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This is a discussion on Peruvian battle for oil - up to 50 dead and rising within the Environment forums, part of the Topical Discussion category on Politics.ie. The reported death toll from a pitch gun battle in Peru is still rising, with over 30 Indians and 9 ...
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| The reported death toll from a pitch gun battle in Peru is still rising, with over 30 Indians and 9 police claimed to have died yesterday. Latest reports are saying that there are at least 50 people dead. Up to 5,000 indigenous people were blocking a motorway in Bagua, North West Peru, to prevent oil exploration and were fired on from helicopters. They later took over a police station and disarmed police. 2,000 seem still to be active in trying to block the attempt to enter their lands. Reuters AlertNet - Dozens dead and wounded in Peruvian Amazon clashes Massacre of Indigineous Amazonians in Peru - 25 dead and counting - Indymedia Ireland Garcia's government has been shelling out oil drilling permits hand over fist since 2007 with a vast area of rain forest being potentially devastated. Along with this the new roads are used for extracting timber for illegally logging. BBC NEWS | World | Americas | Peru's Amazon oil deals denounced ![]() Quote:
Last edited by cactusflower; 6th June 2009 at 08:30 PM. |
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| 1 day, 2 events: HOME, the film + Massacre of 25+ Indigenous Amazonians in Peru defending their (and our) HOME It is clear; To survive on Earth we must change our ways, QUICKLY, or face the consequences. Yesterday was World Environment Day, and was celebrated by a global event in which I was happy to participate in my home city of Barcelona; the CCCB free projection of the amazingly beautiful, shocking film HOME: In our 200,000 years of existence, mankind has destroyed the equilibrium of almost 4,000 million years of evolution of the Earth. The price to pay is considerable, but it is too late to be pessimistic. In this film that took three years to produce, Yann Arthus-Bertrand presents previously unreleased images of over 50 countries seen from the sky, sharing with us his wonder and his concerns, and laying a stone in the edifice that we must all rebuild together. More than a movie, HOME will be a major event all over the globe. On June 5th, World Environment Day, HOME will be released in over 50 countries and on every format : movie theatre, TV, DVD and Internet. ![]() (The entire film can be freely watched online - 90mins, 88,000 people participated in magic the global event happen) - It was a profound experience, feeling the fear that perhaps it is too late, but also filled with HOPE that indeed we can get out of our mess and create a better, more sustainable, more beautiful, more enjoyable and just world. So that was the first Exceptional event for exceptional times Now part 2... next post Last edited by dunk; 6th June 2009 at 07:48 PM. |
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![]() Then, late last night, when checking email lists, horrific news was coming in from people connected witht the Indigineous Peoples movements. I wrote about things this morning in an article entitled: Massacre of Indigineous Amazonians in Peru - 25 dead and counting "This government disregards the indigenous people.” was what they said a week before being shot at from helicopters Quote:
I am also angered further as reports, videos and photos that are coming in showing the brutality and cynicism of the goings on there in their bloody World Environment Day in the Peruvian Amazon - peaceful protestors being fired upon by helicopter gunships, picked off by snipers, bodies being burned by police to lessen the massacred tally, even young Peruvians being shot tortured and shot through the face... Anyway, the point I wish to make is this: What is happening in Peru, affects all of us. In the film HOME, it is described how WATER, AIR, SOIL and TREES are the main things which sustain us. The Amazon is one of the main green lungs of the planet, it is being hacked to bits daily, this has to stop. The FTA (FREE TRADE AGREEMENT) deal done between the Peruvian government (of which there are much cries of corruption etc) and the US allows multi nationals to enter the indigenous area and to do as they please, which going by past records means destroy, destroy, destroy. So you can understand why the people have stood up to resist. After a bit of hunting, I found from BBC´s summary of Peru: Quote:
