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US-Peru FTA Sparks Indigenous Massacre

by: Tom Loudon, t r u t h o u t | Report

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A worker in Yurimaguas, Peru, loads a ship with bags of rice on Tuesday, during a temporary break in indigenous protesters' blockade of the region. (Photo: Enrique Castro-Mendivil / Reuters)

    During the last week, deep in the Peruvian Amazon, confrontations between nonviolent indigenous protesters and police have left up to 100 people dead. The vast majority of the casualties are civilians, who have been conducting peaceful demonstrations in defense of the Amazon rain forest.

    For almost two months, as many as 30,000 indigenous people have been blocking road and river traffic, demanding the repeal of presidential decrees issued last year to facilitate implementation of the US-Peru FTA. According to the indigenous leaders, several of these decrees directly threaten indigenous territories and rights. After having attempted several times to negotiate with the government the repeal of the most egregious of the decrees, and faced with a permanent influx of extraction equipment into the region, the people decided it was imperative to "put their bodies in front of the machines" in order to prevent this equipment from entering their territory.

    On Friday, June 5, the government decided the protests needed to end and launched an aggressive assault against the people protesting on the road outside of Bagua. The dislocation was conducted from helicopters and the ground, with police and army using automatic weapons and heavy equipment against people armed with only rocks and spears. As videos, photos and testimonies from the region slowly emerge, it is clear that this was designed to inflict as many civilian casualties as possible, and deter those in other regions from continuing protests. Pictures circulating on the Internet depict snipers in uniform firing at protesters from the streets, tanks and from on top of buildings. On Saturday, in Lima, Peru's capital, a large spontaneous demonstration in support of the Amazonian indigenous was broken up by police.

    In the wake of what appears to be a massacre perpetrated by the police, the government of President Alan Garcia is mounting a massive propaganda campaign, claiming that indigenous protesters attacked the police, and accusing them of being terrorists. Human rights lawyers have accused Peru's government of a cover-up, and have been impeded from getting in to investigate more fully. The Bishop's Vicariate for the Environment for Jaen, Nicanor Alvarado, said "The main problem is that injured and deceased civilians are being transferred to the "El Milagro" military base ... so, it's possible that a group of injured and deceased people are disappeared later on."

    Credible accusations are emerging that the police are systematically disappearing civilian bodies by burning or throwing then in rivers. Right now, people in the region are preparing lists of those missing to document the large number of civilians disappeared. Amnesty International has issued a warning expressing concern for the scores of demonstrators who were detained last weekend.

    The head of Peru's Justice Ministry issued a warrant for the arrest of Alberto Pizango on sedition charges. Pizango is president of AIDESEP, the main indigenous organization involved in the protests. Pizango has taken refuge in the Nicaraguan Embassy and it appears that Nicaragua will grant him asylum. Arrest warrants have been issued for several other leaders as well.

    The UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues issued an urgent call to the government of Peru, demanding that the violence against the indigenous people cease, that medical attention be made available to the wounded and that the Peruvian government abide by its international obligations regarding the protection of all human rights, especially the people's right to life and security.

    The tragic violence currently unleashed in the Peruvian Amazon is directly linked to the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between the US and Peru. On Sunday, interviewed at one of the many roadblocks set up by the demonstrators, indigenous leader and protester Luis Huansi stated, "We will not give up until they reverse the laws that damage us. They want to take away our lands and forests and make our traditions disappear."

    Indigenous leaders promise that the protests will not end with this latest violence from the government. There have already been calls for international tribunals to investigate and, if their findings so indicate, to hold the government responsible for this massacre.

    On June 8, Minister Carmen Vildoso, the Women's Issues and Social Development minister, announced her resignation in protest of the government's response. There is building pressure for the resignation of Cabinet Chief Yehude Simon and Interior Minister Mercedes Cabanillas. Although President Garcia has stated that he will not backpedal, international pressure is growing for the actions of the police and military to be brought to light.

    A national strike has been called in Peru for June 11 by the newly formed "National Front for Life and Sovereignty," which includes a broad spectrum of Peruvian national organizations. Protests in solidarity have happened in many parts of the world, and people will be watching closely for how the Peruvian government responds to the strike.

    For more news and information on what is happening in Peru, visit: http://art-us.org/ or http://peruanista.blogspot.com/.

  

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Tom Loudon is co-director of the Quixote Center in Washington, DC.

Comments

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How can INDIGENOUS

How can INDIGENOUS protesters be terrorists in any way??Predatory capitalism again.

Why is this no surprise?

Why is this no surprise? So-called "free trade agreements" are nothing more than government-to-government licenses to steal resources from less powerful peoples for fun and profit of the multinational corporations. If a few hundred or thousand indigenous people are slaughtered, so what? Profits above all!! These less-powerful governments' actions are backed, all too often, by thugs fronting for the existing oligarchy, andUS military-trained (at the notorious School of the Americas). Regrettably, few, if any, in the Obama administration are paying any attention to this issue, and even fewer acting in any way to mitigate/constructively address it.

