‘We Will Not Leave Our
Land' Say Pijao and Paez Indians
Helda Martínez
BOGOTA, Aug 2 (IPS) - The Pijao and Paez indigenous communities in Colombia,
who survived near extermination at the hands of the Spanish colonialists,
continue to defend their land, lives and cultures against a new array of
encroachers, as they face evictions, displacement, death threats and forced
disappearance.
The Pijao Indians are known in Colombia for their resistance to Spanish
domination, and their fierce struggles throughout Colombian history for their
land and autonomy.
The two ethnic groups, which have a total combined population of around 70,000
according to the Regional Indigenous Corporation of Tolima (CRIT), remain on
their ancestral land in the municipalities of Ortega, Coyaima, Natagaima,
Chaparral and Saldaña, in the western department (province) of Tolima.
The latest incident involves a court order for the eviction of 90 families
(around 600 people) from Chicuambe, in the municipality of Ortega.
A court ruled in favour of an absentee landowner who brought a lawsuit against
the families, who must move out by Aug. 15, the governor of the indigenous
community in Chicuambe, Deici Rodríguez, explained to IPS.
The Pijao and Paez communities have preserved their traditional form of
political organisation, in which the governor -- in this case, a woman -- is the
highest-ranking authority.
The Colombian constitution recognises the right to autonomy of the country's 80
indigenous groups, who make up less than 0.5 percent of the total population of
46.5 million.
The José Alvear Restrepo Lawyers Collective, a human rights group that has
consultative status with the Interamerican Commission for Human Rights and is
affiliated with the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), challenged
the court order for eviction.
The Lawyers Collective maintains that the eviction warrant, which is based on
the argument that the indigenous families illegally occupied the land in
question, has no legal standing because the families have lived on the land for
10 years, and are merely reclaiming the area as part of the indigenous
community's ancestral land.
"In this case, the dispossessed are the people that the prosecutor's office is
treating as intruders," said the Lawyers Collective.
The human rights group backed its legal challenge on a colonial era document
that recognises the existence of the Great Ortega-Coyaima and Chaparral Reserve,
which was registered before a notary public by legendary indigenous leader
Manuel Quintín Lame, who died in 1967.
"The Pijao community of Chicuambe owns 200 hectares of land, which today the
government and those who claim to be owners want to take from us," said
Rodríguez. "On that land we have 100 hectares of plantain, yucca, bean and corn
crops, as well as land that is being reforested with timber and fruit trees.
Another 100 hectares are dedicated to raising livestock."
The plaintiff, Mario Vargas, an engineer who lives in Bogotá, claims he is the
owner of the land. "I have been trying to recover the land for 10 years, because
it is mine," he told IPS. "But the justice system isn't working. This has
dragged on for a long time, and I have turned to all of the possible channels in
my attempt to recuperate it."
Vargas' interest in the land is based on the existence there of a mineral,
ferrite, which until the indigenous families moved in was extracted by a miner,
José David de los Ríos.
"Before we came to the land in question we lived here and there and did
temporary stints as contract workers," said Rodríguez.
"To get the miner off the property, Vargas invited us to work the land," the
governor told IPS. "But a year later, he sued us for invading the land. Over the
last few years, with support from CRIT, we have understood that this is part of
our territory, and we are not going to leave."
"We have already suffered enough, and this time we won't stop to watch our own
funeral go by. We will resist, and we will hold the national and provincial
governments responsible for the consequences of the eviction, if it occurs," she
said.
The Lawyers Collective stated that "the prosecutor's office has remained
indifferent to the dispossession of the internally displaced, who have lost
millions of hectares of land to the paramilitaries and multinational
corporations, while taking an especially diligent stance in favouring private
interests over collective, social interests, and being lax when it comes to
ignoring the ancestral rights of indigenous peoples."
The human rights lawyers were referring to the actions of right-wing
paramilitary groups, which have forced large numbers of indigenous people off
their land, as well as the presence of transnational corporations and investors
keen on gaining control over resource-rich property in Colombia.
In an earlier case, there was an attempt to force some 200 Pijao Indians from
Balsillas, in the municipality of Natagaima.
Indigenous governor Manuel Yossa Guzmán told IPS that on May 5, around 750
members of the army and police descended on the area, setting fire to housing
and crops.
When the soldiers and police pulled out, the local residents began to rebuild.
"We aren't going to leave, because these lands have been ours since 1881," said
Yossa Guzmán. "So far we have recovered 350 hectares out of a total of 1,197
that were given to us by the Yossa Capea family in the 19th century. They are
ours, even though they have had 30 or 40 different owners over all of these
years."
According to the Pijao governor, the different owners have paid for improvements
on the land through sale-purchase agreements, which did not involve title deeds.
"We are not going to give up our land," said Yossa Guzmán. "We are the legal
owners, and have even paid our taxes, and have the documents to prove it."
In another settlement, Rincón Belú, in the same municipality, local residents
have received threats and others have fallen victim to forced disappearance. One
member of the community, Luz Mari Romero, said several men were forced to flee
for their safety.
"They went to Bogotá and stayed there a couple of months. But since all they
know how to do is work the land, they came back. So far they haven't had any new
problems, but the anxiety never goes away," Romero told IPS.
Elvira Oyola, who lives in the same community, said that in 2002 and 2003,
members of the paramilitary umbrella group, the United Self-Defence Forces of
Colombia (AUC), carried away several local residents, who were never heard from
again.
"But we have stayed on our land. We work in peace, and have suffered difficult
times, of hunger and illness," she said.
"And if that is the case on our own land, you can imagine what things would be
like somewhere else! That is why we are not leaving. Now we have to go to court
because of a lawsuit filed against us by Señora Ana María Ospina, and we are
going to testify. But even if we have to go to jail, we will continue defending
our rights," Oyola said in a soft but determined voice. (END/2006)