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Battle of Reports Sustains Bolivia’s TIPNIS Conflict
------------------------------
Battle of Reports Sustains Bolivia’s TIPNIS Conflict
January 18, 2013
Tweet <http://twitter.com/share> [1]
Rebel Currents <https://nacla.org/blog/rebel-currents> [2]

While President Evo Morales decrees that Bolivia’s TIPNIS conflict is *
resolved*<http://www.paginasiete.bo/2013-01-01/Nacional/Destacados/3Nac00301-05.aspx>
 [3], conflicting reports issued by the government and religious and human
rights groups over the past few weeks have served to extend the controversy
over the proposed highway that would bisect this indigenous territory and
national park in the Amazon lowlands.

On December 17, a 15-member
*commission*<http://www.la-razon.com/nacional/Informe-Iglesia-Catolica-APDHB-TIPNIS_LRZFIL20121217_0003.pdf>
 [4] representing the Catholic Church and the Permanent Assembly of Human
Rights in Bolivia (APDHB), in association with the Inter-American
Federation of Human Rights (FIDH), released the results of their recent
survey in the TIPNIS. Of the 36 communities visited, they reported, 30
reject the proposed road, three accept it, and three have conditioned their
acceptance on further study and/or changes in the route. These conclusions
directly contradict the *government’s
findings*,<https://nacla.org/blog/2012/12/13/bolivia-end-road-tipnis-consulta>
 [5] which affirm that 80% of the 69 communities included in the official
consultation process support the road.[image: 1503]Supporting the road, but
not through TIPNIS. Credit: APG

The commission also concluded that the consultation process did not conform
to standards for the “*consulta previa*” established by national and
international law. It failed to respect collective indigenous
decision-making norms, with some meetings held in the absence of
traditional authorities or even outside the community. It did not provide
information on the road’s potential environmental, social, economic, and
cultural impacts, necessary to achieve informed consent.

According to the commission, the government’s delivery of community
benefits and promises of development and services in conjunction with the *
consulta* severely compromised the integrity of the process, dividing
communities and families, and creating pressures which, in some cases,
amounted to intimidation. The Morales government has dismissed the report
as a 
“*provocation*”<http://%20http//www.paginasiete.bo/2012-12-21/Nacional/Destacados/2Nacional002.aspx>
 [6]by interested parties.

The commission’s report follows on the heels of a preliminary report issued
by Bolivia’s human rights *ombudsman*
<https://nacla.org/blog/2012/12/13/bolivia-end-road-tipnis-consulta>
[5]Rolando Villena on December 10, which characterized the consulta as
“authoritarian, colonialist, and unilateral.” The full report will be
issued in February.

Meanwhile, the *Supreme Electoral Tribunal*
<http://www.bolpress.com/art.php?Cod=2013010704>
[7](TSE) charged with accompanying and monitoring the consultation process
issued its own report on January 7, reaffirming the official government
conclusions. Still, the TSE’s community-by-community findings *reveal*
<http://www.paginasiete.bo/2013-01-07/Nacional/Destacados/Los-indigenas-bolivianos-del-Tip.aspx>
[8]that many conditioned their acceptance of the road on other
requirements, such as an environmental impact study, a determination by
indigenous authorities as to the final route, and a prohibition against
exploitation of hydrocarbons and minerals in the TIPNIS.

At least four communities demanded a relocation of the route to the border
of the park. Most also demanded other government concessions, including
schools, water and sanitation infrastructure, electricity, and
telecommunications. One community insisted that Morales meet with
indigenous leaders to ask their forgiveness. According to TIPNIS leader
Fernando Vargas, these inconsistencies demonstrate a lack of consensus or
agreement even among the road’s alleged supporters.

According to *TSE
officials*<http://www.paginasiete.bo/2012-12-26/Nacional/NoticiaPrincipal/2Nac01-261212.aspx>
 [9], the specific design or route of the highway was not a subject of the
consultation, and did not even appear on the agenda. Says
*Vargas*:<http://www.paginasiete.bo/2012-12-26/Nacional/NoticiaPrincipal/2Nac01-261212.aspx>
 [9] “The fundamental theme [in the communities] never was the road; the
priorities were health, education, infrastructure, and productive
development. Under this pretext, the government consolidated support for
the road.”

Vargas also questions the extent of participation in the *consulta*,
reported by the government at *2007
individuals*<http://www.paginasiete.bo/2013-01-10/Nacional/Destacados/5nac100113-01.aspx>
 [10] and 32 families (different brigades used different counting
measures). According to a report issued by Fundación Tierra in 2010, the
TIPNIS includes some 12,500 inhabitants who are Chimánes, Yuracarés, or
Mojeño-Trinitario (the legitimate subjects of the*consulta*). The
government says there are now only 6,000 inhabitants, of whom 30% are
minors. Vargas insists there are at least 8,000. A further complication is
that the *consulta* also included residents of Polygon 7, a relatively
populous area dominated by coca-growers that is inside the park but outside
the indigenous territory.

