| Ecuador: Indigenous resistance is the new 'terrorism' |
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| Written by Manuela Picq |
| Monday, 11 July 2011 12:21 |
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Source: Al Jazeera In Ecuador, protesting for the rights of the Earth and trying to preserve natural resources may make you a "terrorist". If you thought there was anything romantic about environmental activism or indigenous rights, think twice. Socialist ideas about nature - such as keeping water a public good - can get you facing charges of sabotage by a leftist government. In the land of the Incas, if you protect the pachamama ["Mother World"], you might just be a "terrorist".
In Ecuador, "terrorists" are indigenous peoples from the Amazon and the Andean highlands fighting to preserve access to water in their communities. Old penal codes written in times of dictatorship are being revived by leftist presidents to repress indigenous activists. As "terrorists", they are labelled as enemies of the state, and arrested - by the very president that claimed leftist credentials and staged his inauguration in overtly ethnic style.
Abya Yala, which means "continent of life" in the language of the Panamanian Kuna peoples, refers to the Americas. The summit has consolidated ethnic organising capacity across borders since it first organised in 1990, maintaining a diversity of indigenous voices from Canada and the US all the way to Honduras, Guatemala, Argentina and Chile.
But the week's true highlight was the establishment of an independent, transnational Ethics Tribunal.
On June 22, a four-judge tribunal heard multiple expert reports - as well as 17 personal testimonies - taking more than four hours on the issue.
Cases vary in context, but not in substance. In Cochapata, community members were condemned to eight years in jail on charges of terrorism for opposing mining - the government has so far ignored the amnesty granted by the constitutional assembly. A radio station in the Amazon province of Morona Santiago, Radio Canela, was shut down in April for fueling opposition. |







