Thursday, 16 July 2009

Amazon Uprising to Save the Rainforest

Amazon Uprising to Save the Rainforest

A Fight for the Amazon Is a Fight for the Planet


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Violent Clashes in Peru

By ShellyT, on July 15th, 2009

As the world watched the uprising in Iran, an even more important uprising has been passing unnoticed and uncovered by most of the media, but  its outcome will shape the fate of all of us.  It concerns the Amazon rainforest, described as the “lungs of the planet”.

Earlier this year, Peru’s right-wing President, Alan Garcia, sold the rights to explore, log and drill 70 per cent of his country’s swathe of the Amazon to a slew of international oil companies. Garcia sees the rainforest as a waste of good resources, saying of the Amazon’s trees: “There are millions of hectares of timber there lying [standing] idle.”

The problem with Garcia’s plans are the indigenous people who live in the Amazon, who need the trees and the land for their way of life. They aren’t going to give up so easily. Politically, they are weak. They have no guns and they barely have electricity. The government didn’t bother to consult with them: what are a bunch of unarmed Indians going to do anyway?

Despite the odds, they have been protesting the destruction of their lands.  A group of about 2,500 indigenous Peruvians from the AwajĂșn and Wambis tribes regularly stood on the Fernando Belaunde Terry highway outside Bagua, near Petroperu’s oil pipeline pumping station No. 6.

They were peacefully protesting, as they had been since April 9, against the opening of vast tracts of the Peruvian Amazon to oil drilling, logging and other forms of exploitation in order to fulfill a free trade agreement with America.  Some of it was land to which they held title under the Peruvian constitution, and they don’t want it ruined.  At the very least, they wanted to be consulted before foreign corporations ripped up the trees and the earth and poisoned the waters.

On June 4, Bagua’s police chief had ordered the road opened.  When morning came and the protesters were still there, 500 police, Special Forces and paramilitary opened fire with tear gas and live ammunition.   Garcia declared a “state of emergency” in the Amazon, suspending almost all constitutional rights. Army helicopters opened fire on the protesters with live ammunition and stun-grenades.   But the indigenous peoples did not run away. Even though they were risking their lives, they stood their ground.

One of their leaders, Davi Yanomami, said simply: “The earth has no price. It cannot be bought, or sold or exchanged. It is very important that white people, black people and indigenous peoples fight together to save the life of the forest and the earth. If we don’t fight together, what will our future be?”   At least 34 people were killed at Bagua, and more than 100 others missing. Witnesses suggest that some bodies may have been thrown in the river or burned.

The government’s violent response and the widespread international protests that it sparked forced the resignation of Peruvian Prime Minister Yehude Simon, and President Alan Garcia dismissed seven more Cabinet ministers. The government repealed two of the land laws that had fueled the protests, but indigenous groups are demanding the repeal of seven more, plus the safe return of their leader, who fled the country.

During the crackdown, AIDESEP’s director, Alberto Pizango, fled into the jungle and from there to the Nicaraguan embassy in Lima after a judge ordered his arrest for allegedly inciting violence. Four other AIDESEP leaders also face charges in Peru.

“We know that he (Pizango) made a public presentation in Nicaragua, but not in Peru, because the Peruvian government said that would be a violation of asylum rules. We are also aware that an extradition procedure may be on the way,” says Juan Arellano, a Peruvian activist and head of Global Voices Online.

Pizango had accused Garcia’s government of genocide to further land policies that were enacted to facilitate the U.S.-Peru free-trade agreement, which was approved by the U.S. Congress in 2007, signed by Garcia and former President George W. Bush, and went into effect this year.

In the depths of the Amazon rainforest, the poorest people in the world have taken on the richest people in the world to defend a part of the ecosystem none of us can live without. They had nothing but wooden spears and moral force to defeat the oil companies – and, for today, they have won.

But the indigenous people have seen what has happened elsewhere in the Amazon when the oil companies arrive. Occidental Petroleum are facing charges in US courts of dumping an estimated nine billion barrels of toxic waste in the regions of the Amazon where they operated from 1972 to 2000. Andres Sandi Mucushua, the spiritual leader of the area known to the oil companies as Block (12A)B, said in 2007: “My people are sick and dying because of Oxy. The water in our streams is not fit to drink and we can no longer eat the fish in our rivers or the animals in our forests.” The company denies liability, saying they are “aware of no credible data of negative community health impacts”.

