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Indigenous resistance is the new 'terrorism'

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naaman fletcher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-11 12:59 PM
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Indigenous resistance is the new 'terrorism'
It's becoming tricky to identify "terrorists", at least in Ecuador. They are not members of criminal organisations, they don't spread fear or target civilians, nor have a politically motivated agenda. According to President Correa, "terrorists" are those opposing Ecuador's development. So today's "terrorism" might just look like indigenous peoples peacefully taking over the streets, with their ancestral knowledge and values, to demand environmental and social rights.

In Ecuador, "terrorists" are indigenous peoples from the Amazon and the Andean highlands fighting to preserve access to water in their communities. Old penal codes written in times of dictatorship are being revived by leftist presidents to repress indigenous activists. As "terrorists", they are labelled as enemies of the state, and arrested - by the very president that claimed leftist credentials and staged his inauguration in overtly ethnic style.

When the Continental Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nationalities of Abya Yala gathered delegations from the entire hemisphere in Ecuador last month, the focus was on the criminalisation of environmental protest.

Abya Yala, which means "continent of life" in the language of the Panamanian Kuna peoples, refers to the Americas. The summit has consolidated ethnic organising capacity across borders since it first organised in 1990, maintaining a diversity of indigenous voices from Canada and the US all the way to Honduras, Guatemala, Argentina and Chile.

http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/opinion/2011/06/201162995115833636.html
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-11 01:37 PM
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1. a must read
Cases vary in context, but not in substance. In Cochapata, community members were condemned to eight years in jail on charges of terrorism for opposing mining - the government has so far ignored the amnesty granted by the constitutional assembly. A radio station in the Amazon province of Morona Santiago, Radio Canela, was shut down in April for fueling opposition.

Silencing the opposition

The most prominent cases relate to the accusation and illegal arrest of some of the most visible indigenous leaders in Ecuador - Pepe Acacho, Marlon Santi, Delfin Tenesaca and Marco Guatemal. The four heads of national indigenous organisations were accused of sabotage for participating in marches against laws to privatise water during a 2010 summit of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas in the indigenous town of Otavalo, where leftist presidents discussed continental multiculturalism without inviting indigenous organisations.

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Correa's government, which was elected under a mantle of social justice, has also silenced his opposition through legal and military violence and manipulating judicial mechanisms to repress dissidents. The most recent referendum expanded the executive grasp on the judicial apparatus, making it even more dangerous to oppose his neoliberal stance on natural resources.

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Despite Correa's best efforts to silence indigenous claims, one cannot but recall Bolivia's water wars a decade ago. Multinational participation in the privatisation of water led to widespread street protests, and the more the government repressed protest the more tensions escalated until Cochabamba exploded in conflict.
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naaman fletcher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-02-11 06:16 AM
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2. apparently
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-02-11 07:23 AM
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3. apparently, the CIA also opposes mining and privatization of water
typical right wingers.
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