Still to come, in addition to the ombudsman’s report,  is the official
report of the Executive branch, due later this month, which will include
video, audio, and photographic documentation of the*consulta *process.  The
OAS, which observed the early stages of the process, is also expected to
issue its findings.[image: 1504]TSE issues report. Credit: Correo DelSur

It’s unlikely that future reports will help to resolve the conflict. As the
daily *Página 
Siete*<http://www.paginasiete.bo/2012-12-19/Opinion/NoticiaPrincipal/14Opi00119-12-12-P720121219.aspx>
 [11] notes, the contradictory reports have only served to reinforce the
entrenched positions of a divided public on the TIPNIS issue, bringing the
nation almost back to the “square one” of June 2011, when Morales decreed
that the road would be built “like it or not.”

One outstanding question is whether the Plurinational Constitutional
Tribunal (TCP) will rule on whether the *consulta* process conformed to the
standards established by the court for its constitutionality, including the
achievement of prior agreement among the parties. Adolfo Chávez, a leader
of the lowlands indigenous groups opposed to the road, plans to petition
the court for such a ruling.

A related event to watch is the upcoming *gubernatorial election*
<http://www.la-razon.com/suplementos/animal_politico/Elecciones-Beni-termometro-regional-justas_0_1759624034.html>
[12]this Sunday in the Beni department, where indigenous TIPNIS leader and
ex-legislator Pedro Nuni is opposing the government-backed MAS (Movement
Towards Socialism) candidate—and ex-beauty queen—Jessica Jordan. This could
be an important test of the strength of the lowlands indigenous movement,
as well as an indication of the extent to which the TIPNIS conflict has
eroded support for the MAS—built largely through the strength of the
lowlands indigenous groups—in this conflicted region, and perhaps elsewhere.


------------------------------



*Emily Achtenberg is an urban planner and the author of NACLA’s weekly blog
Rebel Currents, covering Latin American social movements and progressive
governments (nacla.org/blog/rebel-currents [2]).*
Tags:

   - Bolivia <https://nacla.org/category/tags/bolivia> [13]
   - consulta previa <https://nacla.org/category/tags/consulta-previa> [14]
   - Isiboro-Sécure <https://nacla.org/category/tags/isiboro-s%C3%A9cure>
   [15]
   - TCP <https://nacla.org/category/tags/tcp> [16]
   - TIPNIS <https://nacla.org/category/tags/tipnis> [17]
   - TSE <https://nacla.org/category/tags/tse> [18]





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TEL: (212) 998-8638 | FAX (212) 995-4163
------------------------------
*Source URL:*
https://nacla.org/blog/2013/1/18/battle-reports-sustains-bolivia%E2%80%99s-tipnis-conflict

*Links:*
[1] http://twitter.com/share
[2] https://nacla.org/blog/rebel-currents
[3]
http://www.paginasiete.bo/2013-01-01/Nacional/Destacados/3Nac00301-05.aspx
[4]
http://www.la-razon.com/nacional/Informe-Iglesia-Catolica-APDHB-TIPNIS_LRZFIL20121217_0003.pdf
[5] https://nacla.org/blog/2012/12/13/bolivia-end-road-tipnis-consulta
[6] http://
http://www.paginasiete.bo/2012-12-21/Nacional/Destacados/2Nacional002.aspx
[7] http://www.bolpress.com/art.php?Cod=2013010704
[8]
http://www.paginasiete.bo/2013-01-07/Nacional/Destacados/Los-indigenas-bolivianos-del-Tip.aspx
[9]
http://www.paginasiete.bo/2012-12-26/Nacional/NoticiaPrincipal/2Nac01-261212.aspx
[10]
http://www.paginasiete.bo/2013-01-10/Nacional/Destacados/5nac100113-01.aspx
[11]
http://www.paginasiete.bo/2012-12-19/Opinion/NoticiaPrincipal/14Opi00119-12-12-P720121219.aspx
[12]
http://www.la-razon.com/suplementos/animal_politico/Elecciones-Beni-termometro-regional-justas_0_1759624034.html
[13] https://nacla.org/category/tags/bolivia
[14] https://nacla.org/category/tags/consulta-previa
[15] https://nacla.org/category/tags/isiboro-s%C3%A9cure
[16] https://nacla.org/category/tags/tcp
[17] https://nacla.org/category/tags/tipnis
[18] https://nacla.org/category/tags/tse


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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