Free from legal restraint is

Free from legal restraint is all these "free trade agreements" provide as US corporations continue to remove each country's natural resources and in return dump our heavily subsidized grain crops putting their own farmers out of business. The indigenous people know they are having their very rights to land, to farm, and to have safe drinking water being grabbed by US corporations who use the IMF, the World Bank, and the US military to force compliance. Whether it is Shell in Nigeria, or Chevron in Burma or Monsanto in India, US corporations are operating as legal looters and murderers.

"We pray that our united

"We pray that our united effort will bear fruit for the benefit of all land and life, which increasingly are threatened by total destruction. May we be granted the wisdom to return to the divine laws and instructions revealed long ago, when the Creator, through his love, gave us the gift of life. This gift was meant equally for all, with no room for the injustice, hatred and greed today poisoning our world. Let us rid ourselves of this terrible curse of personal gain at the expense of others, for if we do not cleanse ourselves, a higher Power will soon perform for us the work of purification. We have passed through many ages, sometimes becoming lost on the wrong path. The uncountable millions brutally destroyed in the wars of this century clearly indicate we have lost our way. Something is deeply wrong with our present way of life. Therefore, now is the time when world leaders must exemplify the harmonious, harmless Way of Life intended by the Creator.. We recognize that there are many peoples represented in the United Nations, each endowed with their own unique culture and tradition, but the original instructions of the Creator are universal and valid for all time. The essence of these instructions is compassion for all life and love for all creation. We must realize that we do not live in a world of dead matter, but in a universe of living spirit. Let us open our eyes to the sacredness of Mother Earth, or our eyes will be opened for us." statement from traditional Hopi Elders to the General Assembly in September 1982

The President must respond,

The President must respond, if FTA is to blame, change it from our side.

We the people must protest

We the people must protest and force Obama to stop this massacre! Please, someone, who can we write, what can we do?

And some people still wonder

And some people still wonder why USA is so much hated by millions in Latin America! When will they ever learn?

The indigenous people of the

The indigenous people of the Amazon are dying for us. The further destruction of the Amazon is a death sentence for the rest of us too. My heart goes out to these poor people. How powerless they seem against planes overhead, heavy machinery against them. This is too sad to contemplate. How many more of these agreements between US and other countries do we need to witness before we realize that we are gluttonous for other people's stuff and we need to stop it. HELP!!

This tragic attack yanks the

This tragic attack yanks the mask off of the true face of "free trade." These trade agreements are weapons in an all-out war. Corporate interests and governments of well-to-do politicians will use whatever violent means they can to steal resources from people so they can keep the global economic machine oiled and humming along so that they can get richer and richer. We need local, living economies that work for everyone. Global justice means placing people, planet, and principle before profit. Unregulated trade does not work for the people. The Peru free trade massacre only exposes the true violence of unfair trade law... we mourn for them and struggle to ensure their lives were not lost in vain. Today the world will see that people in Peru are willing to wage strikes to stand behind our basic rights, the right to healthy ecosystems and intact communities, rights that "free trade" policies work against.

More than 250 Indigenous

More than 250 Indigenous reported missing and presumed dead. Miguel Palacin, the coordinator of the Andean Indigenous Coalition CAOI said yesterday that there are more than 250 Indigenous leaders missing and presumed dead from thePeruvian government aggression which began last Friday. In spite of many emails, letters and faxes being sent to President Obama, Secretary of State Clinton and USTR Kirk, it appears that there has been no public comments from anyone in the administration to date. To send your message to those three, go to: http://www.quixote.org/peru-massacre-action Tom Loudon

How can the US, with a

How can the US, with a straight face, protest actions in Peru when our entire history and way of life are founded on the "manifest destiny" doctrine which brought about the holocaust in tribes and nations in the US over five centuries! If it was government policy to hunt down and slaughter whole villages, men, women and children, so that greedy "settlers" could take over and pollute to their hearts content, how can this year's government protest the action in Peru? If our government will not even repay the tribes and nations for the misappropriated land claims money being "managed for the tribes," how can it now blame any other government for its treatment of indigenous people? And how is it any wonder that the US government continues to side with Israel in supporting settlements, occupations, and concentration camps for Palestinians, indigenous people displaced when the land was given to "the Chosen People"?

I'm not quite sure I

I'm not quite sure I understand how this tragedy is "directly linked to the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between the US and Peru." Obviously there's a connection in that the indigenous groups are protesting decrees issued as a result of the FTA, but it seems that the underlying cause of the massacre is the Peruvian authorities' willingness to discard the lives of their own citizens in order to enact new policies. Senseless violence is hardly a necessary consequence of Free Trade, whereas callous brutality is a frequent tool of unjust regimes.

