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                    <text>CHIAPAS

UP

Update on
Chiapas

D A T E

---

A

ugust
6 -9,
the
National
Democratic Convention (CND).
organized by th e EZLN in
Aguascalientes. Chiapas, emerged as one
of the most significant political gatherings

in modern M
exican history. Six thousand
delegates from all over Mexico aLtended.
The cemrnl theme was the .. transition to
democracy.• Several local. regional and
national Indigenous organizations partici·
pated (see article below) . Most were not
entirely satisfied with either the CND's
structure or results. but have chosen to

\

\·

continue panicipating.
October 8 . the Zapatista National
Libenuion Aml)' broke off negotiations
with the government , stating that the
Salinas administration was not acting in

good faith , and was preparing a military
assault. The EZLN also claimed lO have
mined the roads leading to their territory.
October 10, peace mediator, Bishop
Samuel Ruiz expressed ·grave· concern
regarding the tensions in the state, and
called on both sides to maintain the ceasefire and return to the negotiating table.
October 12. the CND reconvened in
San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas. With
the support of thousands of local
Indigenous supporters, the CND then
symbolically and peacefully took over the
town. The convention declared itself in
permanent session. stating that a civil

insurgency is necessary in order to topple
the PRI from power. The CND also called
for nation·wide mobilization on Nov. 5.
to prevent President-elect Ernesto Zedillo

from taking office.

The EZLN has maintained a p resence in Chiapas's principal city, San Cristobal de las
Casas: mini Zapatistas for sale.

Six Principles for a New Mexican State
he following an icle is based on a
proposal titled "Six Principles and
Six Proposals" wriuen by the
Independent Indian Peoples From (FIPI)

T

Vol. 8 No.3

and the CommiLtee for the Support and
Defense of Indian Rights (CADDIAC).
After e xtensive consultations with
Indigenous organizations, FIPI con-

tributed this document to the working
roundtables established at the National
Democratic Convention. Although written for Mexico. the analysis could apply
27

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                    <text>CHIAPAS

UP

Update on
Chiapas

D A T E

---

A

ugust
6 -9,
the
National
Democratic Convention (CND).
organized by th e EZLN in
Aguascalientes. Chiapas, emerged as one
of the most significant political gatherings

in modern M
exican history. Six thousand
delegates from all over Mexico aLtended.
The cemrnl theme was the .. transition to
democracy.• Several local. regional and
national Indigenous organizations partici·
pated (see article below) . Most were not
entirely satisfied with either the CND's
structure or results. but have chosen to

\

\·

continue panicipating.
October 8 . the Zapatista National
Libenuion Aml)' broke off negotiations
with the government , stating that the
Salinas administration was not acting in

good faith , and was preparing a military
assault. The EZLN also claimed lO have
mined the roads leading to their territory.
October 10, peace mediator, Bishop
Samuel Ruiz expressed ·grave· concern
regarding the tensions in the state, and
called on both sides to maintain the ceasefire and return to the negotiating table.
October 12. the CND reconvened in
San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas. With
the support of thousands of local
Indigenous supporters, the CND then
symbolically and peacefully took over the
town. The convention declared itself in
permanent session. stating that a civil

insurgency is necessary in order to topple
the PRI from power. The CND also called
for nation·wide mobilization on Nov. 5.
to prevent President-elect Ernesto Zedillo

from taking office.

The EZLN has maintained a p resence in Chiapas's principal city, San Cristobal de las
Casas: mini Zapatistas for sale.

Six Principles for a New Mexican State
he following an icle is based on a
proposal titled "Six Principles and
Six Proposals" wriuen by the
Independent Indian Peoples From (FIPI)

T

Vol. 8 No.3

and the CommiLtee for the Support and
Defense of Indian Rights (CADDIAC).
After e xtensive consultations with
Indigenous organizations, FIPI con-

tributed this document to the working
roundtables established at the National
Democratic Convention. Although written for Mexico. the analysis could apply
27

�~~ I ~ P_A S ~ P~ ~T E --------------------------------------------C H~ A~ ~~ U~ D~A ~.
to the other L.nin American states who
·
conceive themselves to be mestizo.

I. An end to the
" Mestizo-cratic" state
In Mexico, ethnic homogeneity was

considered a necessary precondition in
the c remion of the nation·state, and in
consolidation of a market cconotn)'·
Indigenous peoples have therefore been
subject to hostile policies. ranging from
physical extennination to "'lndigenista ..

strategies whose aim has been to assimilate us. As a result . we have not had. as
Indigenous peoples. a dignified place in
Mexican society. Not only has our right to
exist as a collective entity been denied,
bm also our rights as a peoples. Today. we
continue living under a neocolonial

oppression promoted by the State and
perpetuated by mestizo people who ben-

efil from this siluation . They, in turn, pr
oblems we face, and thus must be mod·
believe themselves to be the synthesis of iOed. It was modified in 1992 in a way
the Mexican people, the embodiment of that was both limited and has not been
the nation, and to have created a State in enforced. Additions to 1\nicle Four recogtheir image and likeness; that is to say, a nize the plurality of the M
exican nation,
"mestizo-cratic" State. Thus, by the light but this plurality i.s not rcnected in the
of comemporary morality. the position of State, which should be structured in
the 'Mexican State and the mestizo peo~ order to rcnect this fact.
pies is illegitimate: both arc based upon
This problem is compounded by the
the displacement and the abrogation of fact that Indigenous rights arc located
the rights of Indigenous peoples, and under Article Four. which guarantees
upon excluding us from collective partic- individual freedoms, rather than within
ipation in the nation and the state, which the constitution's principal anicles (ani·
has bound us in a neocolonial relation· cles 39, 40, and 41, which have to do
ship.
with sovereignty and the fonns or go"ern·
mem. and ankles 115 to 122, which
II. Revise the constitution to
eStablish the basis for our federal strucserve as the foundation for a
wre). The location or our rights under
new, democratic, mult iArticle Four signifies the go"ernmemS
national, and popular state
refusal to recognize our collective rights
The constitution is a key source of the as distinct peoples. recognizing only our

looking toward the National Oemocrc.tic Convention.

28

N&gt;ya Yala News

�CHIAPAS

UPDATE

affected the territorial rights of
Ind igenous peoples. In many cases, the
ejido continues to function in a destrucis a multiethnic nation as it is to recognize tive and assimilationist manner in
that Mexico is a multinational state. This Indigenous territories. The new reforms
is why the central project is to divest the to Article 27 constitute a fi nal blow
constitution of its ..mestizo-cratic" cast.
towards the dismemberment of
Indigenous territories.

the state and the Indigenous peoples:
between the Ind igenous and nonIndigenous peoples: between the federation and the elements thereof: between
the capital and the provinces: between the
p rovinces and the Indigenous regions,
etc.

Ill. Building a new federalism
on the basis of a new understanding of territory

VI. A transitional government:
towards a multinational state

individual rights. This is a fundamental
and significant difference, as il is not the
same thing at all to recognize that Mexico

The ideal of federalism -for which
thousands o f citizens, Indigenous and
non·1ndigenous, have struggled- has
not been realized in our country. From

the very beginnings of the Republic,
the Mexican people agreed to constitute a federatio n: however, in prac tice
our government has been centralist,

subject to an overly powerful presidency and to the domination of 1he State
by one party, leading in effect to a dictatorship. In order to ful fill the precepts o f fede ralism. it is necessary to
redefine the notion that through federation we shall .. unify our diversity".

Although t his is a valid concept. it
does not acknowledge nor include the
continued presence o f distinctive peoples within a federation.
Thus indigenous peoples are left out
of the fede ral structu re of our cou ntry.
Some of the worst consequences o f this
exclusion are found in the territorial reorganizations which decisively and negatively impacted the social organization
of the original peoples of this land.
From that moment to the present,
Indigenous territories have been continuously divided. The federalist policies
did not take into account the preexisting
territories nor acknowledge them as a
basis for a re-organization. Instead. they
were deeply genocidal, placing
Indigenous regions under the tutelage o f
the H
lndigenista"' ann or the government. Today the few remammg
Indigenous territories face new threats.
The land redistribution that took place
throughout the country based o n an
ejido concept of occupancy. instead o f
on a communitarian basis. has greatly
Vol. 8 No.3

IV. Democracy for Indigenous
peoples: only within the context of a democratic nation
justice \viii prevail for indigenous peoples only if there is democracy in the rest
of the count!)&lt; And democracy can exist
only if governments are created that are
respectful o f diversity and able to share
power, not only 'vith different political
parties but also with different ethnic
groups. As Indigenous peoples we have
often been d enied the vote and been prevented both from choosing our own legit·
imate representatives as well as fr exerom
cising our right to represent others. As
Indigenous peoples, we add our voices to
the national clamor for democracy. yet we
add that no d emocracy \viii be a true
detnocracy if it does not resolve the amidemocratic
relationship
between
Indigenous people and the power of the
state, as exemplified in our ability to participate and be represented in the structures of govcrnmem.

V. Towards a new covenant
between Mexicans
The road towards democracy must
necessarily take us through a process o f
democratizing the relationships between
Indians and non-Indians. It is u rgent that
as Mexicans we re..1.ch a new national
accord, a new social covenant that is
based on a new ethic of tolerance and
respect towards diversity and plurality
that will allow us to live together in peace.
But this pact c..1nnot rest only upon individual efforts or moral values; we believe
that it must be affirmed by our
Constitmion . The State must address this
covenant by creating the foundation for a
democratic relationship between the State
itself and the Mexican people: between

It is not possible in this day and age to
defend an ethnocratic nation-state. As we
seek to give power to the people, we are
led to question the legitimacy of the mestizo population being the sole holders of
that power. The need for a transilional
government means that we need to create
a new national model that is no longer an
ethnocrntic nation-state, but instead a
multi-national state. The creation of a
truly multi-national state implies the
acknowledgment of the free self-determination of Indigenous peoples, and the
embodiment o f those rights through the
cr
eation of autonomous regions.

Six Proposals
Included within the six proposals are:
!)the constitutional recognition of
Ind igenous autonomy through the fo rmation of '"Autonomous Pluriethnic
Regions":
2) an addition to Article 42 . and
3) to Article 43 o f a section guaranteeing
the existence of the Autonomous
Indigenous Regions:
4) refom&gt;s 10 Article 11 5 10 acknowledge
the Autonomous Indigenous Regions
(referred to as Pluriethnic Regions) as
fundamental elementS of the political
and administrative struclUrc of the
country:
5) modifications to Article 73 and
6) modifications to Articles 52. 53. 54.
55. and 56. which refer to political
participation. in order to redraw electoral districts in Indigenous regions. In
this way, a sixth d istrict will be drawn
to provide for election of Indigenous
congressmen and guarantee the presence of six Indigenous senators. '!I
29

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                    <text>ENVIRONMENT

AND

DEVELOPMENT

The Convention on Biological
Diversity:
An Imperative for Indigenous Participation
The Biodiversity Convention. one of the world's most important pieces of environmental
legisla tion, will be finalized at the end of this year. Whether it will provide tools to defend
Indigenous bio-cultural resources remains unclear.

By Alejandro Argumedo

A

t the 1992 U.N. "Earth Summit" in
Rio de janeiro, over 150 governments signed the International
Convention on Biological Diversity
(Biodiversity Convention), which , came
into force last December after the
required ratification by more than thirty
national legislatures. After two-and-a-half
years of negotiations, the Conference of
Parties (COP) which was eStablished as
the Convention's governing body will

meet for the first time from Nov. 28 to
Dec. 9 in the Bahamas to further define
the treaty's implememmion. The
Convention has yet to establish the scope
and nature of Indigenous peoples' rights
to their bio.cultural resources. Thus, this
meeting will either help ascenain native

rights, or function as yet another intema·
tiona! mechanism to legitimate the theft
of Indian resources.
The Convention is the first global

agreement committing signatory nations
to comprehensive protection of Mother
Earths biological giftS. Provisions stipu·

lating specific commitment towards
achieving this goal are covered in forty·
two legally-binding articles. This legal
instrument addresses issues of tremen·
dous significance for the world's
Indigenous peoples.

Alejandro Argumcdo is Q11ec.hua from Peru, a
SAIIC board member aru1 Dire&lt;tor of Clllt11ral
Survival Canada.
30

Biodiversity and Indigenous Land
Up to the nineteenth century, Indigenous peoples exercised de facto control
over most of the world's ecosystems.
Today, only an estimated 12·19% of the
earths land area is home to the four to five
thousand Indigenous nations of the
world. Even diminished to a mere fragment or what they were, our homelands
constitute an important ponion or the
globe's relatively intact ecosystems, and
shelter an even larger share or its b iologi·
cal diversity. ll is no coincidence that the
habitats richest in natural diversity are
usually home to Indigenous people as
well . By some estimates, Indigenous
homelands shelter more endangered
plant and animal species than all the
worldS ..namre reserves" combined.
Through millennia we have depended
on the diversity of lire around us: uncovering its secrets, and learning how to
increase these riches, for example. when
we create new genetic diversity within a
species. We possess a knowledge that is
not only innovative and cognizant of eco·
logical processes and uses of biodiversity,
but also uniquely holistic for its spiritual
and ethical components. That is why the
conservation of all components of biodiversity-genetic, species and ecosys·
terns--is crucial for our survival as cultures of the land. For Indigenous peoples
biodiversity means just that: the land . The
recognition of inherent rights to our tra-

ditional territories is the foundation both
for our survival as peoples and for the
conservation and sustainable use of biodi·
versity and its components. ln this context the Biodiversity Convention could
provide an imponam mechanism to pro·
tect Indigenous Peoples' rights over bio·
logical resources.

The Convention: a Significant
but Flawed Tool
Disturbingly, there has been liule participation by Indigenous people in developing the Convention. As usual, we have
been viewed as the objects (another
endangered species) rather than subjects
of the process. Most Indigenous people
know little, if anything, about the Con·
vemion. l'iowever, the treaty does recognize our contributions to biodiversity
conservation. In addition, appreciation of
our · use of the medicinal, agricultural,
and other useful properties of endemic
nora and fauna.. i.s increasing.
Nonetheless. parties to the Convention are now meeting behind closed doors
tO determine what rights we will have
over our knowledge. innovations and
practices, for which we currently lack any
legal Instruments of protection . Bio·
cultural pirates are currently plundering
these resources \vithout prior infonned
consent of Indigenous communities and
organizations. Free access for free value is
the common practice. For the first time,

Abya Yala News

�ENVIRONMENT

AND

DEVELOPMENT

provisions of the Biodiversity Convention
may offer opportunities to effectively pro·
teet rights to biocultural resources.
With the increasing focus on
Indigenous territories as reserves of

genetic diversity for use in the food. agriculture, pharmaceutical, b iotechnology
and other industries, Indigenous peoples
presence in the ConventionS develop·
ment is crucial. The Indigenous Peoples'
Biodiversity Network (IPBN). a global
coalition of Indigenous peoples' organizations formed to protect biocuhural
resources, has been lobbying for
Indigenous peoples' rights within the

Convention. In order to promote greater
Indigenous innuence within the treaty.
the IPBN. SAIIC and the Abya Yala Fund,
an Indigenous foundation that supports
Indigenous-based sustainable development in the b .tin America, are jointly

working to facility increased panicipation

Potato crop d iversity developed atongside Andean cultures in the Altiplano
region, where hundreds of varieties can be found in tocat markets.

of Indigenous peoples from South and
Meso America. We need to monitor. ana·

lyze, and seek greater mmsparency and
accountability from all panics, in addition
to promoting policies that protect our
local rights and inte rests.
The Convention's value lies in the
comminnent of signatory nations to work
for a common cause. h also supports

national sovereignty and each country$
right to benefit from its own biological
resources. It funher specifies that each
country should ha\re access rights to new
technologies. including new biotechnologies. which could assist in conservation
efforts or prove useful in the exploitation
of biological resources.
The Convention does not recognize
Indigenous peoples' rights over their traditional tenitories and resources. But it does
rc&lt;:ognize the importance of our cultures'
survival to the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity. It also recogn.izes
that first nations should share in the benefits deri"ed from their knowledge and
innovations.
Unfortunately,
the
ConventionS provisions leave it up to

n..1tional governments to decide the scope
and nature of Indigenous peoples' rights.

Currently, few colonial nation-states recogVOl. 8 No.3

nize Indigenous land rights or rights to
customary practices on the land (biodiversity). Inserting these adequately imo the
treaty is a serious challenge for the signatory members of the Con"emion , and \viii be
a tough figh t for the Indigenous peoples
working within the process. The

ConventionS existing mandates can be
grouped into several broad categories.
these are briefly summarized below.
National Action Plans and Environmental Impact Assessments
One of the Convention's central mandates is to ensure adequate planning and

decision-making to protect biodhrersity at
the national level. Each country will be

Environmental Impact Assessments. This
Article may provide Indigenous peoples
with a forum-which they have often
been lacking-for voicing opposition to

senseless · mega-development" projects

that affect their human and territorial
rights, such as the COI\Struction of hydroelectric dams, highways. tourist resorts,
tnining. oil exploration and exploitation,

and logging.

Protection
In tem'ls of concrete protective mea·

sures, the Convention has three require·
mems: control sources of significant
injury to biodiversity. establish systems of

protection .

protected mnural areas, develop and
implement policies for in situ conserva·
tion. Indigenous participation is critical

Indigenous organizations should panici-

both in designing protected areas and in

pate in designing these plans because new

managing them.
First,
because
Indigenous communities often have
extensive knowledge regarding the land·
scapes at stake. Second to ensure that
these actions are complimentary and

required to formulate a national action

plan

for

biodiversity

policies will affect their communities the
most. Implementation of these plans, is of

course. another mancr. and Indigenous
organizations will have to monitor this
process as well. Secondly for all individual projects "likely to have significant
adverse impacts on !biodiversity)" governments will be required to develop

compatible \vith pre-existing Indigenous

land rights, rather than-as we ha,rc seen
in some previous cases-an auempl to

clrcumvcm them.
31

�ENVIRONMENT

AND

DEVELOPMENT

The Convention specifically recommends the application of traditional knowledge and conservation practices. This is a
very valuable recognition of Indigenous
practices, Indigenous organizations will

have to be proactive in the implementation,
financing and monitoring

or

these mea-

sures.

Research and Indian Lands

reliable biodiversity indicators than science.
Monitoring the status of ecosystem and
species can be done by Indigenous peoples
along with scientists if the integrity, and
rights to our knowledge is respected and
protected.
At the same time. parties to the
Convention are supposed tO identify and
monitor activities that are likely to have significant adverse impacts on biodiverslly. In

In addition to protecting biodi\'ersity,
the Convention is supposed to promote ·
sustainable use of biological resources
through governmenllprivate sector cooper- ]
ation. ln the past, such bilateral coopera- ':'
tion has nearly always sidestepped ~
Indigenous panicipation (e.g. "Texaco &amp; """
Ecuadorian Government Settlement" on
pg. 4, eds.) The Convention continues to
favor bilateral rather than multilateral
agreements. Multilateral agreements are
more favorable for Indigenous organiza-

al action plan should include the following

economic activities in their list of harmful
processes reqltiring monitoring and mitigation: mining, oil exploration, agribusiness,
commercial logging and cattle ranching.

Financing
The Convention mandates the industri·
alized countries tO provide developing
countries with new and additional funds to
meet its implementation costs. The Global
Environmental Facility (GEF) ' vas chosen
as the Convention's interim financing
mechanism. The panies \viii select the per-

manent mechanism at this meeting in Nov.
and Dec.

Institutional Structure And
Intergovernmental process
At the international level, panies to the

Convention will meet regularly in a
Conference of the Parties (COP). A

tions: these are more transparent and

Secretariat will provide administrative str·
vices. An interim Secretarial has been estab·

involve a range or concerned sectors who

can act as our allies, support our rights, and

lished in Geneva, $\vitzerland. In addition,
a scientific and technological advisory committee will give technical assistance to the
COP. At the COP. panies \viii report on
compliance's and consider measures for
strengthening the treaty. They 'viii also
address, among other issues: a) administer-

help to monitor the agreement. Indigenous
peoples' organizations should consider
multilateral agreements for decisions affecting biodiversity in their tenitories.

