Por José Gualinga M

Tayak Apu (President) of Sarayaku

In the past three decades, Sarayaku (a people of 1,200 members fighting against oppression, and the destruction of Mother Nature and our life spaces), have done the impossible in order to prevent our sacred territories from being transformed into an industrial oil field of death.

Consequently, the economic, political, and military powers have been closing in on us – pressuring, threatening, and accusing us of being separatists. There is discrimination against our people. After we built an organizational force in the 70s, for the right to land and territory, which in this period where considered uncultivated, Sarayaku has been persecuted and slandered and the leaders have been considered subversives. Qualified as such, they put us on the Pastaza map as a RED ZONE. Worse still was when in 1989 we expelled the American company Arco Oriente (now called Agip) from our territory. The military intelligence, infiltrated by our own indigenous brothers, continually harassed us.

In 1996, the State granted Block 23 to the Argentinean company CGC without any form of consultation. Later in 2002, the company, protected by armed forces, police, and private security, forcefully and violently entered our territory causing panic, violence, familial and community division. The company planned to forcefully displace us, reducing our territory to 2 km, called the “Sarayaku Center” from the 140,000 hectares that were collective property. They militarized and chained off the passage through the Bobonaza River. They tortured our youth. They presented criminal accusations against leaders and members of the charges of terrorism, kidnapping, vandalism, robbery, and a payment of $200,000 for each charged person turned over. The oil companies CGC (Argentina) and CGG (France) were able to enter our living areas. These zones are still affected and brutally subdued through explosions. And over all, the Company CGC planted below the earth 1.5 tons of dangerous explosives of pentolite used to locate petroleum.

In this way, the life of the superior beings of the “Kawsak Sacha” zones (living forest) of the wetlands, mountains, moretales, and lakes, home of the creatures and beings of the masters of the forest, was irreversibly affected. These beings (Amazanga, Sacharuna, Yashingu) fled with all of their people. These areas of emotional, psychological, and spiritual power were sterilized, affecting the lives of the Sarayaku. The Yachak (elders) stated that one could hear great screams of pain within the mountains and lakes.

Currently, in the zones of seismic development, the forest is empty. Due to the tons of seismic explosions, the resources of species of animals, flocks of wild boar, parrots, deer, and fish from the river have disappeared. With this the subsistence economy of the Sarayaku has become precarious. There is malnutrition. Those most affected are the children and the elders. Various leaders have died as a consequence of this harsh reality.

The successive governments have accused us of being enemies against development and against the government. They have actually labeled us as fanatics, as sectarians, as a state inside the State, as an obstacle to the development of Ecuador. As the years go by, they continue to violate our rights. Every day, marginalization, exploitation, and crime are our reality. Days become centuries, life seems to modernize, but the violation of human rights of the original people continues in various Latin American countries and around the world. The neocolonialism expresses itself in megaprojects of natural resource exploitation, under the pretext of development.

We are victims of this cruel and dark reality of misunderstandings and lootings. We see how the memory of our history, our life in harmony with nature, the philosophy that has allowed us to maintain our cultural roots are attacked against the will of our organized society. This disarticulation of the codes and systems of organization and authorities has brought disappearance of ancestral knowledge, the cultural base of our continuance, where the Ayllus and entire populations are forced to walk the fine line of poverty and misery along with migration.

The governments have accused us of terrorism, sabotage, and crimes against public wellbeing. Meanwhile, impunity is the face of the present. A justice justified in the name of democracy. Because of this, in 2003, the people of Sarayaku with the support of various organizations presented their case before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, to defend our sacred territory and life against the petroleum projects that were granted by the Ecuadorian State without consultation.

Today, after eight years within this process, we find ourselves in the last chapter of litigation. Before issuing a ruling, the Court has convened a public hearing in San José, Costa Rica, which will take place on July 6th and 7th of 2011. During the hearing, Sarayaku will have the opportunity of presenting testimonies before the court, as well as the opportunity to display final pleas regarding the case. We are sure of a favorable sentence that would signify above all a historic triumph for the Sarayaku, but equally crucial for all of the indigenous peoples of South America, as the sentence will establish applicable standards in the rest of the States of the region, whose territories are inhabited by various indigenous peoples.

We have always, and will always protect and nurture our Mother Earth, the forest that nourishes us every day. We from the world of the Kichwa culture are always ready to defend the right to life and the rights of nature. “

When the other peoples have surrendered, the sons and daughters of Sarayaku will not back down.” prophecies of the Tayak, the last men of the Corn River. Costa Rica, July 6th, 2011.