![]() And in case you feel that Democracy is functioning for the well being of the poor in Peru, and most other places of the world, and that FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS are benefitting them, please take the time to learn the full impact of the consequences of the OIL AGE; from neighbouring tribes who are dying slowly in the Peruvian area of Sion: http://video.google.es/videoplay?docid=1789624491349502624 Or perhaps you might want to find out about the Amazonian Chernobyl, which happened when Chevron (Then Texaco) entered Peru´s neighbouring country Equador. As was accurately explained in the new very powerful film CRUDE IMPACT ![]() Here is a segment from the film: Oil Companies and the Environment Even the wranglings on our own "Green Isle", both physical up in Rossport and the battle of minds like here on politics.ie So in conclusion, might I encourage people to find out what is going on and to stand up with our brothers and sisters in Peru We have to change, we dont have much time, we have to take action now. ![]() Here is the statement seeking support, through occupying areas outside Peruvian embassies, from CAOIT, the Andean Coordinating Body for Indigenous Organizations: Quote:
Last edited by dunk; 6th June 2009 at 07:50 PM. |
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| Garcia sees Peru as an economic unit only. The rainforest is doing little or nothing positive for Peru in overall economic terms so in the mind of Garcia it has to go and be replaced with ranches and oil platforms. The indigenous communities in the jungles were always living on borrowed time, what voices have they to stop him? Many of them have never even made contact with the rest of the world. The wealthy in Peru are probably cracking jokes about the look on the faces of the natives when the first exposure to outside life they see is a big oil drilling machine. Pity the Earth for the biodiversity that will be lost. If we plan on sticking around on this planet for a few million years someday our descendants may regret the clumsy wastage inflicted on so many species, things too amazing to be replaced... We may find new power sources, we may find new ways of organising our society to protect the environment but it may be too late. I have sometimes thought that if they cannot look after them, the rainforests should be stripped from the possession of the countries in the region and given extra-sovereign protection such as what Antarctica enjoys... if we do it for Antarctica we should do it for rainforests that not only house huge carbon reserves that we don't want released, but a cornucopia of precious biodiversity and even human tribes. Just as centuries of mistreatment provided every possible justification for Irish Independence from Britain, so if the Peruvians treat the Amazon and it's inhabitants as another country and massacre the people there - so the Amazon is clearly another country to Peru and Peru's 'ownership' is unjust, aside from the consideration that the two (settled Peru and the Amazon) are so different from one another. |
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| interesting BBC article here with accompanying video, made last month when the army were called in to clear roads, bridges etc of the 10´s of thousands of protestors, this evening of which there are 30 less of (possibly a whole lot more) due to yesterdays actions: Peru army call for Amazon protest The other side of this coin, is that nearly all of us are to blame for whats going on in peru. We live in society, as outlined by the film HOME, in which so much of what we consider "normal" is fueled by oil; the clothes we wear, the food we eat, the stuff we use... And that is driving big companies, and trade agreements, to open up new areas for exploitation. BUT, thankfully, we are waking up to this fact. Only very recently has the PEAK OIL idea hit home, and with that many communities are organising to change their ways to become less petro dependant and more locally resiliant, in terms of food, shelter, enjoyment, economy. I suppose part 3 of WORLD ENVIRONMENTAL DAY, for me yesterday, was the happy moment of coming across the VERY VERY excellent film from the POWERDOWN crew in transition Ireland and Cultivate; Transition Movement If anyone is interested in learning more can i recomend the free online version of the The transition handbook, from petroleum dependance to local resiliance, also talks much about HOPE and VISION. ![]() Here in Barcelona we are busy with our own transition stuff |
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| Inca cola news: The United Nations is pissed at Twobreakfasts (Garcia), too Quote:
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| The fighting is still going on, with virtual martial law in Bagua, according to Channel 4 news. Over 60 dead and hundreds wounded. Garcia said that the Amazon Indians are not first class citizens and they could not hold up the interests of millions of Peruvians. The whole thing has come about as a result of the Free Trade deal with the US. |
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