Identification and Monitoring of
Priorities and Problems

ing the financing of arrangements under

Parties to the Convention are required

the treaty; b) seuing up a clearinghouse of
infom1ation on teclu1olog&gt;1 transfer and
other areas; c) establishing cooperative
pannerships on research. information sharing. and technology transfer. "!)

to identify priority ecosystems. species, and

genomes for conservation and sustainable
use of biodiversity. These priority areas ";11
largely be congruent with Indigenous terri-

tories. and Indigenous communities could
benefit from research acti\;ties that help to
ascertain territorial rights (e.g. ecosystem

research). Since the Convention recognizes
the merits of Indigenous knowledge in relation to biodiversity, Indigenous peoples
should participate in this research as equals

with \Vestem researchers.
In addition to biodiversity identification. parties are required to monitor the sta-

tus of their countryS biodiversity resources.
Here. in particular, Indigenous knowledge
has a critical role. In many instances.
Indigenous knowledge can provide more

32

Chimane farmer shows just one of the
several hundred different domesticated
and semi·domesticated plant species

he cultivates- a local variety of peanuts.
many countries Indigenous organizations

are the first to identify and denounce large-

scale envirorunemal irnJXl.ClS (see for exam·
pie Vol. 8: 1&amp;2. Oil exploration in Peru,
eds.). Panies should provide Indigenous
groups \vith resources for in-depth and

continuous monitoring ofhannf\1 activities
1
in their regions. In addition, every nation-

For furt.ll&lt;r infonnation 011 the B:odiwfSfO' Conwnllon
and lndig&lt;nQ\~ '-"'«$ p/c&lt;U&lt; """"" d-~ folfq,fr.g;
M.s Angela Cropper, fx«uti\'t S«relary Col'l\'tndon
on Biological Oi\·crsily
IS Ootmindc$,~ncmortS CP 3S6CH·12I9

O.aU:laiu Ccllcva. SuiU:crlaltd
Td: (i 1-22)979-9J 11 Fax: (41-22)979·2.512

Tht Abya Yala Fund
P.O. Box 2&amp;386 Oakland, CA, USA
Td: (510) 834-4263 F&lt;JX: (510) 834 -1264
Indigenous P(Oplt:S' 81odiver'$iry Nc:(w'Ori:
62(), l Nic.holas 5-l. Ouawa. Ontario, CanaM. KJN 787
Td: (613) 241 iSCOFax: (613) 241-2292

Abya Yala News

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                <text>The UN Earth Summit in 1992 secured the agreement of over 150 governments to follow the Convention of Biological Diversity. With it coming into effect, a committee will meet to determine if indigenous communities will have rights to their bio-cultural resources under the convention. Beyond that, the convention provides many resources and protections to ecological regions.</text>
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                    <text>W 0 ME N
3. Establish relations with national and
inte- national organizations and particr
ipate actively to articulate, promote

and project the demands of women
and Indigenous peoples.
In order to achieve these objectives, the

committee members established the
regional bases for a continental communication and infom1ation dissemination net·

Women from around the continent ca me to La Paz to b uild commu·
nication and plan future strategies

Strengthening the Network:
Second Encounter of Indigenous Women from
South, Central America and Mexico

work. These will be, the Council of Maya
Organization of Guatemala. the Workshop
of Kuna Women-Association of Napguana
(Panama), the Foundation of Educational .
Social and Economic Development FUNDASE (Guatemala); the Coordinating
Committee of Indigenous Women of
Bolivia and the South and Meso American
Indian Rights Center (USA).
The CIMI issued a statement pointing
out that eventhough there has been
progress in tenns of strengthening com·
munication and women's participation in

the organizations, there are still abuses
against women like physical violence and
basic rights , such as education. continue
to be discriminatory.( ...) The statement

also points out that: ..Neo-Hberal policies
of the Latin American governments are

he Executive Committee of the

T

Coordinating Body of Indigenous
Women of South and Central
America (CIMI) met in La Paz. Bolivia,
from july 4·6 of 1994 in preparation for
the General Assembly that will take place
in Mexico in August of 1995. and for the
Founh World Women's Conference of the
United Nations in Beijing in 1995.
The meeting in La Paz was hOS&lt;ed by
Centro de Discusion ldeologioo de Ia Mujer
A)onara (COlMA) and attended by delegates

from Guatemala, Panama. Mexico.
Venezue]a. Nicamgua, Peru. Argentina and a
representative from the Coodinadom de
Mujeres lndigenas de Bolivia (CMI6).

Background:
In August of 1990. the Sabmi Women's
organizations fron1 Norway organized an
international Indigenous \-\'omen's Confe-

rence. At that C\'Cnt, women representati\'es
from aU coumrics in the American continent
34

were present and decided to ca11 a meeting
to set up a network o£ Indigenous \'\bmen
from Mexico. Central and South America.
The First Encounter of Indigenous \\llmen
from South and Central America took place
in Uma, Peru. in March of 1991. At that

meeting the Coordinating Body was
fomted.
This Encounter in

1...:'1

Paz was initiated

with an Aymara·Quechua ceremony which
is the \Va:..:t'a. offer to the Pachamama
(mother can h).
The committee affimted the following
broad objcetives:
l. Promote permanent communication

between existing Indigenous wo1nen's
organiutions in order to develop a
network of solidarity at the national
and international level.

2. Promote the exchange of cultural and
organizational experiences between
Indigenous women's organiz..1.tions.

putting the Indian communities under
more threats. Our territories and

the

Ecosystems will be more exploited and
contaminated."( ...)
Members of the Coordinating Body of
Indigenous Women are planning to travel
to the Fourth \.Yorld ~'omen's Conference
in Beijing to organize a Workshop on the
issue of domestic violence. "il
For mo~ infonnation you can contact:
Sm. Maria Riquiac Morales

Consejo de Organizacioncs Mayas de
Guatemala - l'UNDASE
10 Calle 5-21 Zona 1 CHICHICAS
Chirnaltenango . GUATEMAUI
Telcfa., : 502-9-561018

Fany Avila Eleta Taller de

Mt~eres

Kuna

Apartado 536. l&gt;anama.

Rep. de Panama
Ph: 507-696525 Fa." 507·693514

You can also concaa SAIIC.
N&gt;ya Yala News

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                    <text>W 0 MEN

Drug Trafficking and
Strip Searches Place
Wayu Women in Peril
The following statement regarding "La Requisa lntima"-The Strip Search. was made

by Dalla Duran of the Indigenous Movement for National Identity CMOIIN). and
appeared in IWGIA

he Way(l people have lived on
Guajira
Peninsula
between
Colombia and Venezuela since
before the Spanish arrived on this conti·
nent. This coastal and semi·desert territo·
ry of vast planes is the home of our matrilineally organized society. Way(l women
are the axis of this society: inheritance
and the last name follow the mothers line.
Women:S presence and participation arc
funda mental in the development and

T

continuity of each clan . Nonetheless. in
the last few years, the menace of drug
trafficking has begun to shake the foundation of our community and the position

of women Within it.
In contrast to many other regions of
South America, drugs arc neither grown.
nor processed in Guajirn. However. our
location , which for years kept us isolated
from European innucnces and the missions. has today become our biggest problem . Over the last twenty years, the
Guajira has been converted into a giant
landingsuip and a port of transit for ships.
Drugs arc launched from here to the drug
consuming countries of the world .
Drug trafficking has had more than a
transitOT)' presence. Huge quantities of
money have allractcd cheap labor to the
region: men • women and children act as
guards for the landing strips and illicit
ports which appear and disappear as if
by magic on the savannas and coasts.
Dntgs are stored in the workers' houses,
involving entire families in this activity.
VOl. s No.3

The quanlllles of money paid to the "mules" work should be stopped. we canworkers transforms our communities' not accept the treatment that our women
traditional values. Our society's mea· receive daily on crossing the border check
sured balance with the environment, points. The searches that arc carried out
based on taking only what is necessary are inhuman and undignified. The
from our habitat, is evaporating. At the national guard. police and customs offisame time. violence has grown. as has cials assume that every woman dressed in
the nun1ber of anns-which are required traditional clothing or having our featu res
in the functioning of the drug trade. is a ..mule." During these searches, even
Thus, the model of life based on respect women~ genitals are examined in small
for women and on strong commu·
nity solidarity is at risk. For five
"For five centuries. women have
centuries, women have exercised a
exercised a fundamental role in
fundamental role in the defense of
our traditions along the long road
the defense of our traditions ... •
of European colonization. and the
place of women emerged strengthened by this process. Despite the cubicles in front of the other traveling
Spanish conquistadors' plundering o f companions and without any kind of san·
our society, it never uprooted the status itary control. Only the poor and humble
of women in WayU society.
\VayU women who travel by truck or bus
Throughout the world, drug traffick- are searched in this way. Those who trav.
ers use '"mules.. to transport small quanti· el in private cars are not affected.
ties of drugs from one spot to another.
h is no exageration to call these strip
Here, drugs need only be carried the few searches a violation of our fundamental
kilometers from Colombia to the frontier rights. The searches violate our dignity as
cities of Venezuela. In this activity, Way(l human beings, it is not only an ass.'luh on
women are in demand for their stamina, our morality, but only exposes the popuaudacity and capacity to overcome fear.
lation to venereal diseases and conNonetheless, the government's actions tributes to the deteriorating physical.
to arrest violence generated by the drug emotional and mental health of the Way(l
trade have put Indigenous people at the women. We hope that this statement
center of a connict which. in many cases, causes renection on this issue. as our
jeopardizes women the most. Even people are living under inhuman condithough we understand that the authori- tions under the indifferent glances of the
ties reaction is logical, and that the authorities. ~
35

�ORGANIZATION

AND

COMMUNICATION

Indigenous People's Alliance &lt;IPA&gt; Update

countries to panake in the next encounter. Those pre-.sem emri.

Indigenous Peoples Alliance (IPA) members auended the
Tohono O'odham Human Rights Conference in Sells. Arizona,
on july 29-30 in the lohono O'odham Nation, extending
alliances across the Mexico/U.S/Canada borders. Following the
conference in Sells, the IPA convened in Phoenix for a strategy
and planning meeting on Aug. I. Representatives from

sioned the promotion and encouragentcnt of elders around the

Tonanrzin, Indigenous Environmental Network, En'owkin

ciples for the CONIC constitutional convention were distributed
for cotnment and discussion on recruitment strategy undenak·
en. Members were updated on the situation in Chiapas by

was the 1heme of this congress sponsored by the CH1-G
(Council of May Education of Guatemala), Aug. 8-11, 1994, in
Que1zahenango attended by approximately 350 Ma)'a teachers.
In discussing 1he needs of the Maya, their reality and cosmovision, spirituality and philosophy, 1he teachers recommended

Marcos Perez Gomez from ORIACH (Organizacion Regional de
los Altos de Chiapas).

the initiation of Maya curriculum in both rural and urban areas.
including: Mayan mathematics. astronomy, medicine, linguis·

Center, and Peace and Dignity Project auended. The draft prin-

For' mon: information. Contact:

Tonatiern. POll24009, Phoenix Az 85074 Tel: 602- 254-5230
Fa." 602-252-6094

First Encounter of Maya Elders and Spiritual
Guides in Guatemala
Maya elders and spiritual guides met on March 13-22. 1994,
at the different cardinal points in Tecpa'n, Guatemala. This gathering wns a chance for an exchange of information on Maya
astrology with an ernphasis on predicting cycles which can aid
elders in their healing rituals. The Maya Calendar was a major
point of discussion. Some people believe that the prophecies o f
the calendar will have a great impact over the next 20 years.
A council of elders and spiritual guides fonned at this
encounter with the intention of unifying Indigenous communia
ties. The panicipants also decided to invite elders from other

world to practice, exchange, and impan their traditional teachings and healing practices.

First Congress of Maya Education
"The time has come that we re-initiate the cirdc of light. ....

tics, ans. philosophy. productivity and culture. They also called
for the opening of more schools for training bilingual MayaSpanish teachers, and the institutionalization of21languages by
the Academy of Maya languages.

Workshops to Train Indigenous Journalists
Planned in Norway
SAI IC·Norway representative Sebastian Lara and Sami journalist Unni Wenche Gronvold are establishing an Indigenous
journalists Project in Oslo, Norway. The p roject will o rganize
training workshops for Indigenous journalists from throughout

the conrinent. These workshops will strengthen the
lntemalional Association of Indigenous Press (AlPIN) which is
currently broadcasting from Mexico City. SAIIC-Norway is seek-

ing economic assistance from governments who are sponsoring
to 1he U.N. Decade for Indigenous Peoples, as well as from the
Spanish News Agency EFE. The Foreign Relations Office of the

Norwegian government is now swdying SAllC·NorwayS pro·
posal. This project will enable more Indigenous journalists to
repon on their own struggles.
F4r m4rt infonnatlon and to send a$$fSrancc:
SAIIC-Norge. Torgatta 34.0183 Oslo. Norw.&gt;y

Free Workshops For the Women of La Quebrada
de Humahuaca, Argentina
The women of Quebrada de Humahuaca Province. in the
Republic of jujuy, Argentina. have been organizing . Recently,
this work included designing n ew practical components for the
States educational system, including the prac1ice of preserving

fruits and vegetables, weaving, hcahh education, ceramics.
music and dance, and especially the recuperation of their native
language Kechua. This project results from free workshops orgaInd igeno us w o men's committee meets betow the wip h&amp;t&amp;

36

nized independently by women in various localities. Also the
educational amhorities. OIGEMAS. and the Ministry of Culture
M:Jya Yala News

�ORGANIZATION

and Education all included the women~ proposals into the state
system.
The workshops' primary objectives have been to achieve incen-

tives for panicipation through collective organiz..
'l.tion. incentives
for production based on a subsistence oconomy, incorporation of
modem techniques, re-valuation and advancement of the culture,
recovery of the native tongue. Kcchua. and improving the standard
of li'""&amp;·
For mort: infotmalion~
J~ de Ia lglesia/2238-Cu)"'ya·Son Salvador de
jujuy Rcp~blica Argcntin.V Tel: 29605

Ecuadorian Indigenous Women's
Forum
The forum was held between july and
Sept. . in preparation for the Fourth Women$
Conference. Women from the Quichua. Slmar,
Achuar. Siona, Cofan, Secoya, lioao. Awa,
Chachi, Tsachi and Huancavilcas prepared the
document "Women of Yesterday, Women of
Today, Always 'Women, \Ve weave the Fmure

of Our People.. which analyzes their situation
within

the

communmes

and

within

Ecuadorian society in general. They demand
recognition of the different Indigenous nation·

alities within a Plurinational state, demarca·
tion of Indigenous territories, and the granti·
ng of communal ownership over them.
At the same time, they requested govern·
ment attention to improving agricultural and
anis..·m production and commercialization.
better infrastruc-ture. education and health
services. They also demanded respect for

Indigenous peoples human rights and the par·
ticipation or women in the processes that
affect them.
For more informa!lon, or ro obtain tilt meeting~ final

dccumcm:
Agel'lcia latino:uncrica.na de 1nfonnaci6n
(ALAI). Casilla 17-12-$77. Quito. Ec\lador. Av.
12 de oetubre 622 y Paula. Edificio 6ossano. Of.
503. Tel: (593) 2 505 074 Fax: (593) 2 505 073

First Regional Encounter of
Mapuche Women in Chile
The Mapuche Zomo Ni Unel Xawl"' (First
Regional Encounter of Mapuchc Women) was

Vol. 8 No.3

AND

COMMUN I CATION

organized by the Coordinating Commiuee of Mapuche Women\;
Institutions of the IX Region on Sept. 5. Participants worked to

analyze a number of fundamental cultural concepts in order to
understand and implemem them from an Indigenous perspec·
tive. Concepts like Mapuche identity; health and its relation to

the sacred: education. and its relation to wisdom~ the exercise of
memory and precision~ were central themes of the discussion.
Finally they addressed the situation of Indigenous women who
cominue to live in the communities as well as those who have
migrated.

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                    <text>CA

L E H D A R

0 F

EV

E H T S

Oct.17-18

Nov. 30-Dec. 2

Seminar on Self-determination for Indian Peoples

National and International Conference on NAFTA

Indigenous people from throughout Mexico will participate in
this conference organized by El Colegio de Mexico, under the
leadership of Rodlofo Stavenhagen.

The Aukir1 Wallmapu Ngulam (All lands Council) is calling this
conference in Temuco, Chile out of concern fo r the governments
plans to join NAFTA by the end of next year.

Qmtact:

Rod~fo Stavtnhagen,

tcVfox: 52-5·645·59·55

ContGGt: Au.hifl WQ.Ilmapu Ngulam, General Mackenna 152 Ca.silla 448,

Tcmuco. Chile teVfax: 56-45-235-697

Oct. 20- Nov. 15
Big Mountain to Chiapas Good Medicine Run
This relay run will begin in Big Mountain and proceed to
Brownsville, TX. (Oct.20·29). Second leg is from Brownsville to
Chiapas (Nov. l-15). Each night of the run traditional exchanges
or Native American cultures will take place.

Sacrtd Run Foundation, Inc. PO BX 315 Newport, Kenrutky 41071
Td: (606)581·9456 Fax: (606)581-9458

Dec. 9-10
Summit of the Americas
President Clinton has invited the other p residents of the
Americas to Miami , Florida, to establish a strategy for develop·
ing a new relationship between the American states. Clinton is
ex1&gt;ected to pressure the latin American states to accept U.S.

patent laws and the international agreements of NAFTA and
GATf. Indigenous people " "" work to establish an alternative

Oct. 22-24

meeting, and pressure governments to accept Indigenous partie·
ipation.

Guatemalan Government and URNG Re-open
Negotiations
Peace negotiations between the Guatemalan government and the

Dec. 12

National Revolutionary Union of Guatemala guerilla movement
will re~open in Mexico City. lndian groups will be working to
gain emrance into these talks which will affect Indigenous communities throughom Guatemala.

Nov. 10-20
Symposium: " 502 Years of Denied Rights"
The Centro di Doeumentazione della Etniein Firenze, Italy, is
organizing this conference focusing on rights to land. spirituality and identity.

Contact: Villa Fabbricoui· via Viu. .Emtlntu:lt 64, 50134 Flrcnzc, ltalla,
tel/fax: 39-55·48860

Nov. 13
First Indigenous Autochtonous Festival
Dancers and Musicians will be coming to La Paz from all over Bolivia
to commemorate the deuh of Aymarn heroe Tupac Katari in 1781.

Ccntatt: CED1MA (Aymara \Vom&lt;n$ Center for ldcologtcal Dis&lt;u5Sion.
tel/fax: 591-2.35-48-74

38

Decade of the World's Indigenous Peoples
The United Nations will inaugurate the Decade for Indigenous
People during International Human Rights Day in New York
City. Indigenous leaders from around the world are expected to
attend.

Comact: Tonaticrra, 1818 S. 16!h St, Phoenix, AZ 85034 #418
T&lt;l: 602-254-5230
Or conratt SAliC

January. 1995
Indigenous Peoples, Customary Law and
'Intellectual Property Rights' Workshop
The workshop \viii be held at the SAIIC offices in O..kland.
Indigenous representatives from Meso and South America ' vill
gather to develop Indigenous strategies for long-term survival in
the face of new exploitation aimed at Indian lands. Sponsors are
still needed to suppon participation of Indigenous delgates.

Comact: SAIIC or the Indigenous PeopleS Biodi\'trsicy Network,
Suit&lt; 620. I Nltlrolas St. Ouawa, Ontario, KIN787
Tel: (613) 241 4500 Fax: (613) 241 2292

Abya Yala News

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                    <text>S A I I C

News from
S

S~IIC ...

