And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

Date: Fri, 14 May 1999 15:32:42 -0400
From: LISN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: League of Indigenous Sovereign Nations of the Western Hemisphere

Subject: Ecuador: Amazonians Protest Pollution
Date: Fri, 14 May 1999 14:19:25 -0400
From: Amazon Coalition <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

By Kintto Lucas 
QUITO, May 13 (IPS) - Indigenous communities in the province of Napo, in
the Amazon region of Ecuador, are
suffering serious health problems they blame on pollution in the
Misahualli River, caused by construction work on a
new oil pipeline. 

Community leaders say there has been an alarming increase in diarrhea
among children and the appearance of a widespread
skin fungus has caused equal concern. Medical analyses confirmed that
the illness stemmed from the consumption of water from
the Misahualli. 

According to one indigenous community leader, Martha Tupuy, the sick
children lack medicine and she called for authorities to
intervene in the pipeline project. 

''The river is part of our lives. If we can't drink the river water, we
have nowhere else to get it from,'' she affirmed. 

The contamination is attributed to waste produced by the Argep company,
the builder of the oil pipeline, which does not use
adequate technology to protect the waters, according to
environmentalists. 

Last week, dozens of indigenous people gathered on a bridge to block the
way of the company's workers and faced off against
soldiers and police before being ejected. In another zone, women and
children of the communities seized a bulldozer belonging
to the company and its operators hostage, without harming them. 

The indigenous people want the company to halt construction work and
decontaminate the river before continuing with its work.
In the meantime, they are asking for tanks to collect rainwater for
daily consumption. 

After the protests, a negotiation was arranged between the governor of
Napo province, Edgar Santillan, indigenous leaders of
the Ecuadorean Amazon and executives from the oil company. 

Officials promised to comply with the request of the communities and
indigenous leaders warned that, if the problem is not
solved, they will take further action which would move the conflict to
the rest of the Amazonian provinces of Ecuador. 

Turquino Tapuy, a leader of the Federation of Indigenous Organisations
of Napo, said that the damage caused by the oil
industry ''is not new.'' For that reason, ''the communities do not have
much confidence in the word of the representatives of
these companies,'' he said. 

The environmental group, Ecological Action, charged that ''the oil
activity in eastern Ecuador is destroying one of the zones with
the greatest biodiversity on the planet and is seriously threatening the
survival of many indigenous communities.'' 

For 20 years, oil exploitation in the Amazon was carried out solely by
the Texaco Petroleum Company and, later, by the state-
owned Petroecuador and other foreign companies. 

With the departure of Texaco, various indigenous Amazon towns, backed by
environmental organisations, filed a lawsuit in the
United States against the company for damage to the ecosystem during the
years in which it was exploiting oil in the region. 

The plaintiffs showed that the company did not use the environmental
protection technology commonly used at other sites in
which oil is extracted, which caused contamination of rivers and damage
to flora and fauna. 

A succession of Ecuadorean governments, including the current
administration of Jamil Mahuad, refused to support the legal
action against Texaco and asked the U.S. courts to dismiss the case and
transfer it to Ecuador. 

In spite of this, the judicial process has gone ahead and
environmentalists hope that, in the next few months, the U.S. courts may
order the company to clean up the affected zones and compensate the
indigenous communities. 

Valerio Grefa, an indigenous Amazon deputy, noted that it is fundamental
to take care of the communities affected by the
petroleum contamination. If not, he warned, there could be a health
catastrophe. 

''Besides the fact that there could be irreversible health problems, it
is an attack on the symbols of our people, on their world,
and when that happens, the only thing left is to fight them,'' said
Grefa. 

These days, another alarming development has occurred in the Ecuadorean
Amazon. The pink dolphin, one of the rarest species
in the region, is in danger of extinction. 

The biologist Judith Denkinger, a specialist in pink dolphins, says that
these animals could disappear if deforestation and
contamination of the Cuyabeno, Aguarico and Lagrato Rivers, among others
in which they take refuge, is not contained. 

The discharge of petroleum in Shushufindi in 1993 contaminated the
Aguarico River and caused the deaths of dozens of
dolphins. 

During the following six years further dumping, coupled with
deforestation, triggered the disappearance of most cetaceans,
pushing them to the edge of extinction. 

The dolphins that managed to survive the contamination continue to seek
refuge in the most inaccessible rivers and lakes on the
border between Peru and Ecuador, where Denkinger installed an
observatory to study their behavior. 

With the signing of the peace accord between the two countries, a wider
exploitation of the zone was announced, extending the
threat of petroleum contamination to the last haven of the pink dolphin. 

Denkinger said that if deforestation and oil contamination of the rivers
are not stopped, a species that is unique in the world will
disappear. 

''It will be only an indigenous legend, according to which pink dolphins
transformed themselves into men or women to find their
mates in the riverside communities and, when they found them, returned
with them to the river, where they would turn back into
dolphins,'' the biologist commented. 

For Salesian priest Juan Bottasso, who has lived in Amazon communities
for more than 15 years, the oil has had a significant
destructive impact on indigenous daily life. 

''In ethnic eyes, there is no contradiction between rich and poor. The
Indians of the Amazon are not poor, they live in a culture
connected to nature,'' explained Bottasso. 

''In order to relate better with them and prevent their extermination,
there must be respect for that vision, because to attack
nature, as the oil companies have done, is to attack their way of
life,'' he concluded. (FIN/IPS/kl/mj/en-pr/ks/99)



******************************************************************
Distribuido por:      Distributed by: 
Coalition for Amazonian Peoples and Their Environment
1367 Connecticut Ave. NW, Suite 400
Washington, DC 20036-1860
tel (202)785-3334
fax (202)785-3335
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.amazoncoalition.org

Disclaimer: All copyrights belong to original publisher.  
The Amazon Coalition has not verified the accuracy of the forwarded
message. Forwarding this message does not necessarily connote agreement 
with the positions stated there-in.

Todos los derechos de autor pertenecen al autor originario.
La Coalicion Amazonica no se ha verificado la veracidad de este 
mensaje.  Mandar este mensaje no necesariamente significa que 
la Coalicion Amazonica esta de acuerdo con el contenido.

La Coalicion para los Pueblos Amazonicos y su Medio Ambiente es una 
iniciativa, nacida de la alianza entre los pueblos indigenas y 
tradicionales de la Amazonia, grupos e individuos que 
comparten sus preocupaciones por el futuro de la Amazonia y sus 
pueblos.  Las ochenta organizaciones no-gubernamentales del norte 
y del sur activas en la Coalicion creen que el futuro de la Amazonia 
depende de sus pueblos indigenas y tradicionales y el estado de su 
medio ambiente.

The Coalition for Amazonian Peoples and Their Environment is an
initiative born out of the alliance between indigenous and 
traditional peoples of the Amazon and groups and individuals who 
share their concerns for the future of the Amazon and its peoples.  
The eighty non-governmental organizations from the North and the 
South active in the Coalition believe that the future of the Amazon 
depends on its indigenous and traditional peoples and the state 
of their environment.


-- 
================================================================
League of Indigenous Sovereign Nations of the Western Hemisphere
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
LISN Web Site | http://www.lisn.net

Reprinted under the fair use http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html
doctrine of international copyright law.
           &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
          Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit)
                     Unenh onhwa' Awayaton
                  http://www.tdi.net/ishgooda/       
           &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
                             

Reply via email to