In the Ecuadorian Amazon, according to an independent report, toxic waste allegedly dumped after Chevron-Texaco’s drilling has been blamed by an independent scientific investigation for 1,401 deaths, mostly of children from cancer. When the BBC investigator Greg Palast put these charges to Chevron’s lawyer, he replied: “And it’s the only case of cancer in the world? How many cases of children with cancer do you have in the States?… They have to prove it’s our crude, [which] is absolutely impossible.”

In the Amazon, the need of the indigenous peoples to preserve their habitat has collided with the need to preserve earth’s habitat. The rainforests inhale massive amounts of warming gases and keep them stored away from the atmosphere. Already, we are chopping them down so fast that it is causing 25 per cent of man-made carbon emissions every year – more than planes, trains and automobiles combined.

But it is doubly destructive to cut them down to get to fossil fuels, which then cook the planet yet more. Garcia’s plan was to turn the Amazon from the planet’s air conditioning into its fireplace.

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Why is he doing this? He was responding to intense pressure from the US, whose new Free Trade Pact requires this “opening up”, and from the International Monetary Fund, paid for by our taxes. In Peru, it has also been alleged that the ruling party, APRA, is motivated by oil bribes. Some of Garcia’s associates have been caught on tape talking about how to sell off the Amazon to their cronies. The head of the parliamentary committee investigating the affair, Rep. Daniel Abugattas, says: “The government has been giving away our natural resources to the lowest bidders. This has not benefited Peru, but the administration’s friends.”

 Of course, the oil companies will regroup and return – but this is an inspirational victory for the forces of sanity that will be hard to reverse.

Human beings need to make far more decisions like this: to leave fossil fuels in the ground, and to leave rainforests standing. In microcosm, this rumble in the jungle is the fight we all face now. Will we allow a small number of rich people to make a short-term profit from seizing and burning resources, at the expense of our collective ability to survive?

If this sounds like hyperbole, listen to Professor Jim Hansen, the world’s leading climatologist, whose predictions have consistently turned out to be correct. He says: “Clearly, if we burn all fossil fuels, we will destroy the planet we know. We would set the planet on a course to the ice-free state, with a sea level 75 metres higher. Coastal disasters would occur continually. The only uncertainty is the time it would take for complete ice sheet disintegration.”

Of course, fossil fools will argue that the only alternative to burning up our remaining oil and gas supplies is for us all to live like the indigenous peoples in the Amazon. But next door to Peru, you can see a very different, environmentally sane model to lift up the poor emerging – if only we will grasp it.

Ecuador is a poor country with large oil resources underneath its rainforests – but its president, Rafael Correa, is offering us the opposite of Garcia’s plan. He has announced that he is willing to leave his country’s largest oil reserve under the soil, if the rest of the world will match the $9.2bn in revenues it would provide.

If we don’t start reaching for these alternatives, we will render this month’s victory in the Amazon meaningless. The Hadley Centre in Exeter, one of the most sophisticated scientific centres for studying the impacts of global warming, has warned that if we carry on belching out greenhouse gases at the current rate, the humid Amazon will dry up and burn down – and soon.

Their study earlier this year explained: “The Amazonian rainforest is likely to suffer catastrophic damage even with the lowest temperature rises forecast under climate change. Up to 40 per cent of the rainforest will be lost if temperature rises are restricted to 2C, which most climatologists regard as the least that can be expected by 2050. A 3C rise is likely to result in 75 per cent of the forest disappearing while a 4C rise, regarded as the most likely increase this century unless greenhouse gas emissions are slashed, will kill off 85 per cent of the forest.” That would send gigatons of carbon into the atmosphere – making the world even more inhabitable.

These people had nothing, but they stood up to the oil companies. We have everything, yet too many of us sit limp and passive, filling up our tanks with stolen oil without a thought for tomorrow.

The people of the Amazon have shown they are up for the fight to save our ecosystem.   Who in the government of the United States has stood up for the people of Peru and defended them? Who in the media?

Sources: The Independent/UK,  ZNet and much of the above on page 2 from SolveClimate

From Futurism Now -  http://www.civilianism.com/futurism/2009/07/amazon-uprising-to-save-the-rainforest/#more-2113

images - http://www.theamericaspostes.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/indigenas-armados-con-flechas-bloquean-carretera-en-amazonia-peruana.jpg


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