AIIC is tn the midst of many
changes. We h.-·e changed our
name to the South and Meso
American Indian Rights Center to bet·
ter rcOcct the focus of our activit&lt;&gt;. Wlule

rninee as international relat1ons coordinator. SAIIC board member and women's
project coordinator. Wam Alderete fur·
thercd her information g.11henng on tm·
ditional health systems and auended a

infonnation gathering and dissemination

conference on women and traditional

continue to be major projects fo r us. the

health hosted by Way\1 Indians this

new name describes more clearly our role September in Venezuela. In conjunction
in International organizing: to fight for
Indian peoples' rights. In a more concr&lt;te
change. we will also be mo,1ng tn
No"ember to new office spaces at 171'1
Fmnkhn (3rd Floor). also in downtown
Oakland. Tins large new sp3cc "111 acco·

modate our expanded team or amcms and
volunteers.
0\'CT the summer, we have focused
largely on Issues o f biodiversity conserva·
tion and Intellectual property rights.

which are receiving increasing international attention. SAIIC board member
and Cultuml Sur\-ival-Canada. exccutl\'e
din:ctor. Alejandro Arnaru Argumedo
spent se\'Cml weeks here in Oakland p3r·

with The Book Publishing Comp3ny. we
ha'" published the second edition of the
women's book "Daughters of t\bya Yala" .
For the fifth consccuuve ytar. Nilo
Cayuqueo represented SAIIC at the UN
Working Group on Indigenous Peoples
meeting in GenC\•a. He also helped orga·
nizc a planning meeting for 1he
Coordinating Committee of Indigenous
Nations a nd Organizations of the
Continent (CONIC) in Bolivia.
St\IIC is pleased to announce that
Marcos Yoc, Maya·Caqchiquel from
Guatemala, mil be joining the board of

dtrectors. Marcos has been :acuve m the
Chtmahenango area and works m Maya

ticapaung 10 e\'tnlS relating to these 1ssues

education.

and planntng for our upcoming workhop
on ''Indigenous peoples, Customary
Law and 'Intellectual Propert y Rights."'
This workshop " ;II take place in corly
1995 and will bring together Indigenous
peoples from Nonh and South America
who arc facing constant thrtats to theor
survi"al as cuhures of the land. The work·
shop \\111 be an opponunoty for
lnd.g&lt;nous peoples to dC\·elop pohey and
suateg~es to enhance their struggles for
ad,·ancing inherent rights and protecting
blo-cultural resources and spiritual values.
SAIIC assisted in organizing a plan·
ning meeting of the Coord inating
Committee or Indigenous women of
Meso nnd South America. which took
ploce in Boliva this june. SAIIC Mil con·
tinue pan•dp3t1ng m the steering com-

David Tecklin will be l&lt;aving the
SAIIC Office Coordinator position to
renew work with forest conservation
issues. Ch eryl Musch will be managing
the office through the winter.
We are also happy to welcome
MacArthur Foundation Fellow Marc
Becker here to work wuh us for the next
y&lt;ar. Marc ,viii be using h•s extensive
experience with computer nctworklng to
help us exp3nd our inforrnauon systems

~N0.3&amp;4

via the internet. Marc li\'ed in Ecuador
last year. where he will return ngain next
)'C:rtr to finish research for his disscnation.
St\IIC has established on electronic con·

terence on PeaceNet called S(liic.indio. \Ve
\viii be po&amp;ing a voriety of new and histor·
leal infonnation on St\IICs acth~ties and
the Indian mo\'ement m thiS conference.

The full text o( the &amp;rbados Ill Declamtlon
e.•cerpted u1 th•s 1SSue has been po&amp;ed
there in English and Sp3nish. To join
PeaccNet. c:~ll ('115) 442.{)220. If you
already ha"e all Internet e-mail account rou
can be placed on a mailing list to receh'C the
postings to the SAIIC conference by send·
ing a note which simply s. ys "subscribe
1

saiic·l.. to majordomo®igc.apc.org.
Over the summer, SAIIC has also been
organiza·

\'try busy Implementing se\'ernl

tiona) str.ueg•es m order to strengthen our
work. We completed one of the two public awareness c:amp.•igns planned for thiS
)"ear. Approximately 5.000 people in the
San Fmncisco 6.1y t\rea received news and
information about SAIIC-most likely for
the first time. This effort will also help to
finance the second planned public aware·
ness campaign targeting approximately
200 foundations in the United States.
Broadening our base of subscribers to the
journal IS cn1ieal m our move tov..ard
more self-sustaLnabLiity. You can help
with this elTon b)• sending us the names
and addresses of anyone who might be
interested in receiving infonnation about
SAIIC and Abya Yala News.

You are cordially invited to
SAIIC's Offlce Warming Party
1714 Franklin, 3rd A.
Monday. December 14. 1995

6:00-1O:OOpm
Refreshments Mil be served. Office
\vonning gifts glad I)' accepted.
We still need office equipment,
including: modems, a scanner,
Macintosh or 486 PC computers.
as well as alithe usual items.

39

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                  <elementText elementTextId="38119">
                    <text>ITEMS AVAILABLE FROM SAIIC
Daughters of
Abya Yala

Video:
Rebuilding Our Communities

Testimonies of Indian women orga.

Indigenous leaders from Central and South America d iscuss the

nizing throughout the Continent.

SOO-years campaign, which began as an Indian response to the
Quincentenary celebration and has developed as an ongoing d ialogue among indigenous activists. Produced by SAIIC. S18 +
S 1.75 shipping.

Statements from gra.ssroots Indian
women leaders from South and

Meso America. rndvdes resolutions
from Indigenous women's meetings,
a directory of Indian women's orga·

nizations and key contacts, informa·
tion on Indian women's proiects, and
poems by Indian women. Forty-eight pages w ith beautijul black and
white photographs. Printed on recycled paper. S6 + S1 .50 shipping.
An updated, bound edition is also available for S8 + S 1.50 shipping.

Video: A Skirt Full of Butterflies

Amazonia:
Voices from the Rainforest
A resource and action guide with a comprehen.sive listing of international rainforest and Amazonian Indian organizatiions sponsored by SAIIC and the International Rivers N etwork, and pub·
lished by Rainforest Action N etwork and Amazopia Film Project.
199 0. Available in Spanish or English for $ 4.50 + S 1.75 shipping.

15 minutes. A love poem to the Isthmus Zapotec women of south·

ern

Oaxaca, Mexico, by filmmakers E
llen Osborne and Maureen

Gosling. For every purchase made, a se&lt;ond copy will be sent to an
Indigenous women's organization as a gift. S19.95 + S3 shipping.

Video: Columbus Didn't Discover Us
Native people's petSpcctives on the Columbus Quincentennial based on
the footage of the 1990 Quito Conference. 24 minutes. A co-produc·
lion of SAIIC, CONAIE, ONIC and Tuming 1id&lt;! Productions. Available
in Spanish or E
nglish. S19.95 + S1.75 for shipping f&lt; handling .

1992 International Directory &amp;
Resource Guide
An annotated d irectory of over 600 international organizations
that participated in 500 Years of Resistance projects. Includes declarations from Indigenous conferences and organizations and
information on curriculum resources, speakers bureaus$ computer
netw orks, audio-visual resources and print resources. SS + S1.75
shipping.

South and Meso American Indian Rights Center (SAil C)
P.O. Box 28703. Oakland, CA 94604

Non-profit
O rganization

US

Postage

PAID
Oakland,CA
Permit No. 79

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                    <text>SOUTH AND MESO
AMERICAN
INDIAN
INFORMATION
CENTER

Newsletter

AMAZON

Vo/6 No 3, Spring &amp; Summer 7992

INDIANS

DEMAND

TO

BE HEARD

�~"'

=

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~

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""

-

~

~

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s

ntents
AMAZON
March from Pastaza to Quito (Ecuador) ................... 4
Sacha Yachana Research Center (Ecuador) .............. 8
Military Reserves on Indian Lands (Brazil) ................. 9
Spreading Venereal Diseases (Brazil) ....................... 9
Interview with President of ONIC (Colombia) ............ 10

SAUC
Coordinator: Nilo Cayuqueo
Coordinator Assistants: Eva Aguilar Veilleux
-Jim Freeman
Development Coordinator:
Karl Guevara Erb
Accounting: Quipus
Radio Program Coordinator:
Carlos Maibeth
Design &amp; Typesetting: El Andar Publications

SOUTHERN CONE ·
The Mataco Face Cholera Outbreak (Argentina) ....... 14
500 Years of Epidemics (Argentina) ........................ 15
letter from PIRCA (Argentina) .................................. 15
Pehuenche lands Still Not Secured (Chile) ................ 16
Mapuche Protest Forced Eviction (Chile) ................... 17
Mapuches living under Ozone Hole (Chile) .............. 17

ANDES
Indian and Campesino Leaders Meet (Bolivia) ........... 18
Drought Forces Aymara to Migrate (Bolivia) .............. 19
Indigenous Help Draft Constitution (Colombia) ......... 20

MESO AMERICA
CONIC Meeting in Kuna Yolo (Panama) .................. 22
Police Raid Indian Cooperative (EI Salvador) ............ 24
Dangerous Agricultural Reforms (Mexico) ................. 25
Indians Violently Evicted in Palenque (Mexico) .......... 26
Logging Deal Blocked (Honduras) ............................ 27
Proposal to Create Biosphere (Honduras) ................. 28

SAIIC Board of Directors
Gina Pacaldo (San Carlos Apache/
Chicana),Nilo Cayuqueo (MapucheArgentinaL Carlos Maibeth (MiskitoNicaraguaL Wara Alderete (CalchaquiArgentinaL Xihuanel Huerta (ChicanlndiaL
Guillermo Delgado (Quechua-Bolivia),
Lucilene Whitesell (Amazonia Native-Brasil)
The SAIIC Newsletter (ISSN 1056-5876) is
published 2-4 times per year and available
for an annual $15 personal membership,
$25 for an organizational membership,
or $ at certain newstands. For membership,
you will also receive Urgent Actions bulletins.
We would like to thank the following people
and organizations for their generous
assistance and donations to SAIIC.

NORTH AMERICA
Inuit win Back Territorry (Canada) ........................... 29

INDIAN WOMEN
Interview with Carmen Pereira (Bolivia) .................... 30

CONFERENCES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 32
Indigenous People's Alliance ................................... 23
Second CONIC Meeting ........................................ 23

OTHER NEWS
Letter to the Pope ................................................... 34
Indigenous leaders Sign Paris Declaration ................ 34
UNCED ................................................................ 35
Available ltems ....................................... Back Page

Mail: PO Box 28703
Oakland, California 94604
Office: 1212 Broadway, #830
Oakland, California 94612
Phone: (51 OJ 834-4263
Fax: (51 0)-834-4264
Peacenet E-mail: saiic@igc.org

A Central Place, Peter Veilleux, Juan
Aulestia (Oxfam), Jeffrey Bronfman, Karima
Cammell, Theodore Downing, Dianne
Engleke, Ethnic News Watch, Fellowship of
Reconciliation,W. H. Carol Ferry, Howard
Frederick, Abby Friedman, Dan Greenwood, Rick Hamouris, lncomindios, David
Lauer, Andrew Mutter, Sergio Montano,
Alfonso Palmas, Robert Patton, Joe Quigley,
Rainforest Action Network, Julie Rogers,
Judy Wells.
Thanks to the following foundations for their
generous support: The John D. &amp; Catherine
T. MacArthur Foundation, General Service
Foundation, Tides Foundation, Funding
Exchange, Seventh Generation Fund,
Agricultural Mission, United Church of
Christ, Peace Development Fund, Vanguard
Foundation, Oneway Trust, Highlander
Center-Environment and Democracy Campaign, Compu Mentor, Damien Foundation.

�Since the publication of our previous SAIIC Newsletter, Indigenous
unity and continental organizing continues to be a subject of
dynamic discussion. More Indigenous peoples have been contacted, and we have witnessed encounters with younger leaders,
men and women, who continue to take political responsabilities
within Indian communities.
This year's meetings have resulted in strengthening ties among
Indigenous peoples. They have helped to clarify our positions
within the larger spectrum of societies, and international organizations. The Indigenous perspective is contributing to promote a
process of mental decolonization, and is opening spaces of dialogue
unknown before.
Demands

Printed
on

Recycled
Paper

PRINTED WITH

SOY INK

�@~@
0

@
E

We come to speak in the name of all
In l:he last three years l:he Ecuadorian Pastaza Province, to demand that the Indian
the lives ofthe jungle, especiallyfor those government has been intensifying l:he explo- voices be heard.
which are disappearing.
ration and exploitation ofl:he natural resources
The marchers called on the government
They are the water spirits:
the Yacurunas.
They are the jungle spirits:
the Sacharunas.
They are the fertility spirits.
They are the sowing spirits.
They are the harvesting spirits.
They are the gods of abundance.
Allpamanda! Causaimanda!
Jatarishum!

(For land! For life! We all rise up!)
- from a flyer distributed by the marchers
4

in l:heAmazonregion, especially in l:he Pastaza
Province, homeland of l:he Quichua, Shiwiar
and Achuar Indians. As a way to defend their
territory the Indian People, led by OPlP, have
been trying to persuade the government and
oil companies to recognize I:ndian·territories
and conduct rational exploitation of the resources in these territories. After exhausting
l:he possibility of a negotiated settlement, l:he
Indians felt their only recourse was to march
on the capitol.
ThusonApril21, 199210,000marchers
arrived in Quito,ledby2,000Indiansfrom the

to legally recognize their territories, andreform the National Constitution to protect the
different nationalities and cultures ofEcuador.
The Indians are demanding control over the
largest remaining Amazon rainforest lands.
Under very heavy military guard, the government ofPresidentRodrigo Borja partially met
their demands by officially recognizing over
two and a half million of the almost five
million acres of lands they occupy. The government also called for a special session of
Congress to review Indigenous Peoples' demand for constitutional reform.

SAIIC

Newsletter

�Woman with bouquet at the march

The Amazon march was coordinated by
the Organization of Indigenous People of
Pastaza (OPIP) as a response to nearly three
years of fruitless dialogue between the government and the national Indian federations,
culminating in the government's refusal to
legalize the Indian territories and its acquieslcence to pressure from trans-national oil, timber, mining and tourism industries to exploit
the Amazon rainforest
TheQuichua, Shiwiar,ZaparoandAchuar
marchers were following in the footsteps of
their ancestors. Ninety years ago, led by the
legendary chiefPalati, leaders of these groups
marched from their communities in Pastaza to
the capitol of Quito to meet with the government over the rights to the territory which they
have occupied for a millennium. The leaders
returned to their communities with a
title to all the lands of the Pastaza
Province. This title to seven-million
ac1-es was buried and forgotten when
the chief died.
On April 23, President Borja
warmly greeted and thanked the Indians for their courage and agreed to
negotiate the first of their demands of
the legalization of their traditional
territories. Despite the warm welcome
and promises, the peaceful marchers
were met by a massive contingent of
police and military in riot gear and
army tanks. TitoMerino, the communications coordinator of OPIP commented wryly that he did not realize that
Ecuador was at war.

Vol 6 Num 3

One hundred of the Indian leaders were
allowed to pass through the military blockade
to present their demands to President Borja.
Indian leaders, from Luis Macas, the President of the National Indian Confederation of
Ecuador (CONAIE), to a traditional midwife
urging the President to legally recognize Indian
rights.
The negotiations with the Indian People
of Pastaza reached a deadlock over the
government's refusal to legally recognize Indian territory which falls within a 25 by 120
mile swath of land along the Peruvian border.
The main force blocking the legalization of
these lands is the Ecuadorian Institute for
Agrarian Reform and Colonization (IERAC).
IERAC claims that this border area is
necessary for "national security" and has re-

Ecuadorian March

cently begun a campaign to colonize the region under a program known as "Living bor-

ders." Citing the loss of nearly half its territory
to Peru this century, the Ecuadorian government claims it is encouraging development
along its borders to prevent further incursions.
The Indigenous Peoples of Pastaza are
not asking for areas already colonized, but
only land which they currently use. Close to
35 percent of the Pastaza Indian communities
are located within the border region slated for
colonization. They are demanding that this
security zone be reduced considerably.
On May 13th, the Borja administration
formally handed over title to over one-half of
the Indian-occupied lands. The Indians claim
that all of their territory must be legalized and
that these lands be contiguous so as not to
separate communities of the same nation.
Instead, the government is recognizing 19
separate blocks of lands as the
properties of individual communities.
The military charges that the
Indians are attempting to divide
the country by claiming their "nation-hood." CONAIE disagrees.
"In noway arewecallingfordissolutionoftheEcuadorianState. We
only want our country to legally
ll. recognize the fact that we Ecua~ dorians are made up of different
o nations and cultures," stated one
'5 member of CONAIE.
.c
ll.
The Indians suspect that oil
interests are at the root of the
government's reluctance to formally recognize all their territory. PetroEcuador, the pow-

5

�in a town after the march

erful branch of the Ecuadorian government
which oversees oil concessions to trans-national oil companies, announced the day before the marchers arrived in Quito that the US
based oil company, ARCO, had discovered a
huge reserve of oil within the territories being
claimed by the marchers.
OPIP organized the march to prevent the
ecological and cultural devastation which they
witnessed in the Northern and Southern Ecuadorian Amazon regions. Due mostly to oil
development, Ecuador has the highest deforestation rate of any South American country.
The Pastaza province contains the largest
remaining pristine rainforest in Ecuador.
Since Ecuador's oil boom began in the
early 1970s, over twelve million acres of
Amazon rainforest have been turned over to
trans-national oil corporations. Millions of
gallons of oil and toxic waste by-products
have been spilled or dumped into the rainforest,
contaminating the soil, air and water. Oil
development has brought deforestation, colonization, militarization, prostitution, alcoholism, violence, poverty, malnutrition and disease to the Indigenous Peoples.
''They treat it [the Amazon] like a box full
of resources," says Tito Merino on the
government's attitude toward the Amazon,
"They tum it upside down and shake it out and
leave nothing for those who live there."
"We marched along with the men to
Quito to demand the recognition of our ancestral territories," said Patricia Gualinga, a
Quichu women from the Sarayacu commu-

6

nity. "The women in Amazonia are fighting of Pastaza is calling on the government to
together to defend our people from the oil change Article I of the Constitution to read,
companies' threats to our territories. The oil ''Ecuador is a pluri-national, sovereign, indecompanies come in and they bring disruptive pendent, democratic and unified state which
ideas. They are trying to change the way our recognizes, protects and respects cultural dimen act One example is that they are trying to versity."
prostitute our women. So, we have to be
Most South American countries have
strong. Some women get pregnant This is either reformed or are in the process of revery bad for the community. The women feel forming their constitutions to recognize and
protect the rights of Indigenous People. Howembarrassed, and they move to the cities."
Along with their demands, OPIP pre- ever, the popular concept in Ecuador is still
sented a natural resource management plan in that Indians belong to the past, part of what is
which they explained their traditional, non- known as "folklore," to be commercially exdestructive use of the forest, "not only for ploited.
short-term benefit, but for the benefit of the
In an attempt to contrive a single and
children of our grandchildren."
uniform cultural identity, the government has
The concept of indigenous territoriality been actively promoting the "integration" and
is a fairly new one for the Ecuadorians. The "civilization" of Indian people since its foronly lands currently recognized as Indian mation in 1830. This strategy has led to the
territories in the country are those occupied by social, economic, and political exclusion or
the Huaorani -also located inPastaza -and exploitation of Indian people who comprise
the Awa on the Colombian border. These 40-45% of the total population of Ecuador.
After three weeks of camping in a public
territories were legalized in the 1980s due to
international pressure placed on the govern- park in Quito, the Indians left with less than
ment Over the last decade, environmental they came for. They gained the titles to little
and human rights activists have become in- more than one-half of the lands they use and
creasingly aware that territorial rights are nec- Congress called a special session in June to
essary for the survival of Indigenous Peoples review the Indians' demand for constitutional
reform. Another important achievement was
and for the protection of rainforests.
OPIP now wants to extend these territo- winning the hearts of the Ecuadorian people.
ries to include the rest of the Pastaza Indian Long thought of as "invisible savages," the
lands. They claim that territorial rights are Indians are now recognized as courageous
necessary in order to guarantee the survival of and articulate people.
The marchers met in Puyo, the capitol of
their cultures and their communities.
The Organization of Indigenous People Pastaza, on April lOth, many of them having
IIC

Newsletter

�l

E

F

After one hundred years, the first reunion of the
Mapuche nation took place in Neuquen, Argentina.
Over a hundred lonkos, spiritual leaders of
Nagmapu, Chile, and over 200 traditional leaders
of different communities in Argentina met to
analyze the situation of marginalization and
oppression that the national states of Chile and
Argentina are imposing on the Mapuche people.
They also reaffirmed their historical rights of
existence as a nation, the rights to exercise their
traditional law and speak their own language, and

walked and canoed there from their communities 150 miles away on the Peruvian border.
Men, women and children nervously set out
from Puyo on the 11th mthe pouring min,
holding leaves and plastic over their heads to
keep dry. When they entered a community,
throngs of people met them, offering donations and support.
On their fourth day out, they were greeted
by musicians and a fiesta mthe Indian village
of Salasaca. The community had built bamboo huts m
thecenteroftown forthemarchers
to rest The "Salasacas" opened all public
facilities to them and greeted them with
speeches of solidarity.
Over one-half of the marchers' enormous needs for firewood, food, drink, blankets, clothing, shelter and medicine were met
by donations from communities along their
route. In a press release, the Indians stated,
"Our historic walk has defmitively changed
the relations between Indian people and the
white/mestizo society: the demonstrations of
solidarity with our objectives are a clear sign
that it is possible for us to live side-by-side,
respectful of unity within our diversity."
Many of the marchers came down with
severe colds and were treated by one of the
doctors and/or shamans accompanying the
march. The people of the Pastaza rainforest
are accustomed to a very warm climate at near
sea-level. During the march, they had to climb
to altitudes of up to 14,000 feet where the
nights were sometimes below freezing.
In reaction to the gala jubilee celebra-

Vol6

3

E

p

E

agreed on the creation of a Mapuche flag.
reunion ended with a ceremony with
participation of more than a thousand people.
A complete report will be published in the next
SAIIC newsletter.
Also for more information write to:
NehuenMapu
Barrio Islas Maluinas
Batilana 315, Neuquen, Argentina

tions being planned by governments and corporate interests throughout the Americas and
Europe to mark the 500years since Columbus
began the process of colonization of Indian

lands, leaders of the march declared, "Now is
the time for de-colonization, the time to recognize our rich cultures and build a new
Ecuador."

