One year ago, on June 5th 2009, more than 30 people were killed in Peru’s northern Amazon province of Bagua when security forces violently clashed with indigenous protestors on a narrow strip of highway called “Devil’s Curve”. Early that morning, Peruvian security forces opened fire from helicopters into a crowd of several thousand protestors in an attempt to break through a road block, one of many throughout Peru’s vast Amazon region that indigenous communities had set up in protest to legislative decrees 1090 and 1064 that would have opened up the indigenous territories to increased mining, oil, natural gas and hydropower development.
I was in Lima during this time waiting to travel to the city of Iquitos in Peru’s northern Amazon to meet with local indigenous leaders, but my trip was delayed by the two months of protests leading up to the massacre at Bagua. Transport into and out of the Amazon came to a standstill as communities barricaded roads, blocked waterways, and shut down an oil pipeline from lucrative Block 1AB deep in the northern Peruvian Amazon, in protest of the model of development being imposed by a government in faraway Lima.
As news of the massacre in Bagua spread, tensions rose and protests broke out in the rest of the country. As I waited in Lima, I remember watching huge crowds gather in the center of the city to show their support for Amazonian communities, and watching security forces fire rubber bullets and tear gas into the crowds.
Amidst these protests, the Peruvian government charged Alberto Pizango, president of the national organization Interethnic Association for the Development of the Peruvian Rainforest (AIDESEP in Spanish), with advocating revolt and sedition. Fearing arrest, Alberto Pizango fled to the Nicaraguan embassy in Lima seeking asylum, which was granted the following day. Later that night, with friends and colleagues from partner organizations Racimos de Ungurahui, Shinai, AIDESEP, and Amazon Watch, as well as actress and activist Q’orianka Kilcher, I took part in a candlelight vigil outside the Nicaraguan embassy to show our support for Alberto and the struggle of indigenous communities of Peru.