Este lunes, 11 de julio a las 10H30 en la CONAIE, representantes del Pueblo de Sarayaku, su abogado y el presidente de la Confederación de Nacionalidades Indígenas del Ecuador (CONAIE) ofrecerán una rueda de prensa, para comentar  su participación en la Audiencia del “Caso Sarayaku vs Ecuador” ante la Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos en Costa Rica, los días 6 y 7 de julio. En este evento, se entregará un kit de comunicación para mayor información sobre el caso.

“Estamos decididos a no dejar destruir nuestra selva. Somos un pueblo de solo 1.200 personas, pero yo sé que en cada uno de sus corazones hay un pueblo que lucha.”, así terminó la declaración de José Gualinga, Presidente del Pueblo de Sarayaku, ante la Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos, el pasado 7 de julio.

El pueblo de Sarayaku demandó al Estado ecuatoriano por no haber respetado sus derechos cuando, en 1996, dio en concesión gran parte del territorio del pueblo a la empresa petrolera argentina CGC. Además, cuando,  entre los años 2002-2003, trabajadores de la empresa CGC ingresaron inconsultamente al territorio, con militares ecuatorianos, para realizar exploración sísmica. La empresa abrió trochas, introdujo explosivos y deforestó áreas de bosque, incluyendo árboles y plantas de valor sagrado y cultural para la comunidad. También,  en éstos eventos líderes de Sarayaku fueron amenazados y hostigados por sus labores en defensa del territorio ante la entrada ilegal de la compañía.

Las víctimas fueron representadas por la Asociación del Pueblo Kichwa de Sarayaku (Tayjasaruta), el abogado Mario Melo de Fundación Pachamama y el Centro por la Justicia y el Derecho Internacional (CEJIL).

"Si existen autoridades indígenas y derecho consuetudinario sobre el control de un territorio, esa autoridad debe ser respetada" declaró James Anaya, Relator Especial de Naciones Unidas para los Pueblos Indígenas ante la Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos (CorteIDH) durante su intervención en la Audiencia del Caso Sarayaku. El Relator recalcó la importancia, de  consultar a los indígenas desde la etapa en que se conciben los proyectos de desarrollo en sus teritorios y criticó el hecho de que “llegan a los territorios con los contratos ya hechos, los obreros contratados y las obras diseñadas y luego se le presenta a los pueblos. Eso no puede ser así". Anaya señaló que existen instrumentos jurídicos internacionales que justifican la obligación de los Estados a realizar la consulta, y entre algunos instrumentos legales que mencionó para cumplir con ésta medida citó los siguientes:  el convenio de la Organización de Estados Americanos y la misma Convención Americana de Derechos Humanos (Ambos instrumentos fueron ratificados por Ecuador en 1977 y 1999, respectivamente).

El Dr. Melo denunció el incumplimiento por parte del Estado ecuatoriano de las medidas de protección ordenadas por la Corte Interamericana hace 6 años. Además, hasta la fecha, el Estado no ha acatado las recomendaciones que fueron emitidas en el 2009 por la Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos (CIDH) para  este caso. Tampoco, ha cumplido con las medidas de protección ordenadas por este órgano para garantizar la vida e integridad física de los pobladores y pobladoras del pueblo de Sarayaku.

Además de exponer que las acciones del Estado pusieron en grave riesgo la vida de los miembros del pueblo de Sarayaku y sus condiciones de acceso a una vida digna, Viviana Krsticevic, Directora Ejecutiva de CEJIL y parte de los abogados de Sarayaku, explicó que: “El caso es transcendental, ya que es emblemático de la persistente violación de los derechos de los pueblos indígenas no solo en Ecuador, sino en todo el continente.”

El presidente de la Corte, el juez peruano Diego García Sayán, cerró la fase de preguntas consultando a la delegación estatal qué veracidad hay en la versión de que Ecuador prepara una nueva licitación de bloques petroleros para octubre. Los representantes del Estado comentaron no tener información al respecto, por lo que se comprometieron a responder ésta  interrogante, en una ampliación de  alegatos escritos.

Se espera que la Corte emita su sentencia antes de que finalice el año.

Contactos de prensa:
Fundación Pachamama: Joke Baert
jbaert@pachamama
02 333 2245 – 09 135 6877

CONAIE:
Nancy Bauptista, secretaria del presidente de la CONAIE
comunicación@conaie.org
02 245 2335 – 08 8163649

RUEDA DE PRENSA:
Lunes 11 de julio 2011
10H30
Conaie (Av. Los Granados E10-275 y 6 de diciembre)