7

�The Sacha Yachana Research Center
(CISAY) was created in February 1992 as
the scientific arm of the Organization of
Indigenous Peoples of Pastaza (OPIP). It
was established to advise OPIP and its
member communities and associations on
issues related to the management and
conservation ofecosystems in the indigenous
peoples' territories ofPastaza.
The goals of CISAY are:
0
To conduct studies of indigenous
peoples' territories and their natural and
managed ecosystems
0
To research cultural and ecologically
sound socio-economic development plans
for Indigenous communities
0
To evaluate governmental and nongovernmental organizations' economic
development projects for Pastaza that affect
indigenous peoples' territories.
0
To evaluate governmental and NGO
scientific projects within Pastaza's
indigenous peoples' territories.
o To develop guidelines for scientific
research, socio-economic development,
resource extraction, and conservation within
indigenous peoples' territories in Pastaza.
CISAY' s finances and management are
independent from OPIP. However, CISAY
is accountable to the policies emanating
from OPIP's congresses and assemblies. A
diagram of QSAY's internal organization
rollows.

CRITERIA FOR THE SELECTION
OF CANDIDATES FOR CISAY'S
SCIENTIFIC TEAM
1. A workshop for team pre-candidates
will take place in Puyo in May 1992. The
theme of the workshop will be: natural
resources and environment, traditional
Quichua knowledge, environmental policy.
2. Candidates will be chosen because
they are: bilingual (Quichua/Spanish); at
least high school graduates; inclined to work

8

on environmental issues; and, experienced
in community activities and organizations.
3. Team members will be chosen among
those who have: good training, a commitment
and understanding of indigenous and
environmental issues, understanding of the
national mestizo/creole society and the other
ethnic groups of Ecuador, and also on the
basis that they exercise their traditional and
cultural practices.
Currently, CISAY is formed by
Leonardo Viteri, Director; Alfredo Vargas,
Hydraulic Engineer; Wilfrido Aragon,
Zootechnist; Olga Pineda, Research
Assistant; Maritza Toala, Secretary; and
Ricardo Grefa, Cartographer.

THE ORGANIZATION OF
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES OF
PASTAZA (OPIP)
OPIP was established in 1978 by the
Quichua, Achuar, Shiwiar, and Zaparo
peoples of Pastaza. It is formed by 148
communities with a population of nearly
20,000 people.
The grass-roots members of OPIP are

organized in centers (settlements); and
associations (groups of centers). The frrst
authority of OPIP is the Congress which
meets every three years with delegations
from each community. Additionally, there
are annual assemblies and ordinary bi-annual
assemblies. OPIP also has a board ofdirectors
elected by the Congress which are: President,
Vice President; Director of Promotion and
Organization; Director of Territories and
Natural Resources; Director of Education,
Science and Technology; Director of
Community Health; Director of Community
Development; and Director of Women in
Development.
The goals of OPIP are:
1. To promote the unity and develop the
organization of the peoples of Pastaza.
2. To obtain land rights to our ancestral
territories from the government of Ecuador.
3. To develop policies for conservation
and sustainable management of natural
resources on our territories, for the benefit of
indigenous people and for the rest of
humankind.

SAIIC Newsletter

�Brasil
IL

The Brazilian military controls 25 million acres of land in the Amazon. Presidential
decress have alloted and reserved 36 areas for the armed forces. According to Angelo Pansa,
· an Italian priest who is a member of the International Tribunal for the Rights of the People
and who is also active in CIMI (Indigenous Council of Missionaries) there are 6 areas that
trancede Indigenous lands, totally or partially. In the southern part of the state of Para, where
2,600 Indians live, the military holds 16 million acres, an area twice the size of the Kayap6
Indian reserve. The majority of the land reserved for the military is devoted to the
establishment of living quarters, the stationing ofbatuilions and border platoons as well as
for military training in areas that are remote and sparsely populated.
Source: Jornal do Comercio, 2111192 (via alternex)

OLD-MI

SPRE

Dl

TO I
Indigenous women and young girls in the Amazon have been contracting venereal
diseases from gold miners and soldiers. According to CIMI (Indigenous Missionary Council)
and Indigenous leaders from Para,Amazonas and Acre, many of them, lured to the cities, end
up in brothels and in the trafficking of babies throughout the Amazon.
"Prostitution among indigenous girls is alarming. Indigenous women come to the city
and don't have job qualifications, so selling their bodies becomes the only alternative", said
Antonio Apurina, Coordinator of UNI-Acre (The Union of Indigenous People in Acre).
Anthropologist Antonio Maria de Souza confrrms that soldiers have been known to gang rape
Indian women in the city of Sao Gabriel da Cachoeira, on the border of Brazil and Colombia,
in the state of Amazonas.
Source: Folha de Siio Paulo, 2110192 (via alternex)

6 Num 3

9

�I

SAllC: What region do you come from and
who do you represent?
AP: My name is Alfonso Palmas, I come
from the department of Tolima from the
interior of the country, and represent ONIC
(Organization of Indigenous Nationalities
of Colombian), of which I have been the
president since June, 1990.
SAllC: What is the role of ONIC?
AP: Our role is to train, orient and promote
organization in the indigenous communities,
because we believe that it is the indigenous
peoples who must look for solutions to our
own problems. ONIC promotes programs,
we like to promote inter-ethnic relations
among the different ethnic groups in the
country and with those in other countries.
SAllC: What is the indigenous population
of Colombia, and how many groups are
there?
AP: There are about 100 indigenous groups,
and we speak more than 80 languages and
are located all over the country.
SAHC: How would you describe the situation of the indigenous communities in Colombia?
AP: Up to this moment the wave of violence
against indigenous peoples continues in
Colombia: very often the leaders are persecuted and even assassinated. We continue to
face colonization of traditional lands- that
is indigenous lands are still being taken -

10

Alfonso Palma, center, describing the situation in Colombia at the SAIIC office with
representatives of the Tommtzin land Institute and Bay Area Indian Alliance

the drug problem, guerrilla organizations ...
all these groups have lack of respect for the
indigenous communities. In addition, a major problem is that of communication, there
is no permanent communication. We have
no means to communicate among ourselves,
much less with indigenous communities of
other countries. The state does not provide
us with anything, in fact the government has
sponsored division among us by creating
organizations similar to, but self-sufficient
from those of the indigenous peoples.
Therefore we cannot analyze or understand
other communities problems, nor can we be
updated on issues which involve us, or
evaluate the actual national situation.
Another problem is the exploitation of natural
resources by foreign and even national
companies. They never consult with the in-

digenous communities and their acts only
bring more problems for us. First of all, the
cultural clash. Then, contamination of all
living creatures and plants, and death of our
people. Also, we have land but no means to
produce, and if we do produce then the
production goes through an intermediary
and this person retains all the profit, leaving
the indigenous with little or almost nothing.
SAllC: Can you tell us about the massacre
of Dec. 16 and what ONIC does in such
cases?
AP: In Colombia there are, legally speaking,
"indigenous reservations", these cannot be
sold nor rented (leased), and they are
imprescriptible; that is the indigenous
communities can claim them whenever they
want. In this case there are many territories

SAUC

Newsletter

�with colonial titles that belong to the indigenous communities, but the fanners, ranchers, and landowners, and production companies have kicked out indigenous communities by violent means, and this is what has
happened in Colombia. In the case of the
massacre, the killing took place in the department of Cauca in the PAES territory,
where they had been reclaiming their land
from the government for four years. However, this land has been invaded by big
landowners who form large groups and send
them to kill the indigenous. In this case, the
indigenous had communicated to the government about their claims, however, the
State did not answer, therefore the massacre
took place. In these cases, ONIC, f:rrst of all
issues denunciations at the national and international levels. We've denounced this
and many otherproblems which are unknown
totheinternationalcommunity.Forexample,
the massacre of December last year, where
five compafieros were burned alive by
narcotraffickers. We denounce all of this
violence against indigenous peoples. Last
year ONIC met with the Government Ministry, and the senators and we demanded that
the state respond to all of these acts of terror
and what the State was doing to investigate.
Until now, all we know is that there is an
investigative commission and that there is a
negotiation being carried with the institute
oflandreform. However, we are pessimistic
about these type of investigations because
our experience is that such investigations do
not bring any results, as occurred with the
indigenous peoples of the Aruaco community, where the armed forces and even government people were involved, and nothing
was ever done. In that case, more than 20
compafieros were assassinated.
SAllC: What are the activities of ONIC
planned for 1992?
AP: At the local level, we are working with
the organizations in the interior of the indigenous communities. Weare working with
students, professors, the popular sectors,
blacks, environmentalists and other people
who see in the campaign a positive aspect,
that it is important toreflectandcultivate our
magnificent and rich culture, also that we
evaluate and reflect what these 500 years
have meant for our culture. Also in the
Vol 6 Num 3

proposals for the Constitution we have to
make clear that Colombia is a multi-ethnic
pluricultural country, and we have to work
closely with other indigenous peoples who
are working on the campaign, who have
similar and different problems, so that we
can create bonds of fraternity and unity
among indigenous and non-indigenous
peoples.
SAllC: There were 3 indigenous representativeselectedtothecongressofthecountry.
Who are they? What are their proposals to
the national Constitution?
AP: Compafiero Gabriel Muyuy, representing ONIC, and Anatolio Quira of the Social
Indigenous Alliance and Floro Alberto of
the Autoridades Indigenas de Colombia.
They represent different indigenous sectors,
however we are trying to work in unity and
present our proposals together. In addition,
we believe that by having our own representatives we can have a voice; we are open
to work with other people and like that other
sectors of the society of Colombia work with
us in problems which affect not only the
indigenous peoples but all Colombians.
Concerning the issues of the national Assembly, we have obtained that in the constitution it be stated that Colombia is a
pluricultural state; the harmony of many
cultures is declared; the issue that the state
must protect our nationalidentity, that is our
customs, traditions, language, all that makes
us different. We have now achieved the
recognition of our languages in our territories, that education be bilingual. We have
about 40 groups who live near the border
with other countries and the governments do
not understand that for indigenous peoples
there are no borders. So now they have
double nationality. Another achievement is
the recognition of ownership of our territories. Right now there is a discussion with the
government because the government does
not want to recognize territories traditionally
occupied, which are large extensions. They
want to recognize only the reservations; now
we will struggle for the recognition of traditionallands, reservations. For this we are
proposing a plan to the government so that
we do not have foreigners coming to our
communities and plan our development, but
instead that this planning be left to us, once
11

�we're trained. Another important aspect is
that of juri~diction; that is each community
has its own form of sanction and imposition
of penalties. We will try to fix this according
to the national system. Now this is considered. Another issue is that in relation to the
natural resources, its exploitation must be
consulted with the indigenous peoples. For
this we are hoping to write a guide, rules
from all indigenous Peoples communities,
that will be followed, because even if there
are already laws they do not represent our
view, nor are they followed. However we
must organize within the communities, so
that we can face the problems and present
plans. For this we are planning a meeting for
December 1992 to discuss the problems we
have, how will we participate politically
speaking.
INCORA is the institute in charge of handling land issues, conflicts; there are large
extensions which have been traditionally
occupied by the indigenous peoples who
have always lived there and have no titles for
it They are called "traditionally occupied".
The reservations are where INCORA has
handled titles, but this sort of land is not
defined yet.
SAllC: If you could realize anything in the
world, this year of 1992, what is the outcome
you would hope for?
AP: At our level it will be that the Constitution serve our interests and not those of a few
people, as has happened historically. We
want to retain our cultures. We hope to unify
at the continental level. We want to avoid
past mistakes and work towards understanding among different communities; we are
not going to celebrate the genocide, we want
to analyze the past so that we can work for
the future. We want to make demands on the
UN since 1993 has been declared the year of
indigenous peoples. We want a strong United
Nations (UN) presence so that human rights
violations be watched carefully and that
something more than just condemnations be
made. We want protection.
SAllC: What role do you see the government playing in this multi-ethnic and
pluricultural state?

12

AP: I believe that the government should
facilitate changes. They are not only indigenous peoples but blacks and other groups;
the government should protect the culture
and promote overall cultural development.
SAllC: What do you say to the Crioles,
Campesino people who are afraid of losing
land while indigenous peoples recuperate
their lands?
AP: First of all, we are not claiming land
which is not ours. Our claims are over lands
which we have been on for hundreds of
years; therefore we believe that if there are
cases where there are Campesinos who have
come to our land due to many problems, we
demand the government carry out an integral agrarian reform, that they be relocated
to lands where there are no indigenous communities, and to lands where they can survive and develop economically.
SAllC: What ONIC is doing about education?
AP: We are talking to the government We

are participating in certain areas of education, such as health and agriculture. We
believe that the state should provide access
to education for indigenous peoples because
it is only in this form that we can become
independent and govern ourselves.
SAllC: Can you comment on the continental struggle against 500 years ofcolonization?

AP: By being here and after exchanging
views and talks with other people, I acknowledged the we the indigenous peoples
all through the continent face the same problems such as land recognition, development,
etc ..
We must acknowledge how can we unify
and defend ourselves as communities. First
of all, indigenous peoples' lands must be
recognized. Secondly, thestatemustrespect
cultures, different cultures from those which
were brought to Latin America by the Europeans. Therefore we must communicate
and join together in order to demand this
from states and from the UN. We need to
develop a means of communication. We
need to know the problems of our brothers
and sisters in other countries. In reference to

SAIIC

Newsletter

�the campaign, we must develop the campaign in an autonomous form that is because
the situation, even if it similar, is also unique
in each country. We do have commonalities.
We have' to negate these state celebrations
and come up with specific proposals, because for us the campaign does not end this
October. In fact, this is only the beginning;
the plans of the Indigenous Continental Alliance is to continue working for the rights of
indigenous peoples and others with similar
problems to those we have. Therefore the
campaign for us goes beyond this year.

SAllC: What does development means for
Indigenous Peoples in Colombia?

At the community level, we can talk about
how to develop solutions, alternatives on
development In Colombia we are trying to
fmd solutions for our communities.

AP: In Colombia, with the so-called economic internationalization, or the economic
aperture, the indigenous communities will
suffer problems because most of these
projects carried out in the name of development will exploit and explore the wealth, the
natural resources, diversity, wild life. In the
area of the Choco (Pacific coast) and the
Amazon, the resources are being negotiated
behind our backs. These negotiations are
going to be carried out among the government and the large foreign companies. They
do not consider the people living there. We
are never consulted. We need to put international pressure on the government.

SAllC: What do these Continental Conferences mean for the communities?

SAllC: What is economic development for
indigenous peoples in your opinion?

AP: First of all, we discuss and share to
analyze the situation of the indigenous people
of the continent. We want to know what the
specific problems of indigenous peoples are.
Once we acknowledge this, we can start to
think about solutions, alternatives which we
ourselves formulate. Those encounters try to
fmd this diagnosis of the problems, but also
through them we solidify our links at the
continental level.

AP: First of all, let's look at the word development, for us development is not just economics, it is integral; that is to have autonomy, to have organizational and administrative capacity. In these terms, when
promoted like this, we can realize development for the community as a whole. Most of
the time when talking about economic development, it means to have economic possibilities for the betterment of our
compafieros. For us, however, it would not
just mean individually, but at the collective
level; it means to propose solutions for the
community. We have to generate many alternatives such as appropriation of technology, credit possibilities, adaptation of an
economy proper to us, an economy that
allows us to control our means, that allows
the communities to develop their autonomy.

In Colombia, since we have such a variety of
indigenous peoples, we say that our country
can achieve development once the communities and their cultures have developed to
the upmost. This identity of the country is
important to look at from different points of
view, in the mutual harmony of different
communities, so that we learn to live and
recognize cultural and historical differences,
which have been denied for 500 years. We
consider that this identity of Colombia must
be looked at from its territorially, regions,
religions, anthologies, different cultures,
rites, practices. We have to analyze what is
Colombia, because throughout all of the
years in Colombia others have been wanting
to impose one culture, different to ours, and
this is not possible. We are a country rich on
cultural traits, therefore we must try to live in
harmony among all of these cultures.

Vol 6 Num 3

SAllC: Can you talk to us about environmental organizations in Colombia?
AP: I believe that the environmental organizations and indigenous peoples have one
thing in common, that is the defense of
nature, of the environment. However, we
indigenous peoples go beyond that, we defend human life too. We have to initiate a
dialogue so that we can work for nature but
also for human life. Environmental organizations can coordinate international actions
so that projects are carried out only if indig-

enous peoples have been consulted. Wereally need to work on a dialogue in order to
see how indigenous peoples can work together with environmental organizations.
SAll C: Could you please talk about culture
in Colombia?

AP: One of the main purposes of ONIC is to
protect and promote indigenous peoples'
cultures. We consider that culture is an authentic expression of peoples or a specific
group; that is, their very own traditions,
practices, form of government, values, organization, adaptation to changes maintaining
their values. One of our achievements has
been the recognition of a multi-ethnic society, country. For us, education is important
because through it we learn to value our
culture, because right now we have problems mainly with religious organizations
which want to wipe out our cultures and
create foreign one. Through education we
value our cultures and learn the differences

SAllC: What about oil companies in Colombia?
AP: There are now oil companies going to
Colombia wanting to explore and exploit
our lands in search of oil and other precious
minerals. In our proposals to the constitutional reforms we proposed recognition of
our right to the land; that is, the soil and
subsoil, because for us land is property which
belongs to the community and soil and subsoil are not separate, they are an integral
part. However the state did not want to
recognize this right, because they know there
is enormous wealth, so there is an article
which states that where there are minerals,
oil, or other exploitable resources there will
be consultations with the indigenous peoples.
At this point the foreign companies are experimenting in many places in order to find
oil and other resources. Where there is oil the
govemment takes the land even if it belongs
to the indigenous peoples. It is for this reason
that we believe it is crucial that we organize
so that we can defend ourselves, that we
learn Spanish so that we can talk their language and conduct a dialogue.
March 1992

13

�Tartagal. Gerardo Tortelli, a medical doctor who lives in Salta, arrived
in Mision La Paz and said that, "drinking water in this area is
contaminated with cholera, but we cannot do much about it, except to
tell people to add the chlorine we are distributing to the water, and to
boil it before drinking."
Landowners in Salta, Argentina, have used the cholera epidemic
to accuse Indian communities of hosting such diseases. Journalists
asked Health Minister Julio Cesar Araoz, if it was true that local
landowners had said that "due to a bunch of shitty Indians our Province
willlosealotofmoney ."The Minister answered, "Whoever is thinking
ihat way is stupid and inhuman... What lam interested in is not the Salta
landowners, but people infected with cholera, and not trying to confine
it to this sector [the Indians']. Afterwards we will talk to the landlords."
Local landowners, exporters offruits and produce, have pressured
Health Minister, Julio Cesar Araoz into not reporting the presence of
cholera in Salta, "because the cholera presence would affect the export
and sales of our produce on the market."
Health Secretary Alberto Mazza reported to President Menem,
the press corps and administrators in Tartagal, that the total number of
people with cholera has risen to 154 cases. Mazza also noted that the
cholera type is different from that in Bolivia and Peru, and that most of
the affected people are children.
Source: El Tribuno (Jujuy) and written by journalists Diana Alvarez
and Walter Echazu

following is excerpted from a letter
to the newsletter in
las
ComunidadesAbori~

December, 1991

More than one hundred Mataco and Toba people who have lived
for centuries in the Gran Chaco, a territory that comprises the colonial
boundaries between Bolivia, Argentina and Paraguay, are facing
incredible hardships due to an outbreak of cholera on the Pilcomayu
River where they traditionally fish. Local authorities have been
accusing the Mataco ofbeing responsible for the cholera outbreak, and
have closed off the Mataco' s territory, not allowing them to leave, nor
allowing people to enter their territory. This forced isolation by the
Argentinian authorities has led the Mataco to denounce their discriminatory treatment. "Our source of life is the Pilcomayu river. If we are
not allowed to fish there, we will die not of cholera, but of hunger," said
NoeandMartin Bravo. TheMataco harvest squash and watermelon on
their tiny plots of land, but they have been forbidden to sell, buy, or
exchange with local merchants. Mataco Indians also live from selling
folk art, and their small surplus of produce and fruits. "Authorities do
not allow us to leave or travel," a Mataco Indian recently reported in

14

I am writing to inform you that our work continues at our own
pace: we are preserving the production of quinoa and kiwicha seeds,
and it looks like some small farmers in the south of Mendoza are
seriously considering cultivating them commercially. We are in touch
with a similar group in Bolivia with whom we are attempting to resolve
some of the problems we are having.
We recently completed 54 houses in rural areas utilizing our
traditional technology and we colored them with paints which were
used by our ancestors thousands of years ago. We even extracted them
from the same sources our ancestors used!
We continue to videotape life in the Andean world. We have
taped more than 100 hours which will be edited as soon as we have the
opportunity.
We have finished installing the offices for Radio FM Pirca in
Tilcara. Occasionally, we have been able to air our programs thanks
to borrowed equipment.
Well, the struggle continues, with all the usual problems. Nevertheless, we are progressing.
Please receive from all of us a fraternal hug.
Armando Alvarez
Proyecto de Rescate de la Cultura Andina (PIRCA)
CC 6 (4624) Tilcara, Jujuy, Argentina.

