| Peruvian forest laws overturned
Posted: August 29, 2008
by: Rick Kearns / Indian Country Today
LIMA, Peru - Peruvian lawmakers handed President Alan Garcia a significant
defeat Aug. 22 by voting 66 - 29 to repeal Garcia's controversial 'forest
laws,' which had been the subjects of fierce protest by indigenous
communities (and with future actions still possible).
Native advocates and their allies had asserted that the laws made it easier
for big companies to purchase their land, against the wishes of the
communities, by lowering the percentage of 'yes' votes needed to grant a
sale, and that in violation of Peruvian law, indigenous communities were not
consulted before Garcia issued the decrees May 20.
Protestors also point out that there are oil, gas and other resources in the
targeted indigenous areas that are estimated to be worth between $2 to 3
billion, and that the president had this in mind when he signed the most
recent Free Trade Agreement with the United States.
When confronted by angry denunciations from many parties in Peru after the
decrees in May, Garcia did not budge from his position and, in early August,
indigenous communities staged a series of strikes, occupations and
blockades.
More than 10,000 Native protestors spanned out across the country - some
armed with spears and bows and arrows - to block several large roads and
take control of a gas field, an oil pipeline and a hydroelectric plant.
Garcia declared a state of emergency for the provinces of Cusco, Loreto and
Amazonas, and then issued the order to send soldiers to disperse the
protestors.
However, before many shots were fired, federal legislators promised they
would overturn legislative decrees 1015 and 1073 if the indigenous leaders
would call off the strikes and other actions. Indigenous leaders complied
and, two days before the congressional vote, protestors left their
positions.
''We have lifted the strike,'' said Alberto Pizango, director of the
Interethnic Development Association of the Peruvian Forest, known as AIDESEP
in Spanish, an indigenous rights organization composed of members of 65
different Native peoples in the country.
''We have faith and expect Congress to follow through,'' Pizango added.
Legislators from the Commission of Andean, Amazonian and Afro-Peruvian
Peoples then introduced the measure to revoke the decrees, which garnered
the 66 to 29 vote in the Congress. The next step in the process would be for
the president to sign the repeal, if not his objection would constitute a
type of veto that would send the measure back to Congress for another vote.
Both the president and indigenous leaders issued public statements
immediately after the repeal announcement, before moving on to further
negotiations.
''I have the obligation to tell Peru that this is a grave error,'' Garcia
stated after the repeal. ''The only thing that this will accomplish is to
keep our rural communities in exclusion and on the margins for another
century.''
The Head of the Cabinet, Jorge Del Castillo, attacked the decision as well.
''What has happened here is nothing more than demagoguery,'' Castillo
opined. ''Those who approved this measure are trying to destroy those
instruments so that Peru does not become modern.''
Reactions from indigenous leaders were positive, but with some caution over
the need for further talks.
''The indigenous people of Madre de Dios [a region] and the Amazonian
indigenous movement of Peru are making history,'' said Antonio Iviche,
president of the FENAMAD federation.
''But we must not lower our guard,'' Iviche added. ''The government of
President Alan Garcia thinks we are ignorant, that the indigenous
communities can be manipulated, but with this action we have demonstrated
the opposite.''
Pizango sent a letter of request for dialogue to the president, with a list
of issues along with those related to land rights and return of land-title
control. Indigenous leaders wanted a meeting with the participation of the
People's Advocate (a national-level attorney in charge of constitutional
rights) and the Ministers of Mines and Energy, Environment, Health and
Agriculture. Pizango and other leaders had already been in contact with
People's Advocate Beatriz Merino Lucero; Lucero had announced in late May
that she was filing a motion to annul Legislative Decrees 1015 and 1073
asserting they were unconstitutional. Merino noted that by not consulting
with native communities about the laws, the president had violated their
constitutional rights.
Environment Minister Antonio Brack will be the liaison between the two
sides, Pizango noted, but that the meeting had to include the president.
''We would not say we had lost trust in Brack'' Pizango asserted at a press
conference in the last week of August. ''It's just that we need to talk to
the owner of the circus and not the clowns.''
While Pizango and other indigenous leaders were waiting for a meeting with
the ministers, Garcia said in various public venues that he was going to
have a dialogue with the opposing side. He also asserted he would be willing
to ''allow'' the keeping of the old 66 percent rule - which was the
percentage needed to permit the selling of community lands - if the
indigenous would accept having only 51 percent of the vote for the renting
or ''joint venture'' of lands.
While waiting for a specific date for the meeting, AIDESEP announced that
they were being investigated by the Peruvian Agency for International
Cooperation. APCI sources denied AIDESEP charges that the investigation into
international funding of AIDESEP was in reprisal for the vote and the
protests. Agency spokespeople asserted that the investigation had been
planned far in advance.
In the meantime, indigenous leaders have repeatedly warned that they will
stage more protests if their requests are ignored; and AIDESEP and other
groups staged a protest in sympathy with Brazilian indigenous Aug. 26 by
blocking the road that connects Brazil with Venezuela for three hours.
Indigenous advocates are urging the Brazilian Supreme Court to vote in favor
of maintaining the territories already owned by Native peoples from Roraima
do Sul whose lands are being sought by ranchers and other developers.
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