This article would be more

This article would be more helpful if it indicated that the author talked to or attempted to talk to someone at the State Department. P. Michael McKinley, confirmed on June 28, 2007, is the U.S Ambassador to Peru. From http://fpc.state.gov/documents/organization/75264.pdf: "On January 6, 2006, President Bush notified the Congress of his intention to enter into a free trade agreement with Peru. On June 28, 2006, the Peruvian Congress voted to approve the FTA with the United States, with 79 votes in favor of the agreement and 14 votes against it." Follow the Money (From the same link as above): "Peru accounts for less than 1% of total U.S. trade. Peru is the 43rd largest U.S. export market ($2.3 billion in 2005) and the 44th largest source of U.S. imports ($5.1 billion in 2005). The dominant U.S. import item from Peru is gold (31% of U.S. imports from Peru in 2005), followed by refined copper (11% of total), and kerosene and other oils (9% of total). The leading U.S. export items are gasoline (7% of U.S. exports to Peru in 2005), engineering machinery parts (6% of total), and office and data processing machinery parts (4% of total)."

the responsible for this

the responsible for this massacre is President Alan Garcia,who ignored the Peruvian Constitution, the International treaties signed by previous Peruvian goverments,both documents, secure the right of the Indigenous people to preserve their land and water resources,resources that President Garcia, has delivered into the hands of the American multinationals,land grabbing all over again!

Here in Europe, we have

Here in Europe, we have regarded Peru as a democratic country, a country with problems, yes, but a country where problems were solved by nonviolent means. - The recent bad news from the Amazonas region shocks everybody. - My apologies on behalf of all civilized people: We grieve with you.

Can we as a people face the

Can we as a people face the multinational onslaught as bravely as the people of Peru? Boycotting the bastards would be a significant start. We seem to lack the sophistication of the indigenous people who value what is truly important: elements of earth and air, water and forest.

How can INDIGENOUS

How can INDIGENOUS protesters be terrorists in any way??Predatory capitalism again. " Right. They are "re-named", the new way of dealing with unpleasantness, made so popular by the Bush admin. Like Iraqis being "insurgents" instead of civilians/"freedom fighters". Enemy combatants instead of innocent citizens.

I noticed many commets

I noticed many commets about the word capitalism. May I suggest the real issue here isn't capitalism but corruption and violent acts by the police. According to the article is was the gov who supported the actions of the police and the keyword "peace" were the actions taken as protest yet the reward for peaceful protest was violence from the police. Once again well meaning people are attacking capitalism and not the root cause. In short it was the gov who pushed the issue. I own a small company which provides jobs to well over 100 people in the state of Va. Am I an evil guy just becuase I have a business venture? May I suggest before you attack the free market that you begin your own business and find out how much work and effort it takes to be a success. Now, Obama want to regulate the regulation for most all forms of business ventures. Peace and capitalism go hand in hand.

For more details, read or

For more details, read or re-read John Perkin's excellent "Confessions of an economic hitman". He saw it first-hand - indeed he did it himself and then spilled the beans.

Everyone of conscience must

Everyone of conscience must support the indigenous people of Peru against the FTA between the US and Peru. Also the indigenous people of the entire Amazon basin. This region is essential to our survival, it is no less than the lungs of the S. Hemisphere, and also the largest storehouse of genetic gold on the planet. Just because you cannot walk through it's jungles, or smell it's air, does not mean it isn't important to you sitting there in front of your computer. Free trade is a capitalist euphemism for "free to extract a developing nation's resources at the expense of it's people."

People need to do what they

People need to do what they can to stop exploitation of the indigenous people and their land and to protect their own local landbases from exploitation. I recommend reading Derrick Jensen's books Endgame, Vol. 1: The Problem of Civilization and Vol. 2: Resistance. And start resisting.

Indeed the US-Peru Free

Indeed the US-Peru Free Trade Agreement has a direct role. There are so many other factors including, as mentioned in the 2nd comment (Why is this no surprise? Thu, 06/11/2009 - 17:37), the history of U.S. military training via mechanisms such as the School of the Americas and others. Another Truthout article "Iraqis Take Control of Baghdad's Green Zone" http://www.truthout.org/061609B discusses another U.S. export-import which will have bloody consequences for Peru. The article mentions Peruvians employed in Iraq by private security companies (i.e., Peruvian mercenaries employed by Western mercenary outfits) when it states, "Iraqi troops now man all the checkpoints leading into the sprawling zone of Iraqi government buildings and foreign embassies - tense areas once staffed by U.S. troops and sometimes Peruvians employed by a private security firm." These Peruvian mercenaries will no doubt return to Peru (and other parts of Latin America) to sow genocide and human rights abuses.

Obama administration has not

Obama administration has not condemned the massacre of more than two hundred amazonian indigenous people, when is it going to happen? Maybe the FTA gods want more bloodshed.

I would like to know

I would like to know which corporations are behind the "permanent influx of extraction equipment", because in this age of globalisation there is almost certainly a connection to North American corporations and banks for funding, loans, etc. Maybe we can help from afar if there is a connection to corporations near us here in Canada and the USA. Corporate Mindset, as reflected by at least one comment here, simply does not see the bigger picture of environmentalism or human rights. "Oh, gee, we work so hard that killing protesters doesn't rate being a crime". These protesters are trying to protect the Amazon Rainforest - "the lungs of the earth" - and we all have an interest in their goal.