Newsletter

�STI

IDEMICS BRO G
lll G THE I D

"C

N" ARE

PEOP

The Indian people of Argentina in general, and particularly
those living in this territory, have been displaced by the national
society to marginal areas; they constitute a cheap labor force, and
do not have access to adequate health care and education.
They become the center of attention of government officials
only when they are victims of infectious diseases which can be
transmitted to the rest of the society. However, historically they
have been silent victims of malnutrition, dysentery, Chagas disease,
tuberculosis, infant mortality and many other illnesses which do not
represent a threat for the rest of the population. It is not by chance;
that Indian people have been the first victims of cholera, "the
disease of poverty".

Attitude toward the Indian People

On Jan. 1, 1992, during a long and warm summer, Argentina was
hit by the cholera epidemic. The first person to acquire the disease, and
the first fatal victim, was a Mataco Indian who lived in Santa Victoria
Este, a province of Salta. Soon five more cases were diagnosed, all of
them Indians of the same village.
The focal point of the epidemic was the area where theMatacoand
Chorote people live. The area is known as "The Great Chaco" (El Gran
Chaco) and it includes the provinces of Salta, Formosa, and Chaco; this
area has been devastated by indiscriminate deforestation. The Indian
poopleliveincommunitiesvvhichladcsanitlrysavicesandmeansofcxmmmicatln
The provincial government in Salta, implemented tight military
control, with the participation of the military Border Patrol. Physicians
were allowed into the area only when accomparned by military
personnel. The Indian people were intimidated and forced to attend the
sanitary establishments. A military blockade was set up to isolate the

area.
The Mataco people still remember that during the smallpox
epidemic of 1930, military personnel burnt their houses often with the
sick people inside, in an effort to prevent the spread of the disease to
the rest of the population. As a consequence of this treatment, many
Matacos fled to the forest, allowing for further spread of the disease.

6

3

The statements of the mass media regarding the cholera
epidemic showed that in Argentina Indian people are seriously
discriminated against The discourse of the press blamed the
Indians' way of life for the acquisition and transmission of the
disease, ignoring their historical experience of exploitation and
discrimination. We can provide many examples of the disdain and
ignorance of the press in their coverage of the "news about the
cholera epidemic": A woman legislator said: "these groups do not
have culture or education, what can we expect of the Indians?" The
latifundists of the province of Salta, who export vegetable crops,
declared to the local press: "Because of a few shitty Indians we are
going to lose a lot of money."
Arguments of the press and health officials for explaining the
epidemic: 'The Indians eat raw fish, they use the river to defecate."
None of these statements are true. The Mataco people do not eat raw
fish, and they are very careful to avoid contamination of their rivers.
Headlines of a newspaper of nationwide distribution stated: "The f:rrst
case of cholera in a white person has been diagnosed."
Racial conflicts in Argentina are usually covered by a discourse
which presents the Argentine society as a homogenous population of
European descent. It conceals and ignores the fact that Argentina is a
multiethnic country, like any country in the American Continent, and
most of all, it conceals the discrimination against Indian people.
Five hundred years after the arrival of the colonizers, the epidemics continue to be a weapon for the extermination of the f:rrst nations
of this continent. To protest the discrimination, and most of all the fact
that the Argentine society consistently ignores the existence of Indian
people, please ~te to President Carlos Menem, Casa de Gobiemo,
Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Source: The Oyemboati Foundation for the Promotion of Indian
People

15

�Ten members of the Mapuche Indian
Nation were arrested in front of the government palace Thursday, Feb. 7, during an antigovernment protest against their anticipated
expulsion from land they have lived on for
years. The protest was organized by the National Council ofindigenous Peoples (CNPI)
insupportofthe22Pehuenche(abranchofthe
Mapuche)Indianfamilieswhofacetheexpulsionorder.
A recent judgement determined that the
territory, an agricultural zone south of the
Chilean capital, belongs to a group of families called the 'the Gallatue Society.'
CNPI protested the police "repressive measures," and demanded that the
governmentgivea "justifiable explanation
for this shameful action." While the police
dispersed the crowd, several ministers and
members of the Gallatue Society were
negotiating a possible expropriation of the
lands where the Pehuenche Indians live
and work. "We view with profound disdain
the fact that 500 years after Europe invaded
our continent, we are still being robbed of
our ancestral lands," said a statement read in
front the National Palace.
Representatives from Mapuche and
Aymara oganizations, as well as other Indian
groups, took part in the demonstration. They
blame the slow resolution of the problem on
the "inefficiency and lack of political willingnesson the part of the the negotiating commission" which is addressing the issue. A committee for the defense and solidarity oflndian
tribes is proposing that Mapuche representatives negotiate alongside those who claim to
be the rightful owners of the territory.
Edgardo Boeninger, General Secretary
to the President, has announced the
government's offer to purchase the territory
from the Gallatue Society for five million
dollars. Although the territory is not "economically exploitable" explained Boeninger,
"the offer is based on our desire to resolve this
conflict to the satisfaction of the Indigenous
community."

16

Faced with an eviction order from the
Chilean Supreme Court, the 22 Pehuenche
Indian families living in the Quinquen Valley
are hoping for an agreement between the
government and the landowners which will
allow them to stay on their ancestral lands.
Officials are trying to beat the March 2
deadline set by the Supreme Court for the
eviction of the Pehuenche from the 333,450

acres of the Cordillera Valley located some
385 miles south of Santiago. The Pehuenche
Indians say they have occupied the lands, rich
with forests of araucaria pine trees called
"pehuen" in their language, since time immemorial. The Pehuenche got their name from
thetreeswhicharealsotheirsourceofincome.
The Galletue firm, which got its name
from a river that flows in the area, claims it
owns the valley and brags of land titles to
prove it. Galletue, which obtained the eviction
order from the Supreme Court, has refused the
government's offer to buy the lands for five
million dollars. The bi-monthly magazine
PaginaAbierta has accused Galletue owners,
Gonzalo Lledo, Miguel Lamoliatte and
Mauricio Mettas of trying to profit from the
negotiations.

The government of President Patricio
Aylwin wants to tum the Quinquen Valley,
whose name means 'place of refuge' in the
Pehuenche language, into a national park and
reserve. In the early 1970s, the socialist government of Salvador Allende set up an agrarian reform program which expropriated the
Quinquen lands from Galletue and recognized the Pehuenches' right to the land. But
the Augusto Pinochet dictatorship gave back
the lands to the firm in 1974, and later authorized it to exploit the araucaria forests. Last
year, the Aylwin government declared the
araucaria tree a national monument and once
more prohibited its exploitation all over
Chile. As a result of this decision, the state
gave Galluete six-million dollars in compensation and paid the firm another fivemillion to conserve the forests as a national
patrimony. But Galletue is asking tenmillion dollars for the lands, a sum considered "excessive" by the government and
"immoral" by the Pehuenche, politicians
and ecologists.
Government experts say a police eviction of the Pehuenche would elicit criticisms
locally and abroad, particularly in consideration of the upcoming quincentennial. Local
Indigenous groups waiting for the
government's decision describe the case as
the "robbing of their ancestral lands which
began five hundred years ago." Should
Galletue and the government fail to reach an
agreement, Aylwin, backed by the ten parties
of the ruling democratic coalition, will have to
urge congress to pass the bill expropriating
Quinquen. Jorge Arrate, acting president for
the Chilean Socialist Party which is the second strongest group in the coalition, has accused the government of acting with timidity
on the case. Fernando Quilaleo, President of
Ad-Mapu (the national Mapuche organization) has called on the government to solve the
case this year. "But Quinquen is only one of
Chile's problems. Between the Chilean state
and the Pehuenche Indians, there are a thousand more Quinquens," Quilaleo said.

SAIIC Newsletter

�Chile

I
The Mapuche Nation of Chile has
launched a campaign to draw international
attention to the plight of over one million
Indians threatened with forced eviction from
their ancestrnlland.
"What we are asking is that the Chilean
authorities leave our people alone," Reynaldo
Mariqueo of the Mapuche Committee in Europe said. This message was also communicated to Chilean AmbassadorGermanRiesco
Zafiartu in a letter addressed to Chilean President Patricio Aylwin.
The Committee, representing the
Mapuche-Pehuenche, said they launched the
campaign to confront the "unofficial state of
siege" declared recently in Indian territory in
Chile.
Mariqueo said: ''The government has
sent in a police contingent of approximately
400 men, military vehicles, police vans,
mounted police and helicopters, and (taken)
other measures to prevent a possible uprising
in the Andes mountains and take the land."
Thecommunity,situatedin theQuinquen
district of Cautfn province, survived mainly
on the pehuen tree, harvesting the pine nuts for
food and selling or exchanging the surplus for
other essential goods. But the Indians were
unaware that as far back as 1918 their land had
been sold by the Chilean state to privateOWI!ElS
(rm-~)who then resold it for a profit
In 1987, Pinochet's government issued a
decree that allowed timber industries to
override an earlierforestprotectionlaw. When
thepresentgovernmentcametopower,another
law was passed to protect the forests, which
meant the owners now wished to sell the land
that they could no longer exploit
But in June 1990, the land owners filed a
case at the supreme court asking the Indians to
leave to facilitate the selling of the land. "The
present situation is desperate. Until now the
strength of opposition from Mapuche
organisations has delayed the eviction proVol 6 Num 3

press for autonomy and self-determination for
cess," Mariqueo said:
our people."
Orders to proceed with the operation, he
Source: International Press Service
said, have now been given and will be carried
out by Gen. Osvaldo Munoz Sanhueza, who
was active in the Pinochet dictatorship. The
objective, Mariqueo said, is to transfer the
people together with their personal belongThe people living in the tip of
ings and animals to a designated area away

from the community, while their homes will
be destroyed.
Mariqueo quoted Sanhueza as saying
that military units from three provinces had
been mobilized, and a base camp had been set
up to supervise the takeover and provide logistic support
The Mapuches, living in the Andes
mountains,are the original inhabitants of what
is now Argentina and Chile. During the Spanish conquest, the Mapuches signed a treaty to
defme the borders of their territory, which was
honored by Spain. The treaty was also acknowledged by Argentina and Chile when
they gained independence.
They signed several more agreements
with theMapuches but which they later broke.
"Our major objective is to continue with the
campaign until justice is served toourpeople,''
Mariqueo said. "if we don't campaign, the
atrocities will continue. Our ultimate aim is to

Tierra del Fuego are living under
the ozone hole, which scientists have
recenrly found to be growing much
faster than anticipated. It is now four
times larger than the United States
and from late August until early
December is direcrly over the high
mountain homeland of the Mapuche.
Walter Ulloo, a 28-year-old farmhand found that his arms burned
"like boiling water" and his eyes
became swollen, irritated and
clouded over after working high
mountain pastures. His left eye is
now completely blind. After examining him, Chilean doctors said that
he was probably exposed to excessive uhraviolet-B radiation. They
prescribed UV-resistant sunglasses,
which Ulloa can't afford.
Chilean scientists estimate that
levels of the carcinogenic ultravioletB radiation jumped more than 1,000
percent in Punta Arenas, the largest
town located under the ozone hole.
Huge increases in skin cancer, and
sheep, fish and rabbit blindness are
being reported in the area.
Despite this starriing evidence,
there is very little research being
done in the area. The Universily of
Chile was unable to raise the
$11,000 for a spectral radiometer
to measure radiation levels and
because ohhis a planned three-year
study fell through.

t.....---------------...11
17

�5

1a

D~ODD~~ ~~OD cS~~CP[]:0

~rn~ovrnm.0 ~rnrnu
"Nearly 150 Indian leaders from the
La Paz provinces came together in a planning and consciousness-raising meeting
to consolidate the Assembly ofNationalities," reported Zenobio Quispe, permanent secretary of the Federation of
Campesino Worlcers of La Paz (Tupaj
Katari).
During the event, campesinos of La
Paz, struggling for unity, reiterated the
need to establish their own political party
and assembly of nationalities, and determined thatthelndirufeonfederationshould
be formed, under its own laws, and its own
political constitution "until Aymara,
Quechua, Guaranies and other nationalities assume power."
The participants reject the celebration
of the quincentennial because Oct. 12 is a
dateofpain and mourning forcampesinos
and Indians of the continent. For this reason, they will demonstrate with a reaffirmation of their cultural identities and

18

~

against ethnocide, genocide, and the destruction of cultural values.

Ideological

Unity

The participants will ask professionals committed to the cause of Native
peoples for their support in creating documents and school texts, both historical and
othexwise, which will encourage Native
cultural values.
"This first meeting has been positive,
because with the initiativeofthecampesino
and Indian authorities, we have accepted
the responsibility of strengthening our organizations," said the Director of Tupaj
Katari attheconclusionofthemeeting. He
indicates that the most important step is to
organize because the Indian, campesino,
worker, and popularmovementshave been
weakened in the current political climate.
"In spite of the adverse situation,
campesinos and Indians have accepted the
great challenge of establishing the assem-

~CQ)

~~ CP~~
bly ofnationalities and a political party, to
provideanaltemativeforthemarginalized
and oppressed sectors of Bolivia."

Seventh Congress
The seventh congress of the Federation of Campesino Workers of La Paz
(fupaj Katari) will be held Dec. 20-22.
At this event the Federation will discuss
the situation of the campesinos, who categorically reject property taxes and demand that the government fulfill the numerous obligations it has made to agricultural workers.
The Federation of Campesinos of La
Paz, which seems to be consolidating itself after several actions which were interrupted by official militants, "has decided
to fmm anew pluralist executive committee, but only with leaders who fight for the
people and not with those who have sold
out to the oligarchy's parties."
Source: Semanario Aqui
[Chuquiyawu, Bolivia]
SAIIC Newsletter

�In one blow the drought and freeze of
1978 destroyed thefurureofNiooJasMullisaca,
who as the eldest child would have been
responsible for his parents' land. Like many
other children ofcarnpesinos, he was forced to
leave for La Paz in search of work.
"It was not a happy day, but it was the
only choice because there was nothing to eat
For a carnpesino, leaving the land that our
ancestors have farmed for generations is always
a very sad thing."
NicoJas Mullisaca, and later his five
brothers, started out as casual laborers in the
city of La Paz. He became a mason and has
worked in this profession ever since, except
for two years when he went looking for gold
fora company in Tipuani where he nearly died
of tuberculosis.
For one year now he has worked as a
mason for a construction company with about
30employees. Itis hard work, with a timecard
to punch and pay docked for arriving even a
little late. He travels an hour from the worksite
in the center of the city to his home with his
wife and eight children in the barrio of
Pasankeri.
Pasankeri is located high above La Paz
and is one of the final rungs in the ladder of
suburbs which climb up out of the city. It is the
last barrio before arriving at Ciudad Sarelite at
the very peak in El Alto.
Their pig stays in the lower part of their
yard. Above, there is a little patio that his wife
Ceferina uses to wash clothes and prepare the

Vol 6 Num 3

food,andwherethekidsandthedogplay.The
adobe house has two rooms, and alongside the
bed stands a sewing machine that the tWo
parents use. Spanish and Aymara are spoken
in the Mullisaca family household, Spanish
because it is more practical in the city, and
Aymara so the children don't lose their culture.
"I dream of opening a tailorshop in
Pasankeri. For a year and a half I've attended
a sewing course at night here in my barrio and
soon I'll be done," says don Nicolas.
His wife has attended a course in weaving and is hoping to get a loom. But with ten
stomachs to fill, they live hand to mouth and
it's practically impossible to pull together the
necessary capital to start their own business or
save the 150 bolivianos that a loom costs.
"I will probably be a mason for many
years to come, and knowing this, I take on as
much responsibility as the others in working
to form a union to ask for better wages." At
one time he was a campesino leader in his
village.
Many migrant families suffer from the
harsh conditions of the city, and from not even
knowing their neighbors and have to face
frequent periods of unemployment
"We worry about the children and fear
that they willfallin with delinquents or drugs,"
explains Ceferina Mullisaca. "In the countryside, life is far more peaceful and safe."
"Sometimes mestizos and white people
ride by in mini-vans and humiliate us for being

Aymara. They harass us as we carry our loads
and accuse us of being dirty."
In the city, access to medical attention
and education is easier. Yet without money,
life in the city is impossible, while in most
cases, people in the countryside can live from
what the land yields.
"Work in the city is boring and makes us
feel like slaves. For a campesino, work is also
hard but at least you feel free, and the work is
interesting," said Nicolas Mullisaca.
His parents still live in the countryside
and he and his family return during planting
and harvesting to San Andres Machaca, a
village located in the province ofingari, three
hours to the west of La Paz, near the Peruvian
border. For NicoJas and Ceferina, going to the
country is like returning home, while their
children treat these visits as outings.
"I am not ashamed of my roots as an
Aymara and a campesino. I am proud of our
culture. When my children grow up, I hope to
go back and live in my village."
"But to make this happen, we will need
economic help for digging wells and better
tools to work the land We're never going to
get these with governments run by the rich
who could care less about the problems and
needs of poor campesinos," said Nicolas. He
adds that "so long as neoliberal policies hold
sway, migration from the country to the city is
sure to continue."
Source: Aquf, [Chuquiyawu, Bolivia]

19

�INDIGENOUS

EOPL.

MBIA

ELP

RAFT

THE CONSTITUTION
~·~~~~~~-·~···~·······
0

®
&lt;It
&lt;It

@
@
@I

&lt;It
@
@

€II
€II

•
•
Ill

•
•

&lt;II

e
&lt;II

The following infonnation was given to
SAIIC by Alfonso
Pahnas,Presidentofthe
National Organization
of Indigenous Peoples
of Colombia (ONIC),
while visiting in February 1992.

