez wrote "It was such a beautiful city."
Father forgive them, they know not what they did...
The Spaniards get a bad rap in English speaking countries.The English created, with a little help from the Spaniards, the Black Legend of Spain.500 years after the Spanish conquest of Mexico, we are still subject to the lingering effects of Elizabethan propaganda.Question:if, because of some accident of history, the English had landed in Mexico in 1520, would the results have been much different? Apart from the racism of the English, that is?
Of course not. Well, it's possible more people would be drinking tea...
Mind you the English were a bit less nasty to the natives in the areas they colonised, the English did respect the treaties they signed. The yanks broke every treaty they signed with the natives. I'm not sure if the Spanish ever signed any treaties, and don't know what the Portuguese did either. The French did regard the Natives as equal nation states, perhaps that's why the English were so keen to kick them out of North America...
The difference between Britain and France (At least In Canada) and their outlook towards the Natives is best exemplified by comparing Newfoundland to the Maritimes.
The Natives of Newfoundland were slaughtered to the man.Newfoundland was first settled by the British.
The French that settled in the Maritimes intermingled with the Natives. When the British took over the maritimes and began their clearances of the Acadians, they had a devil of a time because the Acadians would "go Native".
That is they would slip into the wilds and live alongside their allies.
After the fall of New France Britain decided to reexamine its policy towards the Natives and adopted more of the French Model. This led to them closing the lands west of the 13 colonies to further expansion and a decision to reexmaine the treaty process within those same 13 colonies.
This was something the Colonists in the 13 colonies would not accept. They were greedy for that land.
Leaving out the silly, and possibly racist, remarks about 'cryptojews' and 'cryptoarabs', the same thing could have been said of Hawkins and Drake.Freebooters and scoundrels.From the Spanish point of view, they were also pirates, even if they had a 'license' from Queen Lizy herself.They were indeed a mixed bag-in fact, a mutt culture, long before anyone ever heard of the word 'multicultural'.They were Celti-Iberians, Romans, Goths and Visigoths, Jews and Arabs, to name a few.They weren't nice, but in an era of predatory European empires, they were no worse than the other guys-and in some respects, they were better.
Oh I was not speaking to the Cultural Genocide. That a different matter entitley but was NOT part of French Policy when they first settled New France.
Indeed Champlain was very interested in melding the French Culture with the Aboriginal to create a new peoples . As example he would send French Children to Native Villages to be raised as Natives and in turn the Natives would respond by sending Native Children to be raised by the French.
Where the change happened in Quebec was when the Orangemen and their ilk started to have a greater influence in Canadian Politics. This group believed the Anglo_saxons destined to rule the World and advocated the forcible destruction of the Aboriginal Cultures so that they would become proper citizens of the British Empire.
This is where that Residential School system had its roots. The French In Quebec adopted the same measures because they felt that if they did not all the Aboriginals living there would be "assimilated" into the English Culture.
This is NOT to defend that action. From what I read of history however I tend to think that had the french been able to defeat the British and hold on to "New France" the Aboriginal peoples would have been a heck of a lot better off.
Now that said , once the Colonists in the 13 Colonies tried to throw the british out, most Aboriginal tribes sided with the British. As bad as the British were they felt them a bit more trustworthy then the Colonists in the Americas.
Frankly I think Canada has a LONG ways to go before they correct the wrongs done to our first Nations people. We fail to acknowledge their role in the formation of our country like we should. If it were not for their aid in the war of 1812 just as example, we would be part of the United States of America.
From my reading of history, it was less 'the Colonists' in general who were greedy than the wealthy, connected speculators like Washington.
Ordinary people -not the religious loonies- tended to live in peace if left in peace (something often in short supply, of course, because of elite depredations). The Highland Scots - my ain folk :-) - incomers, being tribal themselves and with their own history of subjugation by the Sassenach ('What a Parcel of Rogues in a Nation'), shared strong kinship-feelings with the First Nation folk and thought nothing of intermarrying.
http://intercontinentalcry.org/
support some rights petitions on behalf of indigenous peoples to celebrate the day
http://www.internationalrivers.org/en/latin-america
transnational industrialization of agriculture requires water - and the rivers are damned for power at the cost of due process, international treaties, the rule of law, indigenous rights, ecological destruction, population displacement, ethnocide and genocide.
The "development" model is not for everybody
I do not propose to speak for anyone other than myself; one 'son of his people'.
I would take all that I possess and sell it along with everything I could borrow or steal,(I would never beg) along with my college education and my military experience (USMC Vietnam era), and drop everything else and go to war against the USA this afternoon---and die gladly, fighting if it would win the independence of my people.
I am but one.
I cannot be alone however, and since I do not speak for the future, the future will remain a mystery to everyone until the future arrives; tommorrow or the next day or the next.
But as long as these same ideas can grow; the USA will never know the satisfaction they think they know as long as the potential for others JUST LIKE ME---TO RISE UP----TAKE BACK WHAT IS OURS----COMES WITH THE RISING SUN TOMMORROW.
The same applies to all indigenous people of the entire planet.
Good Luck America, you will need it, if not tommorrow; then the next day or the next day or-------
Are you accepting poor white guys in your group? We aren't all fascist or racist. Some of us are simply twentieth generation orphans whose cultures were absorbed centuries ago.
Sorry Paleface,
But this is the reason we progressives never get anywhere. We can't surrender primary allegiance to all of our pet causes which mean the world to us. If we could come together: Native American, teabagger, environmentalists, small businessman, poor-white-trash, black, gay, equal rights, vegan, animal rights, peace movement, gun nuts, Labor Unions etc into one party of people who cherish individual liberty over empire, we could be players in the power struggle.
The Libertarian Party is the third biggest party in the US and I wonder if we can't get disenchanted NeoCon defectors to join progressive causes, if we couldn't meet them halfway in the Libertarian Party. Remember, it's a very broad umbrella of conservatives and liberals.
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
It's going to take a lot more than merely demonizing Columbus to rectify the consequences of imperialism and colonization. Reparations are in order.
I don't think Columbus Day should be observed either. How is an indigenous person supposed to feel about getting a day off because of a conqueror who killed their ancestors? How am I as someone of European descent supposed to feel about Columbus or any other "discoverer?" As if there was no one or nothing in The Americas before Europeans came.
There are plenty of other people throughout history who deserve holidays. Columbus was not one of them.
Climate solution > "Give forests back to local people to save them" - don't give them to governments, say new findings of a 15 year study
http://www.newscientist.com/topic/climate-change