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Social Injustice and Environmental Destruction in the Peruvian Rain Forest - Part 1

November/December 2009

By Mershona Parshall

This past spring, I was in the Peruvian Amazon learning from an indigenous curandero about the amazing pharmacopoeia of the jungle. A curandero, or healer, channels the powers of nature to help heal the sick. Sometimes this healing involves using herbs and traditional folk medicine, but it can also involve communication with the spirit realm.

My idyllic jungle experience was forever altered on June 5, 2009, when I learned that militia, sent by the Peruvian Government, had fired upon, killed, and wounded peaceful indigenous protesters in Bagua, a town in northern Peru. I learned that, for many months, Amazonian Indians had been protesting against President Alan Garcia’s policy to open up over 70% of the Peruvian Amazon to international oil, gas, mining, logging, and agribusiness interests for major exploitation. Garcia used special powers to push through legislative decrees after signing the Free Trade Agreement with the United States during the Bush administration. These decrees were to allow virtually unlimited access to much of Peru’s Amazon for major resource exploitation regardless of environmental consequences or human rights violations against Amazonian Indians.

The June 5th massacre in Bagua attracted international outrage, and Garcia was forced to repeal two of the most egregious decrees. The UN Special Rapporteur and other human rights organizations condemned the Peruvian Government’s handling of the situation. Regardless of international pressure, the Peruvian Government has pressed criminal charges against leaders of the indigenous movement despite its own human rights offenses, and has ignored the recommendations of the United Nations.

Garcia touts extracting resources from the rain forest as the solution to reducing the substantial poverty in Peru. He complains that the indigenous people are “ignorant savages” who are holding back progress. Yet, he ignores the fact that oil and gas extraction has left other parts of the Peruvian rain forest so polluted the indigenous people can no longer eat the fish or drink the water in their rivers. Since June 5th, Garcia has attempted to undermine the cohesive objections of the Amazonian indigenous tribes and he has not consulted with them, as promised, about impacts on their ancestral territories by international extraction corporations.

The Shipibo-Konibo tribe is one of the largest indigenous tribes in the Peruvian Amazon. The Shipibo-Konibo have maintained a strong tribal identity despite hundreds of years of exploitation. They are known for their exquisite art, their traditional knowledge of Amazonian plants, and powerful curanderos. Their territory runs along the Rio Ucayali, a major tributary of the Amazon River. In response to the present threats to indigenous territories, the Shipibo-Konibo have decided to organize themselves politically to protect their territory, culture, conserve the rainforest, and promote sustainable economic development. Leaders met in June 2009 after the massacre and will meet again on October 16-18, 2009 for the 2nd Congress of the Shipibo-Konibo in Pucallpa, Peru. At that time, Shipibo-Konibo leaders will formalize their organization and make plans to address the environmental threats and human rights violations being supported by the present Peruvian administration.

Peru has some of the most biologically diverse rain forests in the world. Once the rain forest is bulldozed, logged, or burned, it is gone forever. As you read this article, the Peruvian Government is forging ahead with its agenda by auctioning off yet more parcels of the jungle for resource exploitation.

I will be attending the 2nd Congress of the Shipibo-Konibo. Part 2 of this article (to be run in the January e-newsletter) will focus on how the Shipibo-Konibo tribe plan to proceed in their efforts to save their sizable territory and how we can help them.

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