•e o e
e
20

111 •

e e e e e e e e e e e e o e e

At the demand of students, activists and the genernl population, the Colombian

* government was obliged to call for elections to a National Constitutional Assembly
* (NCA) on Dec. 9, 1991. Aside from a few minor reforms introduced by Colombia's two
e
* political parties, the liberals and the conservatives, the Colombian Constitution bad not
Ill
o been modified since 1886. Indigenous people bad never participated in constitutional
: reforms, but this time the indigenous movement introduced two candidates, Francisco
@I
Rojas Birry of ONIC and Lorenzo Muelas of the Indigenous Authority of Colombia
: (AICO). The indigenous candidates were elected despite lack ofexperience and funds and
• the fact that a large portion of the indigenous population was not registered to vote and
&lt;II
111 did not even have the official identification required to register. The indigenous
111 movement was concerned with natural resources and regional development, and wanted
e to change the constitution to declare Colombia a multiculturnl country. But they also
• stressed the more general issues of democratic participation, human rights and resolution
&lt;II
e of regional conflicts, and the candidates were elected with a large percentage ofnon-

•

SAl

Newsletter

j

�Indian 'I'OteS.
Once in the assembly they had to broaden their proposals to
benefit'not only indigenous peoples but also the general population
of Cololl)bia, especially those who like the indigenous peoples, live
under oppression, discrimination, exploitation and misery and who
struggle to build a better society.
The indigenous movement achieved the following points in the
new constitution:
I. Right to Culture: Colombia is recognized as a multi-ethnic
and pluri-cultural country. The great diversity and coexistence of
cultural identities made up of values, customs, community practices,
rites, religions and languages which differentiate one group from
another are recognized.
II. The languages of indigenous peoples will be official languages in their respective territories; and education will be bilingual
and bi-cultural in those territories.
III. Dual nationality is recognized for the indigenous groups
who live on the borders With other countries, such as Brazil,
Venezuela, Panama, and Ecuador.
IV .Indigenous reservations are recognized as territories of
collective ownership which cannot be sold, rented, or owned by
other peoples because they are the communal property ofindigenous
communities. These territories will be administrated together with
the state. Indigenous Councils will be formed and a governor will be
named for each department according to the practices and traditions
of the indigenous communities. These councils can develop and
design plans and programs for economic and social development; in
addition they will watch over the conservation of natural resources,
promote public investment and coordinate programs together with
the community.
V. Jurisdiction: In the indigenous communities there exists
customary law which dictates how the members of the community
act and how they are punished. This law is recognized but it varies
greatly between communities and will be coordinated with the
judicial system of the country. Nevertheless it will be indigenous
peoples' authorities themselves who will judge and sanction penalties in indigenous communities, in accordance with their practices
and traditions.
VI.Permanent participation of two indigenous peoples in the
Senate of the Republic, which is formed by 100 members, is
guaranteed.
Despite these gains the new constitution was a mixed victory.
There was no change in the structure of the armed forces which have
committed many human rights abuses against Indians. The constitution mentions indigenous communities and reservations but does
not give Indians rights to their traditional territories. The government also retains subsoil rights.
In December 1991 three indigenous people were elected to the
Senate: Gabriel Muyay of ONIC, Anatolio Quira of the Indigenous
Social Alliance (ASI), and Floro A Tufiu Gala of AICO. They face
a great challenge because the Senate is dominated by the traditional
parties, and groups working for change have less influence than they

6 Num 3

did in theNCA. The indigenous movement will have to mobilize the
communities and get them involved in the law making process. They
will also have to look for national and international solidarity to
support their proposals in the Senate and they will have to fight to
make sure the new laws protecting indigenous rights are enforced.
It is clear to us that laws alone will not solve our problems. In
fact we recognize that we need organization, autonomy, decision
making power, permanent community work and active participation. In addition we acknowledge the need for changes within the
political, economic, cultural, territorial structure of the Colombian
state, changes which correspond to who we are as true Colombians
and not to models which do not fit our needs. In conclusion, there
were already laws in Colombia which protected indigenous peoples,
but they were neither enforced nor respected. Even though the
killings, massacres and persecution of our leaders continue, we will
continue struggling to strengthen our unity, to attain autonomy, to
preserve our culture and to promote and protect our right to work for
change so that we can live in a just society with opportunity and
dignity for all.

21

�Representatives at the meeting for the
foundation of ONIC in Panama

THE

RDINATIN
I

In December 1991 the main Indian organizations from South, Central and North
America met in Panama to discuss the future
of the inter-relationship between the Indian
People of the Continent, and to define the
politics and way of communication with nonIndian people due to the failure of building
alliances with some of the grass-roots organizations, especially with the groups that are
directing the "Continental Campaign 500
Years of Resistance of the Indigenous, Black
and Popular Movement"

Some of the resolutions of the
meeting are the following:
There is an urgent need to unify the
Indigenous Peoples (Original Nations) of the
continent We want to re-establish and utilize
the historical links that were disrupted by the
invading colonizers. In this way, together, we
are planning the reconstruction of our communities.
On the occasion of the SOOth anniversary
of the European invasion, we reaffmn our

BO

NS

OF INDIGEN US
I

historical commitment to unity and to the
development of a plan to mobilize for 500
YearsofindianResistance andStruggleagainst
colonialism. We are declaring to the world
that, despite more than five centuries of
genocide, more than 40 million Indigenous
Peoples from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego
continue to live and plan for our future.
We maintain a firm position against all
forms of colonialism, neocolonialism, and
internal and external racism. We reject all
kinds of manipulation and ideological or political imposition, because we, as peoples,
have our own ideology. We support alliances
with other popular sectors in order to change
the conditions of injustice in which oppressed
peoples of the world find themselves today.
Hence, we have decided the following:
1. To form an Indigenous commission
committed to organize a meeting of Indigenous Peoples, the establishment of a continental coordinating body of indigenous organizations and peoples. This continental coordinating body will consist of representatives

of all Indigenous Peoples, Original Nations,
of Abya-Yala (Land of Life, the American
continent in the Kuna language).
2. To carry out a coordinated plan of
action for 500 Years of Indian Resistance and
Struggle against colonialism.
3. To organize workshops and continental gatherings in order to make known the
Indian position regarding the 500 years, with
the goal of attaining a definitive unity at the
continental level.
We reject the celebrations of the socalled "Quincentennial of the Discovery of
America," "Encounter of Two Worlds," and
the "Quincentennial of Evangelization." We
are promoting actions at the regional, national and continental levels which respond
to the fundamental interests of our peoples
and honor our ancestors who gave their lives
defending the dignity of our peoples. In the
same spirit, we will continue to confront
oppressive forces, such as military invasion
and repression, and exploitation of our territories by transnational corporations.

Newsletter

I

�We reaffirm our commitment to a continental Indigenous alliance, and to reciprocal support in our struggles for
rights and self-determination,
traditional ways of life, religion, culture, and the protection of our Mother Earth with
all her resources.
Finally, we call on all nations, organizations, and Indian
communities of the continent,
even the most isolated ones, to
unite in this great effort for
action and continental coordination, on the path towards the
liberation of our peoples.
Signed on the Dec. 21, 1991, in Kuna Yala,
Panama

Indigenous Peoples Alliance
Founded in North America

Representatives at the
for the
foundation of ONiC in Panama

THE COORDINATING B DY F INDIGE
I
In December 1991 the main Indian organizations from South, Central and North
America met in Panama to discuss the future
of the inter-relationship between the Indian
People of the Continent, and to define the
politics and way of communication with nonIndian people due to the failure of building
alliances with some of the grass-roots organizations, especially with the groups that are
directing the "Continental Campaign 500
Years of Resistance of the Indigenous, Black
and Popular Movement."

Some of the resolutions of the
meeting are the following:
There is an urgent need to unify the
Indigenous Peoples (Original Nations) of the
continent. We want to re-establish and utilize
the historical links that were disrupted by the
invading colonizers. In this way, together, we
are planning the reconstruction of our communities.
On the occasion of the SOOth anniversary
of the European invasion, we reaffirm our

us

historical commitment to unity and to the
development of a plan to mobilize for 500
Years ofindianResistanceandStruggleagainst
colonialism. We are declaring to the world
that, despite more than five centuries of
genocide, more than 40 million Indigenous
Peoples from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego
continue to live and plan for our future.
We maintain a firm position against all
forms of colonialism, neocolonialism, and
internal and external racism. We reject all
kinds of manipulation and ideological or political imposition, because we, as peoples,
have our own ideology. We support alliances
with other popular sectors in order to change
the conditions of injustice in which oppressed
peoples of the world find themselves today.
Hence, we have decided the following:
1. To form an Indigenous commission
committed to organize a meeting of Indigenous Peoples, the establishment of a continental coordinating body of indigenous organizations and peoples. This continental coordinating body will consist of representatives

NS

of all Indigenous Peoples, Original Nations,
of Abya-Yala (Land of Life, the American
continent in the Kuna language).
2. To carry out a coordinated plan of
action for 500 Years of Indian Resistance and
Struggle against colonialism.
3. To organize workshops and continental gatherings in order to make known the
Indian position regarding the 500 years, with
the goal of attaining a definitive unity at the
continental level.
We reject the celebrations of the socalled "Quincentennial of the Discovery of
America," "Encounter of Two Worlds," and
the "Quincentennial of Evangelization." We
are promoting actions at the regional, national and continental levels which respond
to the fundamental interests of our peoples
and honor our ancestors who gave their lives
defending the dignity of our peoples. In the
same spirit, we will continue to confront
oppressive forces, such as military invasion
and repression, and exploitation of our territories by transnational corporations.

Newsletter

In Jan. 10-12, 1992, the National IndigenousForum, the Indigenous Peoples Alliance
of North America was founded. The meeting
took place in Alburquerque, NM and was
hosted by the Tonantzin Land Institute. The
participants came from the different Indian
communities of Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, California, Idaho, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and South Dakota, and Alaska. The decisions that came out of the conference represent a consensus by all participants. Some of
the of the main resolutions of this conference
are the following:
• It was decided to create an alliance
called the Indigenous Peoples Alliance. This
alliance is open to all Indigenous Nations and
organization who are interested in building a
long term alliance oflndigenous People who
emphasize grassroots community involvement
in issues affecting Indigenous communities.
.. The Indigenous Peoples Alliance would
endorse the Continental Indigenous Coordinating Commission's resolution that was
written in Kuna Yala, Panama.
.. Tonantzin Land Institute was given the
responsibility for sending out all communications being produced and /or being sent by the
Indigenous Peoples alliance.
"TheindigenousPeoples Alliance should
implement regional meetings that would focus on education and training. It was decided
that the first regional meeting would take
place in conjunction with the Indigenous En-

Vol 6 Num 3

vironmental Network conference in the Columbia River area. It was decided that the
focus of the regional meeting would be on
sovereignty.
.. Our logo consists of a turtle (to represent Turtle Island), with the continental campaign logo of the Eagle and the Condor located inside the turtle and the North, Central
and South American continent in the Center.

Second CONIC Meeting
York

New

We understand ONIC to
be a communication instrument for the Indigenous
Peoples of the Continent and
not a representative organization.
Our objectives are the following:
1. To seek Indigenous
unity on a continental level,
recognizing that we have a
5:::! common past and present, and
~ that we have decided to work
o together beyond the years
0
.c 1992, respecting the situation
Q,
and strategies which each Indigenous Nation may adopt to
reach their liberation and self-determination.
2. To develop a continental communication network which would directly involve the
grass-roots communities in order to strengthen
our ties and make known the critical situation
in which we the native Peoples liv/. and seek
solutions for our future.
3. To promote a process leading to dialogue and consensus based on our spiritual
values, life styles and millennia! knowledge.
4. To form a common alliance to reconstruct our Nations which were dispersed by
colonization and to fight to curb the destruction of our Mother Earth and her harmony.

The Second Meeting of the Coordinating
Body of Indigenous Organizations and Nations of the Continent,
CONIC, took place in
New York City from
March 4-7, 1992. The
meetingwashostedby the
Native Council of New
York and organized by
Tonantzin Land Institute
andSAIIC.
Delegates representing Indian organizations
and nations of the continent from 17 countries
participated in the Meeting.
""'""'i::'""''"' l&lt;u,ina, Panama; Maya, Guatemala;
Following are some
'"'"'"""•'""'• Chile; and Nahuath, El Salvador
of the resolutions that
came out of the meeting in New York:
The Continental Coordinating Body has Solidarity Organizations:
arisen due to the need to consolidate the bonds
Solidarity organizations and institutions
of union and communications between orga- may participate in meetings specifically organizations and nations native to this continent, nized to exchange information coordinate
which include, the Southern Cone and the activities, or promote dialogue with members
Caribbean.
of the Coordinating body. These general prin-

23

�ciples and guidelines will continue to be discussed within each organization and in the
Regional Workshops.
This CO&lt;?rdinating Body calls upon all
the progressive, honest and committed to join
against thecontta-celebration of the colonialist
plans. In the same form, we call upon the
popular sectors and the racially discriminated
to form an alliance to struggle against the
oppression, respecting, among ourselves our
diversity.

In 1986, the Indigenous Movement initiated a campaign to disseminate information
about the
state of oppression underwhichour
peoples live.
The movement has
taken the opportunity of
t
h
e
Quincenteruny

as a way to let

El

Salvador
I
I

OnThursday,Feb. 27; 1500policeraided
the Corte Azul Cooperative, arresting 60 Indian men, women and children and destroying
crops and supplies. The community members
had peacefully occupied the unused government land to plant their crops. The police
arrived at 7 am accompanied by three representatives of the United Nations Observation
Team, reporters from a local television station
and a group of local landowners.
The police ordered the 250 workers from
the Indian community of Costa Azul to leave
their fields immediately, and when asked for
a warrant ordering the displacement, they
replied that they did not have one, but President Cristiani had instructed them to proceed
as quickly as possible. The workers responded
that their crops were already planted and that
they could not leave them unattended.

24

the world know about the situation of repression under which Indigenous Peoples live;
and to show our rejection of the celebration of
the so called "V Quincentenary of the Discovery of America or the Encounter of the
Two Worlds," led by the Spanish government
and the Vatican and supported by the governments of the colonial states of the continent.
Among the initiatives ofthe native peoples
of ABYA YALA have been to invite the different sectors of the society to organize a
common front, based in mutual respect of the
differences and characteristics among sectors. This indigenous proposal has been distorted, and usurped by sectors which have
always carried out discriminatory practices.
Their policy has failed in our region and in
other parts of the world, because their project
are far from the reality of Native Peoples,
because they tried to impose a system of a
homogenous society which is based in centralized and bureaucratic power which ignores the right of Indigenous Peoples to Selfdetermination.
In conclusion, the Indigenous, Black and
Popular Sector Campaign, does not respond
to the demands of Native Peoples of the continent. In addition, the form in which it is
structured does not guarantee that Indigenous
proposals will be respected in the future, nor
does it allow for an honest alliance based on
the right of each people to decide their own
destiny, no matter how small the group is.
Therefore, this Coordinating Body calls
upon all the progressive, honest and committed people to join us in the struggle of the

I
At 2:15 p.m., in the presence of the
ONUSAL officials, along with a captain, a
second lieutenant, and the director of the
National Police of Sonsonate, the police proceeded to intimidate the Indians with their
weapons and then arrest 60 Indigenous workers and physically remove them to a nearby
command station. The Indians were then taken
to the nearby haciendaofDr. Guillermo Garcia
Guerra, where the police officers were received with a special luncheon. During this
time, the arrested men, women and children
were made to stand and listen to the police say
things like, "We should just machine gun
these sons of bitches down to solve our problems." Hours later, they were transported to
the Sonsonate police station and imprisoned
andnotallowedtospeakwithfamilymembers
or lawyers until Saturday, Feb. 29, when they

oppressed peoples, to join in contra-celebration of the colonialist plans. In the same form,
we call upon the popular sectors and the
racially discriminated to form an alliance to
struggle against oppression, respecting among
ourselves our diversity.

Given in New York (Indigenous Land occupied by the United States), 515/92.

I
were released.
The following local landowners were
with the arresting police officers: Andres
Garcia Corona, Rafael Flores, Elsa Gutierrez
Candel, Julia Leiva, Juan Martinez, and the
three brothers, Carlos Chacon Moreno,
Armando Candel Calderon, and Guillermo
Garcia Guerra
The Corte Azul and nearby Monzon cooperative members have received numerous
threats in the past from these men, especially
the three brothers, who flaunt their close ties to
President Alfredo Cristiani.
The crops, hammocks, blankets, beans,
com,crates,clay fryingpansandcomales, and
a food storage hut were destroyed in the raid.
Source: ANIS (National Association of
Indigenous Peoples of El Salvador)

SAIIC Newsletter

�ciples and guidelines will continue to be discussed within each organization and in the
Regional Workshops.
This Coordinating Body calls upon all
the progressive, honest and committed to join
against the contra-celebration ofthe colonialist
plans. In the same form, we call upon the
popular sectors and the racially discriminated
to form an alliance to struggle against the
oppression, respecting, among ourselves our
diversity.

""~-'' ..."'" Sector"
In 1986, the Indigenous Movement initiated a campaign to disseminate information
about the
state of oppression underwhichour
peoples live.
The movement has
taken the opportunity of
t
h
e
Quincentenazy
asawaytolet

El

Salvador
I
I

OnThursday,Feb.27,1500policeraided
the Corte Azul Cooperative, arresting 60 Indian men, womenandchildrenanddestroying
crops and supplies. The community members
had peacefully occupied the unused government land to plant their crops. The police
arrived at 7 am accompanied by three representatives of the United Nations Observation
Team, reporters from a local television station
and a group of local landowners.
The police ordered the 250 workers from
the Indian community of Costa Azul to leave
their fields immediately, and when asked for
a warrant ordering the displacement, they
replied that they did not have one, but President Cristiani had instructed them to proceed
as quickly as possible. The workers responded
that their crops were already planted and that
they could not leave them unattended.

24

the world know about the situation of repression under which Indigenous Peoples live;
and to show our rejection of the celebration of
the so called "V Quincentenary of the Discovery of America or the Encounter of the
Two Worlds," led by the Spanish government
and the Vatican and supported by the governments of the colonial states of the continent.
Among the initiatives ofthenativepeoples
of ABYA YALA have been to invite the different sectors of the society to organize a
common front, based in mutual respect of the
differences and characteristics among sectors. This indigenous proposal has been distorted, and usurped by sectors which have
always carried out discriminatory practices.
Their policy has failed in our region and in
other parts of the world, because their project
are far from the reality of Native Peoples,
because they tried to impose a system of a
homogenous society which is based in centralized and bureaucratic power which ignores the right of Indigenous Peoples to Selfdetermination.
In conclusion, the Indigenous, Black and
Popular Sector Campaign, does not respond
to the demands of Native Peoples of the continent. In addition, the form in which it is
structured does not guarantee that Indigenous
proposals will be respected in the future, nor
does it allow for an honest alliance based on
the right of each people to decide their own
destiny, no matter how small the group is.
Therefore, this Coordinating Body calls
upon all the progressive, honest and committed people to join us in the struggle of the

I

I

At 2:15 p.m., in the presence of the
ONUSAL officials, along with a captain, a
second lieutenant, and the director of the
National Police of Sonsonate, the police proceeded to intimidate the Indians with their
weapons and then arrest 60 Indigenous workers and physically remove them to a nearby
command station. The Indians were then taken
to the nearby haciendaofDr. Guillermo Garcia
Guerra, where the police officers were received with a special luncheon. During this
time, the arrested men, women and children
were made to stand and listen to the police say
things like, "We should just machine gun
these sons of bitches down to solve our problems." Hours later, they were transported to
the Sonsonate police station and imprisoned
and not allowed to speak with family members
or lawyers until Saturday, Feb. 29, when they

oppressed peoples, to join in contra-celebration of the colonialist plans. In the same form,
we call upon the popular sectors and the
racially discriminated to form an alliance to
st:ruggleagainstoppression,respectingamong
ourselves our diversity.

Given in New York (Indigenous Land occupied by the United States), 5!5192.

I
were released.
The following local landowners were
with the arresting police officers: Andres
Garcia Corona, Rafael Flores, Elsa Gutierrez
Candel, Julia Leiva, Juan Martinez, and the
three brothers, Carlos Chacon Moreno,
Armando Candel Calderon, and Guillermo
Garcia Guerra
The Corte Azul and nearby Monzon cooperative members have received numerous
threats in the past from these men, especially
the three brothers, who flaunt their close ties to
President Alfredo Cristiani.
The crops, hammocks, blankets, beans,
com, crates, day frying pans and comales, and
a food storage hut were destroyed in the raid.
Source: ANIS (National Association of
Indigenous Peoples of El Salvador)

I

As Mexico works out the details of the
North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA), the government is in the process of
restructuring the country's agrarian laws to,
among other things, allow the privatization of
ejido lands. Though in principle the new laws
respect the territorial integrity of Indigenous
peoples, the Indians have reason to be skeptical. Their lands are coveted for tourist and
agribusiness expansion. "We do not want
hotels and other things that do not belong to us
on our land," they stated. "We do not want to
worldorothers who come to own the land." In
principle, free trade is contrary to Indigenous
beliefs, "We do not negotiate the land, or the
forest, or the animals; we the Raramuri do not
work in order to make business of our land"
Fundamentally different philosophies about
human relationships to the earth arise when
passing privatization policies. "The land is
the one who sees that we grow, she is like our
Mother who gives us nourishment, the one
who takes care of us, she is all we have."

One of the significant victories of the
Mexican Revolution was the 1917 Agrarian
Reform Law which established communal
land ownership in the ejidos. The ejidos are
communal farms formed from expropriated
large estates on which farmworkers are given
free access to small plots. Ejido tenure is nontransferable.
However, under constitutional changes
proposed in November by President Carlos

6 Num 3
SAIIC Newsletter

present reforms to [article] 27 of the constitution will give new impulse to the invasion of
indigenous territory, against the justice that
the spirit of the law seeks." The Indians say
that, asitis written, "Thisreformisonlyforthe
benfitoftherich,itisnotinfavorofthepoor....
The ejido should stay as it is." The Indians
therefore proposed the inclusion of the following sentence to article 27: "the law protects the territorial integrity of Indigenous
peoples."

Salinas de Gortari, communal ownership and
land distribution under the agrarian reform
law would end. The amendment to Article 27
of the Constitution, was promulgated on Jan.
6, the final stage of its approval. Article 27 as
amended, will abolish restrictions on corporate ownership of land (including ejido land),
and farmers on ejidos (ejidarios) would be
allowed to own their land outright and to rent
or sell it to non-ejidarios. The law provides
for the abolishment of constitutional obligations for land distribution and Indian ancestral
claims, insitutional reforms, and relaxation of
the limits to property size.
The COSYDDHAC proposal sent to
Fernando Baiza Melendez focused specifically on Article 27, section VII of the Mexican
Constitution, which refers to lands of Indigenous communities. The statements by the
Indians challenged the government's very
right to legislate their lives and lands: "The
government did not plant the grass, this was
planted by God. The government did not give
us the grass, God gave it to us. The trees are
not government property, nor does the grass
belong to the government; therefore the government cannot take our land" The legal
process was criticized: "We are called only
when we are needed to sign, and we are not
givenexplantionsaboutwhatwearesigning."
The COSYDDHAC proposal states "The

In the proposal to the State of Chihuahua,
Indigenous groups expressed concern over
the uncertain future of their lands. The statements from the people included: "What is
going to happen to our children? They will
have nowhere to go, nowhere to live because
all that once was ours will pass to others'
hands." Elders areconcernedfortheirdescendants, "We the older ones will die, however
what will our youth live from if they are not to
inherit even the land, which is ours and which
gives us what we· eat"
History has confirmed their concerns.
The privatization of lands held communally
by Indigenous nations is a common strategy to
weaken their self sufficiency. In the late
1800's the United States Dawes Act allotted
acreage to male heads of households, and
males over 18 years of age. This created a
fictitious surplus of lands that were then sold
to settlers. The Indian landholders then split
up their land to give to their children, who had
the power to sell. Within three generations, 90
percent of the lands allotted under the Dawes
Act were expropriated by settlers.
The Alaska Native Claims Settlement
Act of1971 allows Native shareholders to sell
shares of their lands to non-Indians beginning
inl991. Thustheirlandsaremorevulnerable
to takeovers by private corporations, especially when the economies ofindian commu-

25

�nities are depressed. Alaska Natives resisting
this process are encouraging members of the
tribes to transfer title to the Tribal Councils
from the ~ative Corporations, thereby protecting communal ownership. Free trade and
privatization will benefit the business community, as is aptly noted in a headline in a

Bureau of National Affairs publication called
BNA International Trade Daily which states
"Agricultural Reforms announced in Mexico
should benefit U.S. Firms, specialists say."
The Ta:rahuma:ra, Tepehuano, and
Rammuri of Chihuahua want the government
to recognize the ethnic and cultural diversity

of Mexico and allow the Indigenous people to
play a role in the national arena. They state:
"For the Indians of the state to retain their
identity and contribute to the identity and
richness of the state, it is necessary to respect
the territory that they have been defending for
four centuries."

H
I
I
.

!

'I
i

J

At midnight on Saturday, Dec. 28, 1991,200 state
judicial police bearing sticks
and firearms violently evicted
300 Tseltales and Cho'ol Indians from the steps of the
MunicipalPalaceinPalenque,
Chiapas. They had occupied
the square two days before to
protest police violence, unjustified arrests, and judicial
abuse and corruption, and to
demand access to interpreters
in the court system.
As a result,l02 people
were arrested, including Jesuit priest Jeronimo Hernandez, and Cho'ol
deacon Sebastian Torres.
While being held incommunicado, they
were beaten, dispossessed of their belongings, and pressured to sign declarations which
they were not allowed to read. The Public
Ministry of Palenque denied a request on the
part of local government officials that prisoners be medically examined in order to certify
physical injuries suffered.
On Monday, Dec. 30, Hernandez and 92
Indians were re~~- The remaining nine
were held without bail on charges which included disturbing the peace, inciting to riot,
and sedition.
On Saturday, Jan. 5, while government
officials held formal talks with the organizations involved, sentences ranging from 10 to
40 years were handed down for the nine. Non-

l

I
dian Freedom (CDLI), the Union of Indian
Communities of the Chiapaneca Jungle
(UCISECH), and Tsoblej Yu'un Jwocoltic
Union, have since returned to the Plaza at
Palenque, where they are holding a vigil to
pressure for the resolution of their original
demands and for the immediate release of the
nine prisoners.

governmental human rights organizations took
the case to the government's National Commission for Human Rights.
The wives of the incarcerated have received support from throughout the state of
Chiapas, as well as from other parts of the
country. Local merchants have financed paid
aids requesting that the authorities respond to
the Indians' petitions. Telegrams demanding
freedom for the imprisoned have poured into
the governor and Chief Justice's offices.
Meanwhile, government-controlled farmer
and workers' organizations have responded
with a counter-campaign.
On Wednesday, in Tuxtla Gutirrez, one
of the judges in charge declared himself incompetent to continue with the case. The three
organizations who sponsored the December
sit-in, the Committee for the Defense of In-

SAIIC Newsletter

�nities are depressed. Alaska Natives resisting
this process are encouraging members of the
tribes to transfer title to the Tribal Councils
from the Native Corporations, thereby protecting communal ownership. Free trade and
privatization will benefit the business community, as is aptly noted in a headline in a

Bureau of National Affairs publication called.
BNA International Trade Daily which states
"Agricultural Reforms announced. in Mexico
should benefit U.S. Firms, specialists say."
The Tarahumara, Tepehuano, and
Raramuri of Chihuahua want the government
to recognize the ethnic and cultural diversity

of Mexico and allow the Indigenous people to
play a role in the national arena. They state:
"For the Indians of the state to retain their
identity and contribute to the identity and
richness of the state, it is necessary to respect
the territory that they have been defending for
four centuries."

I

T
I
At midnight on Saturday, Dec. 28, 1991, 200 state
judicial police bearing sticks
and firearms violently evicted
300 Tseltales and Cho'ol Indians from the steps of the
MunicipalPalaceinPalenque,
Chiapas. They had occupied.
the square two days before to
protest police violence, .unjustified. arrests, and judicial
abuse and corruption, and to
demand access to interpreters
in the court system.
As a result,l02 people
were arrested, including Jesuit priest Jer6nimo Hernandez, and Cho'ol
deacon Sebastian Torres.
While being held incommunicado, they
were beaten, dispossessed. of their belongings, and pressured to sign declarations which
they were not allowed. to read. The Public
Ministry of Palenque denied. a request on the
part of local government officials that prisoners be medically examined. in order to certify
physical injuries suffered..
On Monday, Dec. 30, Hernandez and 92
Indians were reJ~. The remaining nine
were held without bail on charges which included. disturbing the peace, inciting to riot,
and sedition.
On Saturday, Jan. 5, while government
officials held formal talks with the organizations involved., sentences ranging from 10 to
40 years were handed. down for the nine. Non-

dian Freedom (CDLI), the Union of Indian
Communities of the Chiapaneca Jungle
(UCISECH), and Tsoblej Yu'un Jwocoltic
Union, have since returned. to the Plaza at
Palenque, where they are holding a vigil to
pressure for the resolution of their original
demands and for the immediate release of the
nine prisoners.

On Feb. 27 the Honduran government
announced. the indefmite postponement of the
decision to give a 40-year logging concession
to Stone Container Corporation of Chicago
due to a tremendous outcry from national and
international environmental and indigenous
organizations and from the Honduran people.
The concession would have allowed. Stone to
log 840,000 acres or four-million cubic meters

annually of pine forests of the Mosquitia,
home to the Miskito, Tawahka, Garifuna and
Pesch Indians. The Indigenous inhabitants
were never consulted on this matter, which
could have had disastrous effects on their
lives, and an environmental impact study was
never conducted.

governmental human rights organizations took
the case to the government's National Commission for Human Rights.
The wives of the incarcerated have received. support from throughout the state of
Chiapas, as well as from other parts of the
country. Local merchants have fmanced. paid
aids requesting that the authorities respond to
the Indians' petitions. Telegrams demanding
freedom for the imprisoned. have poured. into
the governor and Chief Justice's offices.
Meanwhile, government-controlled. farmer
and workers' organizations have responded.
with a counter-campaign.
On Wednesday, in Tuxtla Gutirrez, one
of the judges in charge declared. himself incompetent to continue with the case. The three
organizations who sponsored the December
sit-in, the Committee for the Defense ofln-

The head of the Honduran Forestry Department(COHDEFOR),announcedthat"due
to public and technical interest it was impossible to reach a satisfactory agreement with
the Stone Container Corporation."
The rejection of the concession was announced as over 3,000peoplemarched.against
Stone in the streets of Tegucigalpa. Miskito
forester Jorge Salaverri stated, during his
speech in front of the capitol, that this is just
the first victory for the Honduran people and
the environment, and it is necessary that the

SAIIC Newsletter

6 Num 3

momentum continue to fight against the
Wellington Hall Company, a US furniture
manufacturer which is logging mahogany in
the Mosquitia.

daily influx of landless campesinos.

There were three demonstrations in Honduras organized. to protest the concessions.
One was organized. by teacher unions and
Miskito Indians, one by campesinos and one

Although the contract between Stone and
the Honduran government was shrouded. in
secrecy, activists obtained. a leaked. copy which
revealed. that more than 80% of Honduras
could be subject to logging. The contract
would have permitted Stone to cut trees anywhere outside of this area at anytime within

by university students. Never before in Honduras has there been this kind of solidarity and
consensus on an issue which has united people
of all social classes to protect the environment.

the next 40 years
did not obtain sufficient pulp wood from the specified. region.
Stone intended. to use the pulp wood for the
manufacturing of paper bags, and disposable
cardboard packaging.

La Mosquitia covers the eastern third of
Honduras and is not yet connected by roads to
the highly populated interior. This has allowed. the Miskito, Tawahka and Pesch Indians to retain their cultural and land base to a
large extent. The population of the region is
approximately 40,000, with theMiskitopeople
constituting nearly 90%. Separating the
Miskito Indians' coastal pine forest and the
country's interior is one of the largest surviving Central American rainforests, the home of
the Tawahka Indians. Although the Tawahka
obtained. "provisional guarantees" for their
lands in 1989, the agreement is not being
enforced. and they are threatened. by an almost

The Honduran government and the Congress were bombarded. by letters and faxes
from all over the world protesting the agreement. Protest letters were sent nationally by
groups as diverse as the Association of Honduran Loggers, Organization of Miskito
Peoples (MASTA), Community Education
for Health (EDUCSA) and the Association of
Honduran Biologists. In North America, urgent action campaigns were organized. by the
RainforestActionNetwork, Global Response,
Ancient Forest Rescue, SAIIC and the Task
Force on Multinational Resource Corporations.

27

�A proposal has been drawn up to create
the Tawahka Biosphere Reserve in La
Mosquitia, Eastern Honduras, by Mosquitia
Pawisa(MOPAWI), aHondurangroupwhlch
advocates the demarcation of Indian territories. The proposal was made, recognizing that
protecting forests and the Indigenous People
who inhabit them is both important and a legal
obligation of the Honduran government, and
includes the following points:
The goals of creating the Tawahka Biosphere Reserve include guaranteeing the
Tawahka people the space they need to live in
their traditional manner; protecting
biodiversity in the central Patuca River area;
stopping encroaching deforestation; protecting natural resources to promote ecotourism,
scientific research, and sustainable development; and completing a continuous ecological
corridor thatwouldalsoinclude theRioPlatano
Biosphere Reserve.
The Reserve will be for the collective use
of the Tawahka community and the people
who now live in the area, with the goal of
maintaining the traditional economy and
sustainable development The Tawahkacommunities will promote, plan, and execute the
28

management of the reserve, through the colonists who settle in the areas after this
Tawahka Indian Federation of Honduras decree takes effect.
(FITH), subject to supervision by the Executive Branch.
The exploitation of subsoil resources by
inhabitants of the Reserve will be subject to
The Reserve will be divided into three federal laws and must be authorized by the
areas- a central natural zone, a buffer zone, government and include benefits for the
and a settled cultural zone - which will be Tawahkacommunity.Ifpeoplemustmovein
determined by theTawahkacommunity.Land order for this exploitation to be carried out,
and natural resources in the region will be they will be compensated.
used as they have been traditionally, and in the
manner indicated by the Regulations for Land
Archaeological sites and objects, hisUse approved by the Tawahka Congress. torical documents, and other testimonies of
Current land ownership will be respected, and the past that are found in the Reserve will be
sales will be allowed, with the condition that placed in the custody of Honduran Institute of
the Tawahka community be given preference Anthropology and History, in accordance with
over other prospective buyers.
current laws about the defense of cultural
heritage. The Institute will work in coordinaThe following activiti"'s will not be per- tion with the Tawahka community.
mitted in the Reserve: in( x strial exploitation
of the lumber, pasture-intensive cattle raising,
"All inhabitants of the Tawahka Bioillicit removal of fauna, and other activities sphere Reserve will have the same rights and
that work against the biological conservation obligations as all other Hondurans."
of the Reserve. The Tawahka community,
with the support of various governmental
The government will try to gain admitentities, will be responsible for protecting the tance for the Tawahka Biosphere Reserve to
resources within the Reserve. If the Tawahka the international networkofUNESCO' s Man
community so requests, theHonduranAnned and Biosphere program.
Forces will take necessary measures to eject

Newsletter

�N

c

Ca ada

,,
A proposal has been drawn up to create management of the reserve, through the colonists who settle in the areas after this
the Tawahka Biosphere Reserve in La Tawahka Indian Federation of Honduras decree takes effect.
Mosquitia, Eastern Honduras, by Mosquitia (FITH), subject to supervision by the ExecuPawisa(MOPAWI),aHondurangroupwhich tive Branch.
The exploitation of subsoil resources by
advocates the demarcation of Indian territoinhabitants of the Reserve will be subject to
The Reserve will be divided into three federal laws and must be authorized by the
ries. The proposal was made, recognizing that
protecting forests arid the Indigenous People areas- a central natural zone, a buffer zone, government and include benefits for the
who inhabit them is both important and a legal and a settled cultural zone - which will be Tawahkacommunity. If people must move in
obligation of the Honduran government, and determinedbytheTawahkacommunity.Land order for this exploitation to be carried out,
and natural resources in the region will be they will be compensated.
includes the following points:
used as they have been traditionally, and in the
The goals of creating the Tawahka Bio- manner indicated by the Regulations for Land
Archaeological sites and objects, hissphere Reserve include guaranteeing the Use approved by the Tawahka Congress. torical documents, and other testimonies of
Tawahka people the space they need to live in Current land ownership will be respected, and the past that are found in the Reserve will be
their traditional manner; protecting sales will be allowed, with the condition that placed in the custody of Honduran Institute of
biodiversity in the central Patuca River area; the Tawahka community be given preference Anthropology and History,in accordance with
stopping encroaching deforestation; protect- over other prospective buyers.
current laws about the defense of cultural
ing natural resources to promote ecotourism,
heritage. The Institute will work in coordinaThe following activiths will not be per- tion with the Tawahka community.
scientific research, and sustainable development; and completing a continuous ecological mitted in the Reserve: incr strial exploitation
corridor that would also include theRioPlatano of the lumber, pasture-intensive cattle raising,
"All inhabitants of the Tawahka Bioillicit removal of fauna, and other activities sphere Reserve will have the same rights and
Biosphere Reserve.
that work against the biological conservation obligations as all other Hondurans."
The Reserve will be for the collective use of the Reserve. The Tawahka community,
of the Tawahka community and the people with the support of various governmental
The government will try to gain admitwho now live in the area, with the goal of entities, will be responsible for protecting the tance for the Tawahka Biosphere Reserve to
maintaining the traditional economy and resources within the Reserve. If the Tawahka the international network ofUNESCO' s Man
sustainable development The Tawahkacom- community so requests, the Honduran Armed and Biosphere program.
munities will promote, plan, and execute the Forces will take necessary measures to eject

28

IC Newsletter

After a long struggle for economic
and political rights, the fuuit people
won the political rights over a region which is more than 770,000
square miles (1/5 of the Canadian land mass). The governmentagreed to the creation of a
new political subdivision of
Canada, which will carry the
name of "Nunavut," meaning
"Our Land" in the fuuit language. fu addition, the government accepted the terms that this
territory be independent of the
Northwest Territories.
To the 17,000 fuuit people living in
the Great North, this agreement marks a victory after a long struggle, which began after the
Vol 6 Num 3

European explorers claimed the
Arctic archipelago. In addition
to political and territorial control, the fuuit will receive
economic advantages
through this accord in the
fonn of an indemnity of
one million dollars, payable within 14 years.
Experts believe that
the Nunavut Territory is
rich in oil, natural gas and
precious metals. The fuuit
will grant limited rights for
the exploitation of these resources.
Source: NitanissanBulletin.
No. 24, February 1992
29

�WD

0~@ Lf@
I

This reportwas given during the March 1992 CONIC
conference of the Coordinating Body in New York. Carmen
Pereira, leader of the Organization of Indigenous Women
ofBent, discussed the situation
in Beni following The Indigenous March for Land and
Dignity to La Paz in August
1990, and the signing of the
decree which recognized the
territories of the communities
of the area.

I
mountain wherewemakeachaco
and plant tomatoes, rice, yuca
and oranges for our daily sustenance.

We have organized watch
posts in the forest so the loggers
will not enter but it is difficult to
control. The Indigenous women
of San Ignacio together with the
central organization have to go
and see. We went in January and
took away an eight horse power
engine, two barrels of gasoline,
Carmen Pereira (far left) In a meeting with the Board
two chain saws, their boat and
of Directors of the Center for Indigenous People
their wood. This wood will now
The cattle ranchers are still in the area. Francisco, the barbed wire has already benefit the community and will be sold to
They are not going to leave until the reached the edge of the village. Now ev- make a school, sanitary facilities and
government buys the lands from them erything is flattened, the ranchers knock whatever else is needed.
because they have property titles. Now the over the trees. The government decree is
We women have only done this begovernment has to buy the land to give it there but it is not being enforced. The
to the Siriono people, something they logging companies also continue cutting cause,aswehavesaid,wedonotcareifwe
have not done yet. Where I live in San wood. We have to travelfarto plant, to the die in order to get what we want The

30

SAIIC Newsletter

�Indian women at the CONIC meeting
New York, March, 1992

logging companies arevecy abusive: They
enter the communities and rut the wood in
front of everyone.

@)
I
This reportwas given during the March 1992 CONIC
conference of the Coordinating Body in New York. Carmen
Pereira, leader of the Organization of Indigenous Women
ofBeni, discussed the situation
in Beni following The Indigenous March for Land and
Dignity to La Paz in August
1990, and
signing of the
decree which recognized the
territories of the communities
ofthearea.

I

I
mountain where we make achaco
and plant tomatoes, rice, yuca
and oranges for our daily sustenance.

We have organized watch
posts in the forest so the loggers
will not enter but it is difficult to
control. The Indigenous women
of San Ignacio together with the
central organization have to go
and see. We went in January and
took away an eight horse power
engine, two barrels of gasoline,
two chain saws, their boat and
their wood. This wood will now
The cattle ranchers are still in the area. Francisco, the barbed wire has already benefit the community and will be sold to
They are not going to leave until the reached the edge of the village. Now ev- make a school, sanitary facilities and
government buys the lands from them erything is flattened, the ranchers knock whatever else is needed.
because they have property titles. Now the over the trees. The government decree is
We women have only done this begovernment has to buy the land to give it there but it is not being enforced. The
cause,aswehavesaid,wedonotcareifwe
to the Siriono people, something they logging companies also continue cutting
have not done yet. Where I live in San wood. Wehavetotravelfartoplant, to the die in order to get what we want. The
30

SAIIC Newsletter

There was a serious problem where
they killed a child, Roy Juarez. This family, although it is Indigenous, has cattle
and there was a cattle rancher who wanted
to take their land. This rancher, who is
from Sucre, sent one of his servants. As
they did not find the father who had gone
to the river, they shot and killed the six
year old boy. The boy was with his little
brothers, one who was three and the other
who was one year old. The three year old
grabbed his younger brother into his rums
and ran to the mountain. From there he
heard the shots and went to tell another
family. When they got back the boy was
dead. This happened in 1989 and there is
a case which is still pending in court but
nothing will come of it because this man
has a lot of money to keep the lawyers
quiet For the Indigenous People there is
no justice. For that reason we would like a
law in Bolivia which would protect the
Indigenous women and men.

Forfurther information contact:
Carmen Pereira
Central de Pueblos lndigenas del Beni
Casilla 58
Trinidad, Bolivia
Tel: 591 464575
AliciaCanaviri
Coordinadora de Mujeres lndfgenas de
Sud y Centro America
Av. Burgaleta Pasaje Callacoque 1947
Villa Copacabana
La Paz, Bolivia
Tel: 591 2 3121043 or 591 2 30478
Wara Alderete
PO Box28703
Oakland, CA 94604
Tel: 510 834 4263 Fax: 510 834 4264

The Organization of Indigenous
Women of Beni is a member of the Coordinating Body ofIndigenous Women of
Central and South America, which is a
communication and support network, by
which Indigenous women can publicize
and share our worlc, our problems and
achievements. We also hold activities to
promote the organization and participation of our sisters on a continental level.
6 Num 3

31

�!

The Women's International League for Peace
and Freedom (WILPF) will sponsor an International Seminar of Indigenous Women of the
Americas on June 28-30, 1992 in Santa Cruz, Bolivia.This
meeting will serve as a tribute to Indian women, and to
support the right to life, territory, culture and political
participation of indigenous people.

i

The seminar will be held in preparation for
the WI F XXV International Congress which
will be held in Santa Cruz, Bolivia on July 1
and will culminate in the signing of a "Peace
and Justice Treaty among the Women of the
mericas."
The WILPF is an international organization
which seeks to unite women all over the world
in an effort to work towards peace and human
rights.

32

SAIIC Newsletter

�The Women's International League for Peace
and Freedom
will sponsor an International Seminar of Indigenous Women of the
Americas onJune 28-30, 1992 in Santa Cruz, Bolivia.This
meeting will serve as a tribute to Indian women,
to
support the right to life, territory, culture and political
participation of indigenous people.
The seminar will be held in preparation for
the WILPF XXV International Congress which
will be held in Santa Cruz, Bolivia on July 1-6
and will culminate in the signing of a "Peace
and Justice Treaty among
e Women of the
•
II
mer1cas.
The WILPF is an international organization
which seeks to unite women all over the world
an effort to work towards peace and human
rights.

32

SAIIC Newsletter

(Ohio, USA)
America is a
nine month
in solidarity and support of
indigenous peoples'
years of
for their cultures and lands. The Walk is one
many events aimed at changing the
structive and environme
disastrous
course of this country. The
began on
January 31, 1
at the United Nations in
New York City.
walk will continue the
3,000 mile journey, ending at the Nuclear
Test Site on Western Shoshone land on October 1
1
with a massive non-violent
demonstration. The
marchers
II be
passing through
Philadelphia Pennsylvania,
shington DC, Columbus Ohio, Indianapolis Indiana, St. louis
Missouri,
leavenworth
Kansas, Colorado Springs
Colorado, Albuquerque

N

e

w

Mexico, Big
ountain
Arizona,
avasupa1
land
rizona,andlas
Vegas
Nevada. The entire route, once indigenous peoples land, is
now littered with the broken promises of
treaties signed by the US government. Native
Vol 6 Num 3

speakers, demonstrations, and workshops
are planned along
route bring attention
to these struggles. Between 150 and 300
participants are currently walking. Everyone
is invited to walk with the group for a day, a
or the
those unable to
participate in this way,
supporting
another walker or contributing funds for an
indigenous speaker, equipment, or medical
assistance.

Other 1
~ Spiritual Gathering

activities include:
Big Mountain, Arizona,

USA, June, 1992.
~ In October of

1
there will be the Second
Continental Conference: 500 Years Indian
Resistance in Panama

16

33

�I
Indigenous leaders meeting at the December 1991 NGO conference "The Roots of
the Future" in Paris signed a declaration demanding that governments and international
organizations guarantee the rights of Indigenous Peoples to self-determination and control over their natural resources. The declaration rejects the· celebration of the
"Quincentennial of the Discovery ofAmerica"
and states that "the 11th of October, 1492 was
the last day of freedom for the Indigenous
Peoples of America". The signers also demand the right of Indigenous Peoples to participate in the UN Conference on Environment and Development to be held in June in
Brazil. The Indigenous leaders wish to present
an alternative modal for sustainable development based on the traditional harmonious
relationship between Indians and the environment They reject the western development

I!

'

I
'

Letter from the Indigenous Delegates
present at the Palace of Nations in Geneva
Switzerland, to the Pope.
Geneva, August 1, 1991
Chief of State of the Vatican
Pope John Paul ll
Rome, Italy

The indigenous delegates present at the
Palace of Nations, in Geneva, Switzerland, in
debate regarding the Universal Declaration of
the rights of indigenous people, convened by the
"Working Group of Indigenous People" of the
United Nations, hereby present and declare:
In view of the declaration on May 3, 4,
1493, of the Papal Bull INTER CETERA, by
which territories of indigenous people are conceded to Spain and Portugal, without taking into
account the material or spiritual rights of the
indigenous people in case of ABYA-YALA
(America) and other parts of the world;
In defense of the sacred rights of the indigenous people, and in promotion of human dignity and harmony that should reign among humanity on this planet,

For all these purposes:
l)we demand from the vatican state a denunciation of the unilateral treaty Pope Alejandro

modal basedonamarketeconomywhichonly
benefits the powerful and which is responsible for the destruction of the environment
through overexploitationofnaturalresources.
The following is the introduction to the
declaration:
We, the Indigenous Peoples of the world
have been constructing, since the ancestrnl
times, a culture, civilization, history and a
view of the world which have permitted us to
co-exist harmoniously with nature. This normalprocesswasintenuptedinAmericain1492

VI, as being contrary to the Universal Human
Rights of Peoples.
2)whereas theyear 1993 completes 500
years of a supposed spiritual conquest without clear rectification of this universal injustice, allowing the nation-states that have
benefited from the inherintance of Pope
Alejandro VI to continue programmes of
genocide and ethnocide, denying the indigenous people the recuperation of a harmony
based on reciprocal human respect, we demand that the Papal Bull of May 3, 4, 1493
INTER CETERA be annulled.
3)we direct John Paul ll to accede to
universal concepts of justice including the
spiritual and material rights of indigenous
peoples, in furthereance of life, harmony of
human beings with our Sacred Mother, and
the spiritual peace of the Great Creator in
accord with the cosmovision of each one of
our indigenous peoples, free from all oppression.
Thus we proclaim in the name of Human Dignity, in harmony with our Mother
Nature and in the Spirit of Truth.
Signed, the indigenous delegates, and
organizations.

by the European invasion of the continent and
has meant genocide, the negation of our culture, the violation of our human rights, racial
discrimination, the usurpation of our natural
resources and the occupation of our territories
and sacred places. Currently the Indigenous
Peoples fmd themselves very affected by the
necessity created by the economic and cultural system imposed by the great powers and
governments. At the same time we have
contributed to the "development", sacrificing
our peoples and resources without receiving
any compensation.
For a copy of the full text send $3 to

SAIIC.

34

SAIIC Newsletter

�I
Indigenous leaders meeting at the December 1991 NGO conference "The Roots of
the Future" in Paris signed a declaration demanding that governments and international
organizations guarantee the rights of Indigenous Peoples to self-determination and control over their natural resources. The declaration rejects the celebration of the
"QuincentennialoftheDiscovery ofAmerica"
and states that "the 11th of October, 1492 was
the last day of freedom for the Indigenous
Peoples of America". The signers also demand the right of Indigenous Peoples to participate in the UN Conference on Environment and Development to be held in June in
Brazil. Thelndigenousleaders wish to present
an alternative modal for sustainable development based on the traditional harmonious
relationship between Indians and the environment. They reject the western development

'i
! !

Letter from the Indigenous Delegates
present at the Palace of Nations in Geneva
Switzerland, to the Pope.
Geneva, August 1, 1991

i

Chief of State of the Vatican
Pope John Paulll
Rome, Italy

!

The indigenous delegates present at the
Palace of Nations, in Geneva, Switzerland, in
debate regarding the Universal Declaration of
the rights of indigenous people, convened by the
"Working Group of Indigenous People" of the
United Nations, hereby present and declare:

In view of the declaration on May 3, 4,
1493, of the Papal BulllNTER CETERA, by
which territories of indigenous people are conceded to Spain and Portugal, without taking into
account the material or spiritual rights of the
indigenous people in case of ABYA-YALA
(America) and other parts of the world;
In defense of the sacred rights of the indigenous people, and in promotion of human dignity and harmony that should reign among humanity on this planet,
For all these purposes:
l)we demand from the vatican state a denunciation of the unilateral treaty Pope Alejandro

34

modalbasedonamarketeconomywhichonly
benefits the powerful and which is responsible for the destruction of the environment
through over exploitation ofnatural resources.
The following is the introduction to the
declaration:
We, the Indigenous Peoples of the world
have been constructing, since the ancestral
times, a culture, civilization, history and a
view of the world which have pennitted us to
co-exist hrumoniously with nature. This normalprocesswasinterruptedinAmericain1492

VI, as being contrary to the Universal Human
Rights of Peoples.
2)whereas the year 1993 completes 500
years of a supposed spiritual conquest without clear rectification of this universal injustice, allowing the nation-states that have
benefited from the inherintance of Pope
Alejandro VI to continue progranunes of
genocide and etlmocide, denying the indigenous people the recuperation of a harmony
based on reciprocal human respect, we demand that the Papal Bull of May 3, 4, 1493
INTER CETERA be annulled.
3)we direct John Paulll to accede to
universal concepts of justice including the
spiritual and material rights of indigenous
peoples, in furthereance of life, harmony of
human beings with our Sacred Mother, and
the spiritual peace of the Great Creator in
accord with the cosmovision of each one of
our indigenous peoples, free from all oppression.
Thus we proclaim in the name of Human Dignity, in harmony with our Mother
Nature and in the Spirit of Truth.
Signed, the indigenous delegates, and
organizations.

•
I
(Panama, Ecuador) Indigenous mostprogressiveandlndian-friendly,''said
Peoples do not expect a significant reduc- CONAIE president Luis Macas.
tion in the rate of destruction of the
environment after the United Nations
He criticized governments andNGOs
Conference on the Environment and De- for giving little importance to the "human
velopment (UNCED) to be held in Rio de aspects of conservation" during preparaJaneiro in June, and demand that their tory discussions for the Earth Summit.
voices be heard at that conference.
"We have seen governments and environmentalists from both North and South get
For the Confederation of Indigenous deeply involved in discussions on
People of Ecuador (CONAIE), the nature biodiversity and technology, but without
of the pre-UNCED negotiations held so speaking about us (Indians), who have
far seem to point to the meeting being conserved theEarthformillennia,"Macas
"great theater, with few concrete results". said.
Oswaldo de Leon Kantule, a youth
leader of the Kuna People ofPanama, said
that he is opposed to the conference. He
charges that it only provides a forum for
governmental and non-governmental organizations and leaves out the native
populations who are "the true defenders of
Mother Earth."

by the European invasion of the continent and
has meant genocide, the negation of our culture, the violation of our human rights, racial
discrimination, the usurpation of our natural
resources and the occupation of our territories
and sacred places. Currently the Indigenous
Peoples find themselves very affected by the
necessity created by the economic and cultural system imposed by the great powers and
governments. At the same time we have
contributF.Ai to the "development", sacrificing
our peoples and resources without receiving
any compensation.
For a copy of the full text send $3 to
SAilC.

SAIIC Newsletter

Delegates from the Ecuador ethnic
conference had attended the Pre-UNCED
negotiations which began in Kenya in
August1990andendedlastMarchinNew
York. For Macas, those who took part in
the discussions "forgot the Indian tribes,
who for centuries have lived in the forests
and the high plateau of America."

De Leon insisted that the UN summit
He said Indigenous groups throughofficially recognize Indian groups as the out the world would present to the Rio
true environmental protectors and give summit a report showing how the Indians
them a forum from which to voice their view the universe and demanding that all
demands after five centuries of exploita- economic activity in areas inhabited by
tion, death and extennination.
Indians be administrated by the Indigenous groups themselves.
Indigenous groups say official documents to be signed at the Rio meeting
would hardly stop the
current rate of environmental destruction in the region. "It
will be a grand spectacle where each
government will
want to appear the

6 Num 3

Powerfulcountriesmustincreasetheir
economic aid, but at the same time, change
their paternalistic and imperialistic outlook on he south," said Macas. He blamed
the market society and the capitalistmodel
for75 percent ofenvironmental deterioration in the world.
Vianor Perez, Kunaactivist, described
as "contradictory", the fact that Latin
American governments wholeheartedly
back the conference and at the same time,
approve of the cutting down of the Amazonianforest.Everyyear,closeto200,000
acres of forest reserves are destroyed,
tenitory which for centuries has provided
food and shelter to the Indian population.
"A fundamental issue that the conference must discuss is the Indians' right to
use their own land," said Kuna leader de
Leon. "If some kind of agreement is not
reached, the Indigenous people of Latin
America will only be left with the air they
breathe and the little land that surrounds
them now."
"We indigenous peopleofBrazil don't
expect much from that conference," said
Allton Krenack, the Coordinator of the
Union of Indian nations in Brazil. "Because the governments who will participate have made the decision a long time
ago about their environmental police. It is really
just a show."

Source: Inter Press
Service and SAIIC

35

��</text>
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INDIAN
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Newsletter

AMAZON

Vo/6 No 3, Spring &amp; Summer 7992

INDIANS

DEMAND

TO

BE HEARD

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=

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ntents
AMAZON
March from Pastaza to Quito (Ecuador) ................... 4
Sacha Yachana Research Center (Ecuador) .............. 8
Military Reserves on Indian Lands (Brazil) ................. 9
Spreading Venereal Diseases (Brazil) ....................... 9
Interview with President of ONIC (Colombia) ............ 10

SAUC
Coordinator: Nilo Cayuqueo
Coordinator Assistants: Eva Aguilar Veilleux
-Jim Freeman
Development Coordinator:
Karl Guevara Erb
Accounting: Quipus
Radio Program Coordinator:
Carlos Maibeth
Design &amp; Typesetting: El Andar Publications

SOUTHERN CONE ·
The Mataco Face Cholera Outbreak (Argentina) ....... 14
500 Years of Epidemics (Argentina) ........................ 15
letter from PIRCA (Argentina) .................................. 15
Pehuenche lands Still Not Secured (Chile) ................ 16
Mapuche Protest Forced Eviction (Chile) ................... 17
Mapuches living under Ozone Hole (Chile) .............. 17

ANDES
Indian and Campesino Leaders Meet (Bolivia) ........... 18
Drought Forces Aymara to Migrate (Bolivia) .............. 19
Indigenous Help Draft Constitution (Colombia) ......... 20

MESO AMERICA
CONIC Meeting in Kuna Yolo (Panama) .................. 22
Police Raid Indian Cooperative (EI Salvador) ............ 24
Dangerous Agricultural Reforms (Mexico) ................. 25
Indians Violently Evicted in Palenque (Mexico) .......... 26
Logging Deal Blocked (Honduras) ............................ 27
Proposal to Create Biosphere (Honduras) ................. 28

SAIIC Board of Directors
Gina Pacaldo (San Carlos Apache/
Chicana),Nilo Cayuqueo (MapucheArgentinaL Carlos Maibeth (MiskitoNicaraguaL Wara Alderete (CalchaquiArgentinaL Xihuanel Huerta (ChicanlndiaL
Guillermo Delgado (Quechua-Bolivia),
Lucilene Whitesell (Amazonia Native-Brasil)
The SAIIC Newsletter (ISSN 1056-5876) is
published 2-4 times per year and available
for an annual $15 personal membership,
$25 for an organizational membership,
or $ at certain newstands. For membership,
you will also receive Urgent Actions bulletins.
We would like to thank the following people
and organizations for their generous
assistance and donations to SAIIC.

NORTH AMERICA
Inuit win Back Territorry (Canada) ........................... 29

INDIAN WOMEN
Interview with Carmen Pereira (Bolivia) .................... 30

CONFERENCES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 32
Indigenous People's Alliance ................................... 23
Second CONIC Meeting ........................................ 23

OTHER NEWS
Letter to the Pope ................................................... 34
Indigenous leaders Sign Paris Declaration ................ 34
UNCED ................................................................ 35
Available ltems ....................................... Back Page

Mail: PO Box 28703
Oakland, California 94604
Office: 1212 Broadway, #830
Oakland, California 94612
Phone: (51 OJ 834-4263
Fax: (51 0)-834-4264
Peacenet E-mail: saiic@igc.org

A Central Place, Peter Veilleux, Juan
Aulestia (Oxfam), Jeffrey Bronfman, Karima
Cammell, Theodore Downing, Dianne
Engleke, Ethnic News Watch, Fellowship of
Reconciliation,W. H. Carol Ferry, Howard
Frederick, Abby Friedman, Dan Greenwood, Rick Hamouris, lncomindios, David
Lauer, Andrew Mutter, Sergio Montano,
Alfonso Palmas, Robert Patton, Joe Quigley,
Rainforest Action Network, Julie Rogers,
Judy Wells.
Thanks to the following foundations for their
generous support: The John D. &amp; Catherine
T. MacArthur Foundation, General Service
Foundation, Tides Foundation, Funding
Exchange, Seventh Generation Fund,
Agricultural Mission, United Church of
Christ, Peace Development Fund, Vanguard
Foundation, Oneway Trust, Highlander
Center-Environment and Democracy Campaign, Compu Mentor, Damien Foundation.

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                    <text>Since the publication of our previous SAIIC Newsletter, Indigenous
unity and continental organizing continues to be a subject of
dynamic discussion. More Indigenous peoples have been contacted, and we have witnessed encounters with younger leaders,
men and women, who continue to take political responsabilities
within Indian communities.
This year's meetings have resulted in strengthening ties among
Indigenous peoples. They have helped to clarify our positions
within the larger spectrum of societies, and international organizations. The Indigenous perspective is contributing to promote a
process of mental decolonization, and is opening spaces of dialogue
unknown before.
Demands

Printed
on

Recycled
Paper

PRINTED WITH

SOY INK

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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38091">
                <text>Editorial</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38092">
                <text>Newspaper Article</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="47574">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63370">
                <text>Spring and Summer 1992</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
      <elementSet elementSetId="5">
        <name>Zotero</name>
        <description/>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="314">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description/>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38093">
                <text>Editorial</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="217">
            <name>Item Type</name>
            <description/>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38094">
                <text>Newspaper Article</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="322">
            <name>Attachment Title</name>
            <description/>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38095">
                <text>vol. 6, No. 3 (3).pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="222">
            <name>Abstract Note</name>
            <description/>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63371">
                <text>Editorial</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="264">
            <name>Issue</name>
            <description/>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63372">
                <text>3</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="269">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description/>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63373">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="283">
            <name>Pages</name>
            <description/>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63374">
                <text>3</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="293">
            <name>Publication Title</name>
            <description/>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63375">
                <text>SAIIC Newsletter</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="319">
            <name>Volume</name>
            <description/>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63376">
                <text>6</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="4">
        <name>Ecuador</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="794">
        <name>Editorial</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="795">
        <name>Indigenous people</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
